Observer Design for Nonlinear Systems With Time Periodic Coefficients Via Normal Form Theory

Author(s):  
Yandong Zhang ◽  
S. C. Sinha

For most complex dynamic systems, it is not possible to measure all system states in a direct fashion. Thus for dynamic characterization and controller design purposes, it is often necessary to design an observer in order to get an estimate of those states which cannot be measured directly. In this work, the problem of designing state observers for free systems with time periodic coefficients is addressed. For linear time-periodic systems, it is shown that the observer design problem is the duality of the controller design problem. The state observer is constructed using a symbolic controller design method developed earlier using the Chebyshev expansion technique. For the nonlinear time periodic systems, the observer design is investigated using the Poincare´ normal form technique. The local identity observer is designed by using a set of near identity coordinate transformations which can be constructed in the ascending order of nonlinearity. These observer design methods are implemented using a symbolic computational algorithm and several illustrative examples are given to show the effectiveness of the methods.

Author(s):  
Yandong Zhang ◽  
S. C. Sinha

For most complex dynamic systems, it is not always possible to measure all system states by a direct measurement technique. Thus for dynamic characterization and controller design purposes, it is often necessary to design an observer in order to get an estimate of those states, which cannot be measured directly. In this work, the problem of designing state observers for free systems (linear as well as nonlinear) with time-periodic coefficients is addressed. It is shown that, for linear periodic systems, the observer design problem is the duality of the controller design problem. The state observer is constructed using a symbolic controller design method developed earlier using a Chebyshev expansion technique where the Floquet multipliers can be placed in the desired locations within the unit circle. For nonlinear time-periodic systems, an observer design methodology is developed using the Lyapunov–Floquet transformation and the Poincaré normal form technique. First, a set of time-periodic near identity coordinate transformations are applied to convert the nonlinear problem to a linear observer design problem. The conditions for existence of such invertible maps and their computations are discussed. Then the local identity observers are designed and implemented using a symbolic computational algorithm. Several illustrative examples are included to show the effectiveness of the proposed methods.


Author(s):  
Yandong Zhang ◽  
S. C. Sinha

The problem of designing controllers for nonlinear time periodic systems is addressed. The idea is to find proper coordinate transformations and state feedback under which the original system can be (approximately) transformed into a linear control system. Then a controller can be designed using the well-known linear method to guarantee the stability of the system. We propose two approaches for the feedback linearization of the nonlinear time periodic system. The first approach is designed to achieve local control of nonlinear systems with periodic coefficients desired to be driven either to a periodic orbit or to a fixed point. In this case the system equations can be represented by a quasi-linear system containing nonlinear monomials with periodic coefficients. Using near identity transformations and normal form theory, the original close loop problem is approximately transformed into a linear time periodic system with unknown gains. Then by using a symbolic computation method, the Floquet multipliers are placed in the desired locations in order to determine the control gains. We also give the sufficient conditions under which the system is feedback linearizable up to the rth order. The second approach is a generalization of the classical exact feedback linearization method for autonomous systems but applicable to general time-periodic affine systems. By defining a time-dependent Lie operator, the input-output nonlinear time periodic problem is transformed into a linear autonomous problem for which control system can be designed easily. A sufficient condition under which the system is feedback linearizable is also given.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yandong Zhang ◽  
S. C. Sinha

The problem of designing controllers for nonlinear time periodic systems via feedback linearization is addressed. The idea is to find proper coordinate transformations and state feedback under which the original system can be (exactly or approximately) transformed into a linear time periodic control system. Then a controller can be designed to guarantee the stability of the system. Our approach is designed to achieve local control of nonlinear systems with periodic coefficients desired to be driven either to a periodic orbit or to a fixed point. The system equations are represented by a quasi-linear system containing nonlinear monomials with periodic coefficients. Using near identity transformations and normal form theory, the original close loop problem is approximately transformed into a linear time periodic system with unknown gains. Then by using a symbolic computation method, the Floquet multipliers are placed in the desired locations in order to determine the control gains. We also give the sufficient conditions under which the system is feedback linearizable up to the rth order.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (8) ◽  
pp. 2171-2184
Author(s):  
Elvan Kuzucu Hidir ◽  
Ismail Uyanik ◽  
Ömer Morgül

The analysis, identification and control of periodic systems has gained increasing interest during the last few decades due to the increased use of dynamical systems that exhibit periodic motion. The vast majority of these studies focus on the analysis and control problem for a known state-space formulation of the linear time-periodic (LTP) system. On the other hand, there are also some studies that focus on data-driven identification of LTP systems with unknown state-space formulations. However, most of these methods provide numerical estimates for the harmonic transfer functions (HTFs) of an LTP system that are extremely difficult to work with during controller design. The goal of this paper is to provide a simple controller design methodology for unknown LTP systems by utilizing so-called HTFs estimates. To this end, we first build a mathematical basis of LTP controller design for known LTP systems using the Nyquist diagrams and analytically derived HTFs. We propose a new methodology to design P-, PD- and PID-type controllers for LTP systems using Nyquist diagrams and the eigenlocus of the HTFs. Having established the HTF-based controller design procedure, we extend our methodology to unknown LTP systems by presenting a new sum-of-cosine signal-based data-driven system identification method. We show that the proposed data-driven controller design method allows estimation of the HTFs and it provides simple tools for optimizing certain time-domain performance metrics. We provide numerical examples for both known and unknown LTP system cases to illustrate the performance of the proposed controller design methodology.


Author(s):  
Susheelkumar C. Subramanian ◽  
Sangram Redkar

Abstract The investigation of stability bounds for linear time periodic systems have been performed using various methods in the past. The Normal Forms technique has been predominantly used for analysis of nonlinear equations. In this work, the authors draw comparisons between the Floquet theory and Normal Forms technique for a linear system with time periodic coefficients. Moreover, the authors utilize the Normal Forms technique to transform a linear time periodic system to a time-invariant system by using near identity transformation, similar to the Lyapunov Floquet (L-F) transformation. The authors employ an intuitive state augmentation technique, modal transformation and near identity transformations to enable the application of time independent Normal Forms directly without the use of detuning or book-keeping parameter. This method provides a closed form analytical expression for the state transition matrix with the elements as a function of time. Additionally, stability analysis is performed on the transformed system and the resulting transitions curves are compared with that of numerical simulation results. Furthermore, a linear feedback controller design is discussed based on the stability bounds and the implementation of an effective feedback controller for an unstable case is discussed. The theory is validated and verified using numerical simulations of temporal variation of a simple linear Mathieu equation.


Author(s):  
Eric A. Butcher ◽  
S. C. Sinha

Abstract In this paper, some analysis techniques for general time-periodic nonlinear Hamiltonian dynamical systems have been presented. Unlike the traditional perturbation or averaging methods, these techniques are applicable to systems whose Hamiltonians contain ‘strong’ parametric excitation terms. First, the well-known Liapunov-Floquet (L-F) transformation is utilized to convert the time-periodic dynamical system to a form in which the linear pan is time invariant. At this stage two viable alternatives are suggested. In the first approach, the resulting dynamical system is transformed to a Hamiltonian normal form through an application of permutation matrices. It is demonstrated that this approach is simple and straightforward as opposed to the traditional methods where a complicated set of algebraic manipulations are required. Since these operations yield Hamiltonians whose quadratic parts are integrable and time-invariant, further analysis can be carried out by the application of action-angle coordinate transformation and Hamiltonian perturbation theory. In the second approach, the resulting quasilinear time-periodic system (with a time-invariant linear part) is directly analyzed via time-dependent normal form theory. In many instances, the system can be analyzed via time-independent normal form theory or by the method of averaging. Examples of a nonlinear Mathieu’s equation and coupled nonlinear Mathieu’s equations are included and some preliminary results are presented.


Author(s):  
Hamidreza Kazemi ◽  
Mohamed Y. Nada ◽  
Tarek Mealy ◽  
Ahmed F. Abdelshafy ◽  
Filippo Capolino

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