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4.3 OutputResponse toFluctuating Input 33
4.3 OutputResponse toFluctuatingInput
Figure4.3 illustrates the systemoutput in response tofluctuating input (green).The
top rowshows theoutput of the systemprocess, either P (blue) or P˜ (gold), alone
inanopen loop.Thesystemprocess isacascadeof twolow-passfilters,whichpass
low-frequency inputs anddonot respond tohigh-frequency inputs.
The upper left panel shows the response to the (green) low-frequency input,
ω=0.1, inwhich the base system P (blue) passes through the inputwith a slight
reduction inamplitudeand lag inphase.Thealteredsystem P˜ (gold) respondsonly
weakly to the low frequency of ω=0.1, because the altered system has slower
response characteristics than the base system. At a reduced input frequency of
ω=0.01(notshown), thegoldcurvewouldmatchthebluecurveatω=0.1.Asfre-
quencyincreasesalongthetoprow,theprocessesPand P˜blockthehigher-frequency
inputs.
The lower row shows the response of the full PID feedback loop system.At a
low frequency ofω≤0.1, the output tracks the input nearly perfectly. That close
tracking arises because of the very highgain amplification of thePIDcontroller at
lowfrequency,which reduces the systemtrackingerror tozero, as inEq.3.5.
Atahigherfrequencyofω=10,thesystemwiththebaseprocessP respondswith
a resonant increase in amplitude anda lag inphase.The slower alteredprocess, P˜,
respondsonlyweakly to inputat this frequency.Asfrequencycontinues to increase,
both systems respondweaklyornot at all.
Thesystemresponsetosensornoisewouldbeofequalmagnitudebutalteredsign
andphase, as shown inEq.3.7.
Low-frequencytrackingandhigh-frequencyrejectiontypicallyprovidethegreat-
est performance benefit. The environmental references that it pays to track often
change relatively slowly,whereas the noisy inputs in both the reference signal and
in the sensorsoftenfluctuate relatively rapidly.
4.4 Insights fromBodeGainandPhasePlots
Figure4.4 providesmoregeneral insight into theways inwhichPIDcontrol, feed-
back, and inputfilteringalter systemresponse.
Panels(a)and(b)showtheBodegainandphaseresponsesfortheintrinsicsystem
process, P (blue), and the altered process, P˜ (gold). Low-frequency inputs pass
through. High-frequency inputs cause little response. The phase plot shows that
theseprocesses respondslowly, lagging the input.The lag increaseswithfrequency.
Panels (c) and (d) show the responses for theopen loopwith thePIDcontroller,
C, combinedwith the process, P or P˜, as in Fig.2.1b.Note the very high gain in
panel (c) at lower frequenciesand the lowgainathigh frequencies.
Control Theory Tutorial
Basic Concepts Illustrated by Software Examples
- Titel
- Control Theory Tutorial
- Untertitel
- Basic Concepts Illustrated by Software Examples
- Autor
- Steven A. Frank
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Irvine
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-91706-1
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 23.5 cm
- Seiten
- 114
- Schlagwörter
- Control Theory --- Engineering Design Tradeoffs, Robust Control, Feedback Control Systems, Wolfram
- Kategorie
- Informatik