LMIs in Control/D-Stability/Controller D-Stability
LMIs in Control/D-Stability/Controller D-Stability
In some control problems, people are still interested in designing a controller whose poles are located in specific regions of a complex plane, also known as D-stability.
The System
editSuppose we were given the continuous-time system
whose stability was not known. Then the controller that simultaneously stabilizes the above system while ensuring that the poles are at their desired location can be achieved by the controller .
The Data
editIn order to properly define the acceptable region of the poles in the complex plane, we need the following pieces of data:
- matrices , , ,
- rise time ( )
- settling time ( )
- percent overshoot ( )
Having these pieces of information will now help us in formulating the optimization problem.
The Optimization Problem
editUsing the data given above, we can now define our optimization problem. In order to do that, we have to first define the acceptable region in the complex plane that the poles can lie on using the following inequality constraints:
Rise Time:
Settling Time:
Percent Overshoot:
Assume that is the complex pole location, then:
This then allows us to modify our inequality constraints as:
Rise Time:
Settling Time:
Percent Overshoot:
The LMI: The Continuous-Time Controller D-Stability
editKeeping the above inequalities in mind, we observe the following:
Suppose there now exists a symmetric matrix and matrix , we can now determine the controller the following LMIs:
where the resulting controller matrix is .
Conclusion:
editGiven the resulting controller , we can now determine that the pole locations of satisfies the inequality constraints , and .
Implementation
edit- CodeOcean Link - An implementation of the LMI.
Related LMIs
edit- Observer D-Stability - Equivalent D-stability LMI for a continuous-time observer.
External Links
edit- LMI Methods in Optimal and Robust Control - A course on LMIs in Control by Matthew Peet.
- LMI Properties and Applications in Systems, Stability, and Control Theory - A List of LMIs by Ryan Caverly and James Forbes.
- LMIs in Systems and Control Theory - A downloadable book on LMIs by Stephen Boyd.