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Design of PI and PID Controllers With Transient Performance Specification

National Taiwan Ocean University Department of Communications, Navigation and Control Engineering. Design of PI and PID Controllers With Transient Performance Specification. J.C.Basilio and S.R.Matos. Professor : 曾慶耀 Speaker :鄭凱仁 ID : 10067019 Date : 11/17/2011.

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Design of PI and PID Controllers With Transient Performance Specification

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  1. National Taiwan Ocean University Department of Communications, Navigation and Control Engineering Design of PI and PID Controllers WithTransient Performance Specification J.C.Basilio and S.R.Matos Professor : 曾慶耀 Speaker:鄭凱仁 ID:10067019 Date:11/17/2011

  2. Outline • Introduction • DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITHMONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE A. Design of a PI Controller B. Design of a PID Controller C. Example • DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE A. Example • Conclusions

  3. Introduction • PID controllers are widely used in industrial control systems because of the reduced number of parameters to be tuned. The most popular design technique is the Ziegler–Nichols method • Ziegler–Nichols method , besides being suitable only for systems with monotonic step response , the compensated systems whose controllers are tuned in accordance with the Ziegler–Nichols method have generally a step response with a high-percent overshoot • In thispaper, tuning methods for proposed : I. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE II. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE

  4. Introduction The corresponding transfer function is given as The main features of PID controllers are the capacity to eliminate steady-state error of the response to a step reference signal (integral action) and the capacity to transient stability(derivative).

  5. Introduction The parameter setting, according to the Ziegler–Nichols method, is carried out in four steps.

  6. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE The parameter K can be computed as follows

  7. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE one case see that for an ideal, critically damped second-order system with transfer function (3) , the response to a step with amplitude A , as follows:

  8. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE A. Design of a PI Controller Consider the feedback system of Fig. 3

  9. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE Namely, ,the feedback system will be critically damped system will be underdamped (overdamped).

  10. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE by replacing in the expression for the percent overshoot of a second-order system

  11. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE for a system with a monotonic step response can be carried out according to the following algorithm:

  12. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE B. Design of a PID Controller It should be noted that since the open-loop transfer function:

  13. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  14. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  15. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  16. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE Therefore, the tune of a PID controller for a plant with montonic step response can be carried out as follows:

  17. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE C. Example illustrated by the design of PI and PID controllers for the following :

  18. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  19. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  20. DESIGN OF PI AND PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH MONOTONIC STEP RESPONSE

  21. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE Systems with underdamped step response may be approximated by a second-order system with the transfer function For an ideal second-order system with transfer function (11), the response to a step input with amplitude A is given as

  22. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE the damping coefficient and the natural frequency can be determined as follows

  23. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE can be rewritten as Since system (11) has a pair of complex poles, namely a natural choice for the controller zeros would be such that the numerator polynomial of K(s) and the denominator polynomial of G(s) cancel. In order for this condition to happen, must satisfy

  24. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE The relationship between the settling time and the time constant of a first-order system is therefore, for a given settling time , the controller gain should be adjusted to

  25. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE The results of this section can be summarized in the following algorithm:

  26. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE A. Example transfer function For this plant, the unit-step response is shown in Fig. 11, from which it is possible to verify that

  27. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE

  28. DESIGN OF PID CONTROLLERS FOR PLANTS WITH UNDERDAMPED STEP RESPONSE

  29. Conclusions • Ziegler–Nichols method, has good disturbance rejection , but they are based on the plant step response,generally a step response with a high-percent overshoot. • In this paper, provide systematic means to adjust the proportional gain in order to have no overshoot on the closed-loop step response. • PID controllers can be designed for plants with underdamped step response. • since the proposed methodology is based on root-locus diagrams and, therefore, can be used in an undergraduate control course

  30. The End

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