Modern Anti-windup Synthesis: Control Augmentation for Actuator Saturation
By (Author) Luca Zaccarian
By (author) Andrew R. Teel
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
11th October 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Applied mathematics
Automatic control engineering
629.83
Hardback
304
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
510g
This book provides a wide variety of state-space--based numerical algorithms for the synthesis of feedback algorithms for linear systems with input saturation. Specifically, it addresses and solves the anti-windup problem, presenting the objectives and terminology of the problem, the mathematical tools behind anti-windup algorithms, and more than twenty algorithms for anti-windup synthesis, illustrated with examples. Luca Zaccarian and Andrew Teel's modern method--combining a state-space approach with algorithms generated by solving linear matrix inequalities--treats MIMO and SISO systems with equal ease. The book, aimed at control engineers as well as graduate students, ranges from very simple anti-windup construction to sophisticated anti-windup algorithms for nonlinear systems. * Describes the fundamental objectives and principles behind anti-windup synthesis for control systems with actuator saturation * Takes a modern, state-space approach to synthesis that applies to both SISO and MIMO systems * Presents algorithms as linear matrix inequalities that can be readily solved with widely available software * Explains mathematical concepts that motivate synthesis algorithms * Uses nonlinear performance curves to quantify performance relative to disturbances of varying magnitudes * Includes anti-windup algorithms for a class of Euler-Lagrange nonlinear systems * Traces the history of anti-windup research through an extensive annotated bibliography
"This book goes a long way toward providing comprehensive coverage of systematic procedures for anti-windup synthesis, emphasizing algorithmic issues and modern design techniques. A valuable resource for researchers and practitioners, it should interest a broad audience in control engineering, as well as in other disciplines, such as mechanical and chemical engineering."Prodromos Daoutidis, University of Minnesota
Luca Zaccarian is associate professor of control engineering at the University of Rome, Tor Vergata. Andrew R. Teel is a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara.