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The system-matched hold and the intermittent control separation principle

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 11:26 authored by Peter Gawthrop, Liuping WangLiuping Wang
An intermittent controller is a form of hybrid controller which adds a generalised sample and hold mechanism to an underlying continuous-time feedback control system. The sampling may be non-uniform or event driven. One particular form of the hold, termed the system-matched hold (SMH) mimics the behaviour of the closed-loop feedback control signal during the intermittent intervals. It is shown in this article that this choice of hold leads to an intermittent separation principle. In particular, this simple analytical result ensures that when using the SMH, the separation properties of the underlying state-estimate feedback control system carry over to the intermittent control system. This separation principle for the SMH has the important consequence that, unlike the zero-order hold case, the stability of the closed-loop system in the fixed sampling case is not dependent on sample interval. It is therefore suggested that the SMH should replace the conventional zero-order hold in circumstances where the sample interval is unknown, time-varying or determined by events.

History

Journal

International Journal Of Control

Volume

84

Issue

12

Start page

1965

End page

1974

Total pages

10

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC

Former Identifier

2006032340

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-05-25