Model-based knowledge organization: A framework for constructing high-level control systems

1992 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 285-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Wylie ◽  
Mohamed Kamel
Author(s):  
L. Ruiz Huerta ◽  
A. Caballero-Ruiz ◽  
E. Marin-Aguilar ◽  
G. Velasco-Herrera ◽  
T. Baidyk ◽  
...  

This paper describes the experience of the Laboratory of Micromechanics and Mechatronics in the production of low cost micromechanics. A case of study is discussed and explained. The importance of applying simple mechanisms and high level control systems is presented. The basic elements and components needed to develop a high resolution micromachine tool are presented. This case of study is a MicroMachine Tool of 800nm of resolution in its three translational axes. Every single axis is able to move along 20mm. The configuration of the axes is not conventional, thanks to the use of parallel elements that results in semi circular movements.


Author(s):  
Teck Ping Sim ◽  
Perry Y. Li

This paper gives the dynamic analysis of a hydro-mechanical transmission (HMT) drive train with regeneration and independent wheel torque control of a hydraulic hybrid passenger vehicle. From this analysis, we formulate the HMT control system, which is made up of high, mid and low-level control systems. The high-level consists of a state of charge management and the mid-level translates the storage requirement specified by the high-level into desired internal speed and gear ratio to be executed by the low-level. In this paper we focus on the low-level control analysis and design, where the actuation authority to regulate the internal speed variable comes from either the engine (mode 1) or the hydraulic system (mode 2). Experimental studies show good tracking performance of the proposed control systems and enable our vehicle system to be driven in the proposed HMT architecture.


2015 ◽  
Vol 793 ◽  
pp. 100-104
Author(s):  
Abadal Salam T. Hussain ◽  
F. Malek ◽  
S. Faiz Ahmed ◽  
Taha A. Taha ◽  
Shouket A. Ahmed ◽  
...  

This paper discusses the use of the intelligent microcontroller and also discusses the results from the simulation application of fuzzy logic theory to the control of the high voltage direct and alternation current (HVDC)& (HVAC) power station systems. The application considered their implementation in both low and high level control systems in HVDC& HVAC power station systems. The results for the fuzzy logic based controller shows many improvements compared to the conventional HVDC& HVAC control system. The fuzzy logic based controller concept was further successfully extended to high level control of optimization problems such as the power swings. Based on simulation results, HVDC and HVAC breaker design are online protection against unwanted incidents happening to the system.


Actuators ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 301
Author(s):  
Johannes Ultsch ◽  
Julian Ruggaber ◽  
Andreas Pfeiffer ◽  
Christina Schreppel ◽  
Jakub Tobolář ◽  
...  

High-level modeling languages facilitate system modeling and the development of control systems. This is mainly achieved by the automated handling of differential algebraic equations which describe the dynamics of the modeled systems across different physical domains. A wide selection of model libraries provides additional support to the modeling process. Nevertheless, deployment on embedded targets poses a challenge and usually requires manual modification and reimplementation of the control system. The novel proposed eFMI Standard (Functional Mock-up Interface for embedded systems) introduces a workflow and an automated toolchain to simplify the deployment of model-based control systems on embedded targets. This contribution describes the application and verification of the eFMI workflow using a vertical dynamics control problem with an automotive application as an example. The workflow is exemplified by a control system design process which is supported by the a-causal, multi-physical, high-level modeling language Modelica. In this process, the eFMI toolchain is applied to a model-based controller for semi-active dampers and demonstrated using an eFMI-based nonlinear prediction model within a nonlinear Kalman filter. The generated code was successfully tested in different validation steps on the dedicated embedded system. Additionally, tests with a low-volume production electronic control unit (ECU) in a series-produced car demonstrated the correct execution of the controller code under real-world conditions. The novelty of our approach is that it automatically derives an embedded software solution from a high-level multi-physical model with standardized eFMI methodology and tooling. We present one of the first full application scenarios (covering all aspects ranging from multi-physical modeling up to embedded target deployment) of the new eFMI tooling.


2012 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 812-818
Author(s):  
Shahrul Nairn Sidek ◽  
Elliana Ismaif ◽  
Nor Anija Jalaludin
Keyword(s):  

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