Abstract

In many classes of applications like active vibration control and active noise control, the disturbances can be characterized by their frequencies content and their location in a specific region in the frequency domain. The disturbances can be of narrow band type (simple or multiple) or of broad band type. A model can be associated to these disturbances. The knowledge of the disturbance model as well as of the compensator system is necessary for the design of an appropriate control system in order to attenuate (or to reject) their effect upon the system to be controlled. The attenuation of disturbances by feedback is limited by the Bode Integral and the water bed effect upon the output sensitivity function. In such situations, the feedback approach has to be complemented by a disturbance requiring an additional transducer for getting information upon the disturbance. Unfortunately in most of the situations the disturbances are unknown and time-varying and therefore an approach should be considered. The generic term for attenuation of unknown and time-varying disturbances is adaptive regulation (known plant model, unknown and time-varying disturbance model). The paper will review a number of recent developments for feedback compensation of multiple unknown and time- varying narrow band disturbances and for feedforward compensation of broad band disturbances in the presence of the inherent internal positive feedback caused by the coupling between the compensator system and the measurement of the image of the disturbance. Some experimental results obtained on a relevant active vibration control system will illustrate the performance of the various algorithms presented.

Highlights

  • The present paper will focus on adaptive active vibration control

  • The objective of the present paper is to look at the problem of active vibration control from the perspective provided by the automatic control methodology

  • The disturbances can be of narrow band type or of broad band type

Read more

Summary

The problem

Attenuation of vibrations and noise is a current challenge in many areas. Often the term “isolation” is used to characterize the process of attenuation of disturbances or noise. In the control terminology the “secondary path” is the plant to be controlled in order to reduce as much as possible the effect of the disturbance on the controlled output which in the case of active vibration control is the measured residual acceleration or force To achieve this generically a feedback controller will be used. Before moving to the case of feedforward compensation lets mention another fundamental result in feedback control which is of great interest for the problem of vibration attenuation. This is the “internal model” principle which says that the disturbance will be asymptotically cancelled if and only if the controller contains the “model of the disturbance”. Adaptive feedforward compensation requiring an additional transducer for getting a correlated measurement with the disturbance

The adaptive regulation paradigm
An active vibration control system using feedback compensation
An active vibration control system using feedforward-feedback compensation
Identification of the active vibration control system
Background
Controller structure
Direct adaptive regulation using Youla-Kucera parametrization
Robustness considerations
Some experimental results – Attenuation of multiple narrow band disturbances
Basic equations and notations
Development of the algorithms
Some experimental results-Attenuation of broad band disturbances
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.