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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Robust and adaptive control for discrete-time systems

Iglesias, Pablo Alberto January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
2

Design of H#infinity# filters

Elsayed, Ahmed Elsayed Ahmed January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
3

An examination of the effect of active elements in the secondary suspension of a railway passenger coach

Carter, Paul Albert January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
4

Feedback Stabilization of Inverted Pendulum Models

Cox, Bruce 01 January 2005 (has links)
Many mechanical systems exhibit nonlinear movement and are subject to perturbations from a desired equilibrium state. These perturbations can greatly reduce the efficiency of the systems. It is therefore desirous to analyze the asymptotic stabilizability of an equilibrium solution of nonlinear systems; an excellent method of performing these analyses is through study of Jacobian linearization's and their properties. Two enlightening examples of nonlinear mechanical systems are the Simple Inverted Pendulum and the Inverted Pendulum on a Cart (PoC). These examples provide insight into both the feasibility and usability of Jacobian linearizations of nonlinear systems, as well as demonstrate the concepts of local stability, observability, controllability and detectability of linearized systems under varying parameters. Some examples of constant disturbances and effects are considered. The ultimate goal is to examine stabilizability, through both static and dynamic feedback controllers, of mechanical systems
5

Performance of PV Generation Feedback Controllers: Power Factor versus Volt-VAR Control Strategies

Agrawal, Ashish 28 May 2015 (has links)
The variable nature of photovoltaic (PV) generation can cause voltage fluctuations in power distribution systems. Feedback control can be used to minimize the voltage fluctuations. This thesis presents the results obtained from comparing the control performance of two types of PV generation feedback control, namely Volt-VAR control and constant power factor control. A three minute PV generation transient is used to evaluate controller performance, where the transient data used originated from one second measurements taken on an actual PV generator. Using the three minute transient, a set of parametric studies are performed on both feedback control strategies. The performance of the control strategies are compared as to voltage control on the distribution feeder and also to the effect that the control may have on transmission system voltage. In considering transmission system voltage, the reactive power drawn from the substation during the transient is evaluated. Simulation results suggest that the choice of control to be implemented should be based on both transmission and distribution system operational concerns. / Master of Science
6

Persistence filters for controller and observer design in singular gain systems

Srikant, Sukumar 06 July 2011 (has links)
This dissertation develops a general framework for designing stabilizing feedback controllers and observers for dynamics with state/time dependent gains on the control signals and measured outputs. These gains have potential singularity periods but satisfy a technically non-trivial condition referred to as persistence of excitation. A persistence filter design constitutes the primary theoretical innovation of this work around which the controller and observer development is centered. Application areas of singular gain systems considered in this study include robotics, biomechanics, intelligent structures and spacecrafts. Several representative problems involving singular, time-dependent gains are addressed. The specific contributions of this dissertation are outlined as follows: (i) a stabilizing feedback for linear, single-input systems with time-varying, singular control scaling is designed that allows arbitrary exponential convergence rate for the closed-loop dynamics. An adaptive control generalization of this result allows asymptotic convergence in presence of unknown plant parameters. An extension to a special, single-input nonlinear system in the controller canonical form is also proposed. It is proven that this control design results in bounded tracking error signals for a trajectory tracking objective; (ii) observer design for linear, single-output systems with time-varying, singular measurement gains is considered. A persistence filter similar in structure to the control counterpart aids an observer design that guarantees exponential state reconstruction with arbitrary convergence rates; (iii) the observer and controller designs are combined to obtain an exponentially stabilizing output feedback controller for linear, single-input, single-output dynamics with singular gains on both the control and measurements. A novel separation property is established as a consequence. The construction motivates applications to stabilization with reversible transducers which can switch between sensor and actuator modes. The results are verified on two illustrative applications, vibration control using piezoelectric devices and inverted pendulum stabilization with a DC motor. The linear result is further generalized to include state dependent gains; (iv) application of the persistence filter theory to spacecraft attitude stabilization using intermittent actuation is explored. The intermittence is characterized by a time-varying, periodically singular control gain. A nonlinear persistence filter allows construction of an exponentially stabilizing controller and simulations verify convergence with intermittent actuation where conventional proportional-derivative control fails; (v) a stabilization result for a special multi-input, linear system with time-varying matrix control gains is presented. The matrix gain is assumed to be diagonal but allows fewer controls than states subject to a controllability assumption in absence of the singular gain matrix. The single-input adaptive control results are shown to extend to the multi-input case. An application to angular velocity stabilization of an underactuated rigid spacecraft is considered. / text

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