Chapter 6-1 Design of Single-Loop Feedback Control Systems Iván D. Portnoy de La Ossa, M.E., M.SC
Chapter 6-1 Design of Single-Loop Feedback Control Systems Iván D. Portnoy de La Ossa, M.E., M.SC
The concept of feedback control is more than 2000 years old, but it found a
practical industrial application just when James Watt used it for controlling
the speed of his steam engine about 200 years ago.
And
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CLOSED LOOP TRANSFER FUNCTION:
A SIMPLIFIED FORM
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CLOSED LOOP TRANSFER FUNCTION:
A SIMPLER FORM
,
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION
It is noticeable that the denominator of the closed-loop transfer function of a
feedback control loop is independent of the location of the input to the loop.
Therefore, it is characteristic of the loop. The response shape and stability of
this loop depend on the roots of:
Equation above is named the “Characteristic Equation” of the loop. This is why
the response of the loop can be tuned by adjusting the controller parameters.
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION
The characteristic equation determines the unforced response of the closed loop:
Then:
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION: WHY IS
THERE OFFSET WITH A P CONTROLLER?
Consider the following block diagram representation of a control closed loop:
Where:
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION: WHY IS THERE
OFFSET WITH A P CONTROLLER?
Then:
Notice that:
Then:
There is no offset!
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION: A GLIMPSE OF LOOP
STABILITY
When a closed loop is about to go unstable, the roots of the characteristic equation lie in
the imaginary axis of the complex plane.
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION: A GLIMPSE OF LOOP
STABILITY
Thus, if we want to find out the controller gain and loop oscillation period just when it is
about to go unstable (i.e., it is marginally stable), we must set into the characteristic
equation. This will result in a complex equation with two unknowns: The ultimate
controller gain, , and the ultimate oscillation frequency, . The ultimate oscillation period is
defined as:
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
CHARACTERISITIC EQUATION: A GLIMPSE OF LOOP
STABILITY: EXAMPLE
Separating the real and imaginary parts into two equations yields:
The first solution corresponds to the monotonic unstable response caused by a wrong
controller action, and the second one corresponds to the marginally stable response. Then:
And:
THE FEEDBACK CONTROL LOOP:
EXCERCISES