An Introduction to System Modeling and Control
1. Edition May 2022
752 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
A practical and straightforward exploration of the basic tools for the modeling, analysis, and design of control systems
In An Introduction to System Modeling and Control, Dr. Chiasson delivers an accessible and intuitive guide to understanding modeling and control for students in electrical, mechanical, and aerospace/aeronautical engineering. The book begins with an introduction to the need for control by describing how an aircraft flies complete with figures illustrating roll, pitch, and yaw control using its ailerons, elevators, and rudder, respectively. The book moves on to rigid body dynamics about a single axis (gears, cart rolling down an incline) and then to modeling DC motors, DC tachometers, and optical encoders. Using the transfer function representation of these dynamic models, PID controllers are introduced as an effective way to track step inputs and reject constant disturbances.
It is further shown how any transfer function model can be stabilized using output pole placement and on how two-degree of freedom controllers can be used to eliminate overshoot in step responses. Bode and Nyquist theory are then presented with an emphasis on how they give a quantitative insight into a control system's robustness and sensitivity. An Introduction to System Modeling and Control closes with chapters on modeling an inverted pendulum and a magnetic levitation system, trajectory tracking control using state feedback, and state estimation. In addition the book offers:
* A complete set of MATLAB/SIMULINK files for examples and problems included in the book.
* A set of lecture slides for each chapter.
* A solutions manual with recommended problems to assign.
* An analysis of the robustness and sensitivity of four different controller designs for an inverted pendulum (cart-pole).
Perfect for electrical, mechanical, and aerospace/aeronautical engineering students, An Introduction to System Modeling and Control will also be an invaluable addition to the libraries of practicing engineers.
1.1 Aircraft 1
1.2 Quadrotors 7
1.3 Inverted Pendulum 11
1.4 Magnetic Levitation 12
1.5 General Control Problem 14
2 Laplace Transforms 15
2.1 Laplace TransformProperties 17
2.2 Partial Fraction Expansion 21
2.3 Poles and Zeros 31
2.4 Poles and Partial Fractions 32
Appendix: Exponential Function 35
Problems 38
3 Differential Equations and Stability 45
3.1 Differential Equations 45
3.2 PhasorMethod of Solution 48
3.3 Final Value Theorem 52
3.4 Stable Transfer Functions 56
3.5 Routh-Hurwitz Stability Test 59
3.5.1 Special Case - A Row of the Routh Array has all Zeros* 65
3.5.2 Special Case - Zero in First Column, but the Row is Not Identically Zero* 68
Problems 71
4 Mass-Spring-Damper Systems 81
4.1 Mechanical Work 81
4.2 Modeling Mass-Spring-Damper Systems 82
4.3 Simulation 88
Problems 92
5 Rigid Body Rotational Dynamics 103
5.1 Moment of Inertia 103
5.2 Newton's Law of Rotational Motion 104
5.3 Gears 111
5.3.1 Algebraic Relationships Between Two Gears 112
5.3.2 Dynamic Relationships Between Two Gears 112
5.4 Rolling Cylinder* 117
Problems 125
6 The Physics of the DC Motor 139
6.1 Magnetic Force 139
6.2 Single-Loop Motor 141
6.2.1 Torque Production 141
6.2.2 Wound Field DC Motor 143
6.2.3 Commutation of the Single-Loop Motor 143
6.3 Faraday's Law 145
6.3.1 The Surface Element Vector S 146
6.3.2 Interpreting the Sign of 147
6.3.3 Back Emf in a Linear DC Machine 147
6.3.4 Back Emf in the Single-Loop Motor 149
6.3.5 Self-Induced Emf in the Single-Loop Motor 150
6.4 Dynamic Equations of the DC Motor 152
6.5 Optical Encoder Model 154
6.6 Tachometer for a DC Machine* 157
6.6.1 Tachometer for the Linear DC Machine 157
6.6.2 Tachometer for the Single-Loop DC Motor 157
6.7 TheMultiloop DC Motor* 159
6.7.1 Increased Torque Production 159
6.7.2 Commutation of the Armature Current 159
Problems 163
7 Block Diagrams 173
7.1 Block Diagramfor a DC Motor 173
7.2 Block Diagram Reduction 175
Problems 185
8 System Responses 191
8.1 First-Order System Response 191
8.2 Second-Order System Response 193
8.2.1 Transient Response and Closed-Loop Poles 194
8.2.2 Peak Time and Percent Overshoot 198
8.2.3 Settling Time 200
8.2.4 Rise Time 202
8.2.5 Summary of 202
8.2.6 Choosing the Gain of a Proportional Controller 202
8.3 Second-Order Systems with Zeros 205
8.4 Third-Order Systems 210
Appendix - Root Locus Matlab File 211
Problems 212
9 Tracking and Disturbance Rejection 221
9.1 Servomechanism 221
9.2 Control of a DC Servo Motor 226
9.2.1 Tracking 226
9.2.2 Disturbance Rejection 231
9.2.3 Summary of the PI Controller for a DC Servo 234
9.2.4 Proportional plus Integral plus Derivative Control 234
9.3 Theory of Tracking and Disturbance Rejection 238
9.4 Internal Model Principle 242
9.5 Design Example: PI-D Control of Aircraft Pitch 244
9.6 Model Uncertainty and Feedback* 250
Problems 258
10 Pole Placement, 2 DOF Controllers, and Internal Stability 271
10.1 Output Pole Placement 271
10.1.1 Disturbance Model 276
10.1.2 Effect of the Initial Conditions on the Control Design 278
10.2 Two Degrees of Freedom Controllers 283
10.3 Internal Stability 292
10.3.1 Unstable Pole-Zero Cancellation Inside the Loop (Bad) 295
10.3.2 Unstable Pole-Zero Cancellation Outside the Loop (Good) 298
10.4 Design Example: 2 DOF Control of Aircraft Pitch 300
10.5 Design Example: Satellite with Solar Panels (Collocated Case) 303
Appendix: Output Pole Placement 306
Appendix:Multinomial Expansions 310
Appendix: Overshoot 311
Appendix: Unstable Pole-Zero Cancellation 315
Appendix: Undershoot 317
Problems 320
11 Frequency Response Methods 339
11.1 Bode Diagrams 339
11.1.1 Simple Examples 343
11.1.2 More Bode Diagram Examples 345
11.2 Nyquist Theory 359
11.2.1 Principle of the Argument 359
11.2.2 Nyquist Test for Stability 368
11.3 Relative Stability: Gain and Phase Margins 377
11.4 Closed-Loop Bandwidth 383
11.5 Lead and Lag Compensation 387
11.6 Double Integrator Control via Lead-Lag Compensation 392
11.7 Inverted Pendulum with Output 399
Appendix: Bode and Nyquist Plots in Matlab 401
Problems 402
12 Root Locus 419
12.1 Angle Condition and Root Locus Rules 420
12.2 Asymptotes and Their Intercept 427
12.3 Angles of Departure 434
12.4 Effect of Open-Loop Poles on the Root Locus 450
12.5 Effect of Open-Loop Zeros on the Root Locus 451
12.6 Breakaway Points and the Root Locus 452
12.7 Design Example: Satellite with Solar Panels (Noncollocated) 453
Problems 458
13 Inverted Pendulum, Magnetic Levitation, and Cart on a Track 467
13.1 Inverted Pendulum 467
13.1.1 Mathematical Model of the Inverted Pendulum 467
13.1.2 Linear Approximate Model 470
13.1.3 Transfer Function Model 470
13.1.4 Inverted Pendulum Control Using Nested Feedback Loops 472
13.2 Linearization of Nonlinear Models 475
13.3 Magnetic Levitation 478
13.3.1 Conservation of Energy 479
13.3.2 StatespaceModel 480
13.3.3 Linearization About an Equilibrium Point 481
13.3.4 Transfer Function Model 483
13.4 Cart on a Track System 483
13.4.1 Mechanical Equations 484
13.4.2 Electrical Equations 485
13.4.3 Equations of Motion and Block Diagram 486
Problems 488
14 State Variables 501
14.1 Statespace Form 501
14.2 Transfer Function to Statespace 503
14.2.1 Control Canonical Form 505
14.3 Laplace Transform of the Statespace Equations 513
14.4 Fundamental Matrix Phi 516
14.4.1 Exponential Matrix e^At 517
14.5 Solution of the Statespace Equation* 520
14.5.1 Scalar Case 521
14.5.2 Matrix Case 522
14.6 Discretization of a Statespace Model* 523
Problems 525
15 State Feedback 529
15.1 Two Examples 529
15.2 General State Feedback Trajectory Tracking 537
15.3 Matrix Inverses and the Cayley-Hamilton Theorem 538
15.3.1 Matrix Inverse 538
15.3.2 Cayley-Hamilton Theorem 541
15.4 Stabilization and State Feedback 543
15.5 State Feedback and Disturbance Rejection 547
15.6 Similarity Transformations 551
15.7 Pole Placement 555
15.7.1 State Feedback Does Not Change the System Zeros 559
15.8 Asymptotic Tracking of Equilibrium Points 560
15.9 Tracking Step Inputs via State Feedback 562
15.10 Inverted Pendulum on an Inclined Track* 569
15.11 Feedback Linearization Control* 574
Appendix: Disturbance Rejection in the Statespace 579
Problems 581
16 State Estimators and Parameter Identification 595
16.1 State Estimators 595
16.1.1 General Procedure for State Estimation 600
16.1.2 Separation Principle 608
16.2 State Feedback and State Estimation in the Laplace Domain* 610
16.3 Multi-Output Observer Design for the Inverted Pendulum* 613
16.4 Properties of Matrix Transpose and Inverse 615
16.5 Duality* 617
16.6 Parameter Identification 619
Problems 626
17 Robustness and Sensitivity of Feedback 641
17.1 Inverted Pendulum with Output 641
17.2 Inverted Pendulum with Output 655
17.3 Inverted Pendulum with State Feedback 657
17.4 Inverted Pendulum with an Integrator and State Feedback 661
17.5 Inverted Pendulum with State Feedback via State Estimation 663
Problems 666
References 671
Index 675