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Non-linear control

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Non-linear control is a sub-division of control engineering which deals with the control of non-linear systems. Non-linear systems are those systems whose input-output behaviour is very much unpredictable. For linear systems, we have a lot of well-established control techniques like root-locus, Bode plot, Nyquist criterion, state-feedback, pole-placement etc.

Contents

Properties of non-linear systems

  • They do not follow the principle of superposition (linearity and homogeneity).
  • They may have multiple isolated equilibrium points.
  • They exhibit properties like limit-cycle, bifurcation, chaos.
  • For a sinusoidal input, the output signal may contain many harmonics and sub-harmonics with various amplitudes and phase differences. While for a linear system, we know that for u= A sin(ωt), output y = B sin(ωt+ φ).

Analysis and control of non-linear systems

The Lur'e problem

In this section, we will study the stability of an important class of control systems namely feedback systems whose forward path contains a linear time-invariant subsystem and whose feedback path contains a memory-less and possibly time-varying non-linearity. This class of problem is named for A. I. Lur'e.

Lure Problem Block Diagram

The linear part is characterized by four matrices (A,B,C,D). The non-linear part is Φ ∈ [a,b], a<b, is a sector non-linearity.

Absolute stability problem

Given that

  1. (A,B) is controllable and (C,A) is observable
  2. two real numbers a,b with a<b.

The problem is to derive conditions involving only the transfer matrix H(.) and the numbers a,b, such that x=0 is a globally uniformly asymptotically stable equilibrium of the system (1)-(3) for every function Φ ∈ [a,b]. This is also known as Lure's problem.

We will discuss two main theorems concerning Lure's problem.

  • The Circle criterion
  • The Popov criterion.

Popov criterion

The class of systems studied by Popov is described by

\begin{matrix} \dot{x}&=&Ax+bu \\ \dot{\xi}&=&u  \\ y&=&cx+d\xi \quad (1)  \end{matrix}

u = -\phi (y) \quad (2)

where x ∈ Rn, ξ,u,y are scalars and A,b,c,d have commensurate dimensions. The non-linear element Φ: R → R is a time-invariant nonlinearity belonging to open sector (0, ∞). This means that

Φ(0) = 0, y Φ(y) > 0, ∀ y ≠ 0; (3)

The transfer function from u to y is given by

h(s) = \frac{d}{s} + c(sI-A)^{-1}b \quad \quad (4)

Things to be noted

  • Popov criterion is applicable only to autonomous systems.
  • The system studied by Popov has a pole at the origin and there is no throughput from input to output.
  • Non-linearity Φ belongs to a open sector.

Theorem: Consider the system (1) and (2) and suppose

  1. A is Hurwitz
  2. (A,b) is controllable
  3. (A,c) is observable
  4. d>0 and
  5. Φ ∈ (0,∞)

then the above system is globally asymptotically stable if there exists a number r>0 such that
infω ∈ R Re[(1+jωr)h(jω)] > 0

References

  • A. I. Lur'e and V. N. Postnikov, "On the theory of stability of control systems," Applied mathematics and mechanics, 8(3), 1944, (in Russian).
  • M. Vidyasagar, Nonlinear Systems Analysis, second edition, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632.

See also

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Non-linear_control (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-linear_control) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Non-linear_control&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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