Chapter01 - Introduction To Control System
Chapter01 - Introduction To Control System
Lecture: 1~3
Input:
• The input is the stimulus, excitation or command applied to a control system.
• The input is an applied signal or an excitation signal applied to a control system from an
external energy source in order to produce a specified output.
Output:
• The output is the actual response obtained from a control system when an input is applied.
• It may or may not be equal to the specified response implied by the input.
Plant or Process: The portion of a system which is to be controlled or regulated is called the plant or
the process.
Control: The meaning of control is to regulate, direct or command a system so that the desired object
is obtained. Control is a set of technologies that achieve desired patterns of variations of operational
parameters and sequences for machines and systems by providing the necessary input signals.
The control means to regulate, direct, command, or govern.
Controller: The element of the system itself or external to the system which controls the plant or the
process is called a controller.
Control System: Control system is incorporation of different physical elements linked in such a
manner so as to regulate, direct or command itself to obtain a certain objective. A control system is an
interconnection of components forming a system configuration that will provide the desired system
response. Hence, a control system is an arrangement of physical components connected or related in
such a manner as to command, regulate, direct, or govern itself or another system.
Control Engineering:
Control engineering or Control systems engineering is based on the foundations of feedback theory and
linear system analysis, and it integrates the concepts of network theory and communication theory.
It is the engineering discipline that applies control theory to design systems with predictable behaviors.
The practice uses sensors to measure the output performance of the device being controlled (often a
vehicle) and those measurements can be used to give feedback to the input actuators that can make
corrections toward desired performance. When a device is designed to perform without the need for
human inputs for correction it is called automatic control (such as cruise control for regulating a car's
speed). Multi-disciplinary in nature, control systems engineering activities focus on the implementation
of control systems mainly derived by mathematical modeling of systems of a diverse range.
A control system is a system capable of monitoring and regulating the operation of a process or a
plant. The study of the control system is essentially a study of an important aspect of systems
engineering and its applications.
A control system consists of subsystems and processes (or plants) assembled for the purpose of
controlling the outputs of the process. For example, a furnace produces heat as a result of the flow of
fuel. In this process, the flow of fuel in the input, and heat to be controlled is the output.
There are two common classes of control systems, with many variations and combinations: logic or
sequential controls, and feedback or linear controls. There is also fuzzy logic, which attempts to
combine some of the design simplicity of logic with the utility of linear control. Some devices or
systems are inherently not controllable.
Additive Property which says that for x and y belonging to the domain of the function f then we
have, f(x+y) = f(x) + f(y)
Homogeneous Property which says that for any x belonging the domain of the function f and for any
scalar constant a, we have, f(ax) = af(x)
(b) The differential equation describing the system is linear having its coefficients as constant.
(c) Practically the output i.e. response varies linearly with the input i.e. forcing function for linear
systems.
A control system is said to be nonlinear, if,
(a) It does not satisfy the superposition.
(b) The equations describing the system are nonlinear in nature. The function f(x) = x2 is nonlinear
because
f(x1+x2) = (x1+x2)2 ≠ (x1)2 + (x2)2 and f(ax) = (ax)2 ≠ a(x)2
(c) The output does not vary linearly for nonlinear systems.
Block Diagram
• It represents the structure of a control system.
• It helps to organize the variables and equations representing the control system.
• It is composed of:
– boxes, that represents the components of the system including their causality;
– Lines with arrows that represent the actual dynamic variables, such as speed, pressure,
velocity, etc.
For example, the plant can be a furnace or air conditioning system, where the output variable is
temperature. The controller in a heating system consists of fuel valves and the electrical system that
operates the valves.
The distinguishing characteristic of an open-loop control system is that it cannot compensate for any
disturbances that add to the controller’s driving signal and plant output signal.
Disturbances: Disturbance is a signal which tends to adversely affect the value of the output of a
system. Disturbances are two types:
Internal Disturbance: If such a disturbance is generated within the system itself, it is called an
internal disturbance.
External Disturbance: The disturbance generated outside the system acting as an extra input to the
system in addition to its normal input, affecting the output adversely is called an external disturbance.
For example, if the controller is an electronic amplifier and disturbance 1 as shown in Figure 1.6(a) is
noise, then any additive amplifier noise at the first summing junction will also drive the process,
corrupting the output with the effect of the noise. The output of an open-loop system is corrupted not
only by signals that add to the controller’s commands but also by the disturbance at the output. The
system cannot correct for these disturbances, either.
Open-loop systems do not monitor or correct the output for disturbances; however, they are simpler
and less expensive than closed-loop systems.
The disadvantages of open-loop systems, namely sensitivity to disturbances and inability to correct for
these disturbances, may be overcome by using closed-loop systems.
Closed-loop/feedback control: A closed-loop control is used to achieve the desired system response
using a controller with the output measurement as a feedback signal. The use of feedback enables us
to improve system performance at the cost of introducing the measurement noise and stability
problem.
The input transducer converts the form of the input to the form used by the controller. An output
transducer, or sensor, measures the output response and converts it into the form used by the
controller. [For example, if the controller uses electrical signals to operate the valves of a temperature
control system, the input position and the output temperature are converted to electrical signals. The
input position can be converted to a voltage by a potentiometer, a variable resistor, and the output
temperature can be converted to a voltage by a thermistor, a device whose electrical resistance
changes with temperature.]
The first summing junction algebraically adds the signal from the input to the signal from the output,
which arrives via the feedback path, the return path from the output to the summing junction. In
Figure 1(b), the output signal is subtracted from the input signal. The result is generally called the
actuating signal. However, in systems where both the input and output transducers have unity gain
(that is, the transducer amplifies its input by 1), the actuating signal’s value is equal to the actual
difference between the input and the output. Under this condition, the actuating signal is called the
error.
The closed-loop system compensates for disturbances by measuring the output response, feeding that
measurement back through a feedback path, and comparing that response to the input at the summing
junction. If there is any difference between the two responses, the system drives the plant, via the
actuating signal, to make a correction. If there is no difference, the system does not drive the plant,
since the plant’s response is already the desired response.
Closed-loop systems, then, have the obvious advantage of greater accuracy than open-loop systems.
They are less sensitive to noise, disturbances, and changes in the environment. Transient response and
steady-state error can be controlled more conveniently and with greater flexibility in closed-loop
systems, often by a simple adjustment of gain (amplification) in the loop and sometimes by
redesigning the controller. We refer to the redesign as compensating the system and to the resulting
hardware as a compensator. On the other hand, closed-loop systems are more complex and expensive
than open-loop systems.
Closed-loop systems monitor the output and compare it to the input. If an error is detected, the
system corrects the output and hence corrects the effects of disturbances.
In modern systems, the controller (or compensator) is a digital computer. The advantage of using a
computer is that many loops can be controlled or compensated by the same computer through time-
sharing. Furthermore, any adjustments of the compensator parameters required to yield the desired
response can be made by changes in software rather than hardware.
Analysis is the process by which a system’s performance is determined. For example, we evaluate its
transient response and steady-state error to determine if they meet the desired specifications.
Design is the process by which a system’s performance is created or changed. For example, if a
system’s transient response and steady-state error are analyzed and found not to meet the
specifications, then we change parameters or add additional components to meet the specifications.
Control systems analysis and design focus on three primary objectives:
(1) Producing the desired transient response
(2) Reducing steady-state errors
(3) Achieving stability
The Design Process
The design of a control system follows these steps:
Step 1 Determine a physical system and specifications from requirements.
Step 2 Draw a functional block diagram.
Step 3 Represent the physical system as a schematic.
Step 4 Use the schematic to obtain a mathematical model, such as a block diagram.
Step 5 Reduce the block diagram.
Step 6 Analyze and design the system to meet specified requirements and specifications that include
stability, transient response, and steady-state performance.
Figure 1.11 is feedback and communication during each phase. For example, if testing (Step 6) shows
that requirements have not been met, the system must be redesigned and retested. Sometimes
requirements are conflicting and the design cannot be attained. In these cases, the requirements have
to be re-specified and the design process repeated. Let us now elaborate on each block of Figure 1.11.
Kirchhoff's and Newton's laws lead to mathematical models that describe the relationship between the
input and output of dynamic systems. One such model is the linear, time-invariant differential
equation, Eq. (1.2):
(1.12)
Many systems can be approximately described by this equation, which relates the output, c(t), to the
input, r(t), by way of the system parameters, ai, and bj.
In addition to the differential equation, the transfer function is another way of mathematically modeling
a system. The model is derived from the linear, time-invariant differential equation using what we call
the Laplace to transform. Although the transfer function can be used only for linear systems, it yields
more intuitive information than the differential equation. We will be able to change system parameters
and rapidly sense the effect of these changes on the system response. The transfer function is also
useful in modeling the interconnection of subsystems by forming a block diagram.
Still another model is the state-space representation. One advantage of state-space methods is that
they can also be used for systems that cannot be described by linear differential equations. Further,
state-space methods are used to model systems for simulation on the digital computer. Basically, this
representation turns an nth-order differential equation into n simultaneous first-order differential
equations.
Ref: [1] Norman S. Nise; [2] Dorf & Bishop; [3] D’Azzo.