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Chapter 1.5

This document discusses different types of controllers used in control systems: proportional (P), integral (I), and derivative (D). It explains the characteristics of each type of controller and how they affect rise time, overshoot, settling time, and steady-state error. The document also provides examples of open-loop response and the response of P, PI, PD, and PID controllers, showing how each controller type improves the response compared to the previous type. The goal is to select gains for a PID controller to achieve fast rise time, no overshoot, and no steady-state error.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views8 pages

Chapter 1.5

This document discusses different types of controllers used in control systems: proportional (P), integral (I), and derivative (D). It explains the characteristics of each type of controller and how they affect rise time, overshoot, settling time, and steady-state error. The document also provides examples of open-loop response and the response of P, PI, PD, and PID controllers, showing how each controller type improves the response compared to the previous type. The goal is to select gains for a PID controller to achieve fast rise time, no overshoot, and no steady-state error.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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1.

5 OPERATION AND RESPONSE OF CONTROL SYSTEM

 Three-term controller
 The characteristics of P, I, and D controllers
 Open-loop step response
 Proportional control
 Proportional-Derivative control
 Proportional-Integral control
 Proportional-Integral-Derivative control

1
The three-term controller
 Kp = Proportional gain
 Ki = Integral gain
 Kd = Derivative gain
The characteristics of P, I, and D controllers

CL RESPONSE RISE TIME OVERSHOOT SETTLING TIME S-S ERROR


Kp Decrease Increase Small Change Decrease
Ki Decrease Increase Increase Eliminate
Kd Small Change Decrease Decrease Small Change

The goal of this problem is to show you how each of Kp, Ki


and Kd contributes to obtain:

• Fast rise time


• Minimum overshoot
• No steady-state error
Open-loop step response

Self-regulated

• The rise time is about one


second, and the settling
time is about 1.5 seconds.
• Let's design a controller
that will reduce the rise
time, reduce the settling
time, and eliminates the
steady-state error.
Proportional control

The proportional
controller reduced both
the rise time and the
steady-state error,
increased the overshoot,
and decreased the settling
time by small amount.
Proportional-Derivative control

This plot shows that the


derivative controller reduced
both the overshoot and the
settling time, and had small
effect on the rise time and
the steady-state error.
Proportional-Integral control
• We have reduced the
proportional gain (Kp) because
the integral controller also
reduces the rise time and
increases the overshoot as the
proportional controller does
(double effect).
• The above response shows that
the integral controller
eliminated the steady-state
error.
Proportional-Integral-Derivative
control

Now, with PID gain, we


have obtained the system
with no overshoot, fast rise
time, and no steady-state
error.

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