Lecture 1
Lecture 1
Ilia G. Polushin
January 7, 2003
Introduction
Control is a term that describes the process of forcing a system to behave in a desired
way in order to achieve certain objective(s)/goal(s).
Examples.
• Thousands of industries consider control in some or the other form such as quality
control, production control, temperature control, pollution control, precision control,
etc.
• Robot control.
• Human body implements highly sophisticated control schemes for numerous purposes
such as body temperature regulation, hormone level control, etc.
Control Engineering is not restricted to one field of engineering but equally ap-
plicable to different branches of engineering such as aeronautical, mechanical,
chemical, civil, computer, electrical etc.
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Control systems
Typically, a system (process) has one or more inputs and one or more outputs, which
can be represented by a block, as shown in figure 1.
Depending on configuration, control systems can be categorized into mainly two classes:
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Example of an open loop control system: room temperature control. The
structure of this system is presented in figure 3. In this system the inlet vent temperature is
the input (control signal), and the output (controlled variable) is the room air temperature.
The actuator comprises of the furnace and a pre-programmed on-off switch that triggers
the furnace, which in turn activates the inlet vent temperature. The ambient temperature
acts as a disturbance.
The open-loop control system cannot adjust to changes of the ambient tem-
perature.
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Figure 4: Example of an open loop control system: controlling the position of a missile
launcher from a remote location
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Figure 6: Example of a closed-loop control system: room temperature control
• It is negative feedback (the measured output is subtracted from the reference signal).
The previous example is modified by introducing a position feedback loop. This feedback
loop consists of potentiometer R2 and the difference amplifier. Should an error exists, it
is amplified and applied to a motor drive which adjusts the output-shaft position until it
agrees with the input-shaft position, and the error is zero.
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Feedback control systems used to control position, velocity, and acceleration are very
common in industrial applications. They have been given the special name of servomech-
anisms.
The important feature of the using of feedback is that the feedback control
system can handle changes in the system. On the other hand, improper use
of feedback can make the system unstable, so the stability issue arises.
Suppose the captain of the submarine wants the submarine to ”hover” at a desired depth,
and sets the desired depth as a voltage from calibrated potentiometer. The actual depth is
measured by a pressure transducer which produces a voltage proportional to depth. The
difference between the desired and the actual depth is amplified which then drives a motor
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that rotates the stern plane actuator angle θ in order that the stern plane rotation reduces
the depth error of the submarine to zero.
Three steps:
References
[1] S. M. Shinners, Modern Control System Theory and Design. New York: Wiley, 2nd ed.,
1998.