The technical field of this invention is feedback control systems employing proportional, integral and differential compensation.
Feedback control systems, also known as servomechanisms or servo devices have been developed using a wide variety of technologies and techniques. These systems have a broad spectrum of applications. Many special types of servos are used in high performance equipment. A special type of servo loop acting to achieve proportional, integral and differential (PID) compensation is often used to processes an error signal and generate a command. The goal of this loop is to generate the proper command to ultimately drive the error signal to zero. The command generated by the PID compensator consists of three components.
Consider the case where the error is a position error. The task of the PID compensator is to drive the servomechanism to a commanded position, thus reducing the position error to zero. The design of the proper PID compensator is well-known to practitioners in the field of control systems and the details of such design approaches are not the major focus of this invention. Conventional design techniques assure that the design is stable with appropriate stability margins. Digital servos are increasingly common because they are very effective due to development in recent years.
When a design is implemented considerations must be given to factors such as mechanical, electrical and timing limits. These limits may be exceeded if the mechanism moves too quickly. An example, is when the compensator generates a command to a very fast actuator and the loop must have a large bandwidth to hold the position in the presence of high frequency disturbances. Such devices work well when the position error is small and all techniques have been brought to bear to overcome these disturbances. Consider, what happens when a new position command is issued. The position error is very large resulting in an extremely large component of proportional correction signal. This results in a large correction command given to the actuator driver that tends to cause correction. The integral component also begins changing but its effect is not as immediate. The derivative component is an impulse because the rate of change of the position error is large. In a prior art design a high performance actuator can quickly reach high speeds.
There is need to introduce a moderating factor in the servo operation to prevent unwarranted over-drive of the high performance actuator. The PID compensator of
This invention describes a reconfigured form of the well known proportional, integral, differential (PID) servo compensator. The reconfiguration provides inherent limits on the rate of change of the position error without affecting the performance of the servo loop when the position error is small. The technique maintains the high-performance of current PID servo compensators when the position error is close to zero, the operating point of primary interest.
These and other aspects of this invention are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
This invention recognizes an important principle. An alternate form of PID servo compensator providing rate limiting is desirable. This invention permits computations of the rate command based on the position error so that the rate command could be limited.
Employing the principle of superposition since these are linear networks, the overall transfer function can be derived by inspection in terms of the four forward paths. In operational mathematics notation, Equation 2 represents mathematically the transfer functional of the block diagram of FIG. 3. For simplicity and conciseness in describing the techniques of the invention, the differentiator poles, W3 203 and W4 204, are omitted at this point from
The block diagram of
Equating the coefficients of the PID terms in Equation 1 and Equation 2 yields three equations in three unknowns, illustrated in Equations 3.
Solving Equation 3 for KR, KP, and KI in terms of W1 and W2 can yield complex numbers. This form is thus not always realizable in hardware.
Another path or paths must be added in the controller of
Equation 4 shows the transfer function for the compensator of FIG. 4. The limit blocks are ignored for now. The differentiator poles, W3 203 and W4 204, are omitted from
Equating the coefficients as before yields three equations with four unknowns:
Equations 5 have more than one solution because there are four unknowns. Solving for KI results in a quadratic.
The value of KC can be selected such that the quadratic term of Equation 6 is zero, guaranteeing a single real value for KI. This becomes the fourth equation in the solution. The results of the four equations are shown in Equation 7. These coefficients yield the same closed loop results as the original form of Equation 1.
Now the rate limit can be applied. Note that the commanded rate goes to two different limit blocks 406 and 411. When the position error is large and the measured rate equals the desired rate in steady state operation (constant slew rate), a constant output that counteracts friction or any torque offsets such as gravity or springs is desirable. Of course the output is not truly constant, since the spring torque may change as the actuator moves but that is why the loop is closed. This constant output should come from the integrator. By setting rate_limit—2 to the desired rate, the integrator input becomes zeros. Thus the integrator output is instantaneously constant. Setting rate_limit—1 equal to the desired rate times KD, the other paths contribute nothing to the output in this particular steady state condition.
What do the two limits do to the stability and performance of the servo loop? The condition where neither limit is reached is identical to the original design that was stable by design. When the position error is mid-range where the position error exceeds rate_limit—2 but not rate_limit—1, the limit has the same effect as reducing KR to KR′ such that [KR×position_error]=rate_limit—2. In Equation 5, this reduction of KR only affects the integral coefficient so that now KC×KR′×KI=W1. So reducing KR has the effect of reducing W1. This reduces the effect of the integrator by reducing the frequency where the integrator ends. In the process, it reduces the gain of all frequencies up to the original W1.
Assuming that the crossover frequencies where the gain and phase margins are recorded are sufficiently higher than W1, the reduction of W1 has little effect on the stability of the controller. This is in fact the very type of servo that this invention is useful for, where the servo has a high bandwidth.
When the position error is large and exceeds both rate_limit—2 and rate_limit—1, the effect is similar to a reduction in KR for both paths. As before, refer to the reduced gain of the integral path as KR′. Because rate_limit—1 equals rate_limit—2×KD, the equivalent KR for that path is KR′×KD.
Note from equation 5 that the derivative term is still not affected by the limits. Both the proportional and integral paths are affected. The frequency where the integral region ends continues to decrease and the gain of the proportional region decreases as the position error increases.
As before, this has little effect on the higher frequencies so it has little effect on the stability of the controller. The exact effect of the limits on the stability of the servo can be analyzed if desired.
The two derivative low pass filters with respective cut off frequencies of W3 and W4 are provided in the derivative path following derivative block 401 in a manner similar to that illustrated in FIG. 1.
There are many ways to configure a PID compensator but no implementation that is the same as described in this invention. Other common ways to accomplish rate control or a position servo are listed below.
This invention is usable in any servo that meets the criteria of high bandwidth, fast actuator and required rate limit during moves.
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