Abstract
Practical implementations of active disturbance rejection control (ADRC) will almost always take place in discretized form. Since applications may have quite different needs regarding their discrete-time controllers, this article summarizes and extends the available set of ADRC implementations to provide a suitable variant for as many as possible use cases. In doing so, the gap between quasi-continuous and discrete-time controller tuning is being closed for applications with low sampling frequencies. The main contribution of this article is the derivation of three different discrete-time implementations of error-based ADRC. It is shown that these are almost one-to-one counterparts of existing output-based implementations, to the point where transfer functions and coefficients can be reused in unaltered form. In this way, error-based implementations become firmly rooted in the established landscape of discrete-time ADRC. Furthermore, it becomes possible to equip error-based variants with windup protection abilities known from output-based ADRC.
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