Princeton University Press
Modern Anti-Windup Synthesis: Control Augmentation for Actuator Saturation
Modern Anti-Windup Synthesis: Control Augmentation for Actuator Saturation
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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
Author: Luca Zaccarian, Andrew R. Teel
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 07/31/2011
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.15lbs
Size: 9.20h x 6.20w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9780691147321
About the Author
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.
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