Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
752037 Systems & Control Letters 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper we treat a novel combination of two controversial control concepts, Sign Inverting Control (SIC) and Delay Scheduling (DS), for systems with multiple independent and large delays. SIC suggests the inversion of the control polarity and DS prolongs the existing delays. The combined scheme functions with a single requirement that, the union of the control schemes provides a larger stable operating region than each of its components does, in the domain of the delays. The critical knowledge that is needed to execute such a unified control strategy is the crisp description of these stable regions for each time-delayed control scheme. This need can be fulfilled using the recent Cluster Treatment of Characteristic Roots (CTCR) paradigm, which establishes the stable regions exhaustively and non-conservatively. The resulting options in selecting operating modes render more robust control performance against much larger delay variations than each of the schemes. We also investigate the disturbance rejection speeds within these enlarged stable regions in order to improve the control performance even further. Such multi-faceted paradoxical combinations provide previously-unexplored tools to control designers. Experimental validations of these novel concepts are presented on a simple setup with a single-axis manipulator.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Control and Systems Engineering
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