Modern Control Engineering

(Chris Devlin) #1
Section 8–3 / Design of PID Controllers with Frequency-Response Approach 577

1
K s(s+ 1)(s+5)

(s+ 0.65)^2
s

jv
j 8

j 6

j 4

j 2


  • j 6

  • j 8

  • j 4

  • j 2

  • 10 – 8 – 6 – 4 – 2 0 2 s


K= 60

K= 30.322

K= 30.322

K= 13.846

K= 13.846

K= 13.846

K= 60

z= 0.358

z= 0.67

+





Figure 8–12
Root-locus diagram
of system when PID
controller has double
zero at s=–0.65.
K=13.846
corresponds to
given by Equation (8–1)
andK=30.322
corresponds to
given by Equation (8–2).


Gc(s)

Gc(s)

the values of Kandaare
K=29, a=0.25
with the maximum overshoot equal to 9.52%and settling time equal to 1.78 sec. Another possible
solution obtained there is that
K=27, a=0.2
with the 5.5%maximum overshoot and 2.89 sec of settling time. See ProblemA–8–12for details.

Approach 8–4 Design of PID Controllers with Computational Optimization


APPROACH


In this section we present a design of a PID controller based on the frequency-response


approach.


Consider the system shown in Figure 8–13. Using a frequency-response approach, de-


sign a PID controller such that the static velocity error constant is 4 sec−^1 , phase margin


is 50° or more, and gain margin is 10 dB or more. Obtain the unit-step and unit-ramp


response curves of the PID controlled system with MATLAB.


Let us choose the PID controller to be


Gc(s)=


K(as+ 1 )(bs+ 1 )


s

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