In this paper a smooth starter, based on a dc/dc Buck power converter, for the angular velocity trajectory tracking task of a dc permanent magnet motor is presented. To this end, a hierarchical controller is designed, which is integrated by a control associated with the dc motor based on differential flatness at the high level, and a control related with the dc/dc Buck converter based on a cascade control scheme at the low level. The control at the high level allows the dc motor angular velocity to track a desired trajectory and also provides the desired voltage profile that must be tracked by the output voltage of the dc/dc Buck power converter. In order to assure the latter, a cascade control at the low level is designed, considering a sliding mode control for the inner current loop and a proportional-integral control for the outer voltage loop. The hierarchical controller is tested through experiments using MATLAB-Simulink and the DS1104 board from dSPACE. The obtained results show that the desired angular velocity trajectory is well tracked under abrupt variations in the system parameters and that the controller is robust in such operation conditions, confirming the validity of the proposed controller.Index Terms-Cascade control, dc/dc Buck power converter, dc motor, differential flatness, hierarchical controller, proportionalintegral (PI) control, sliding mode control (SMC), smooth starter, trajectory tracking.
I. INTRODUCTIOND C motors are widely used in systems with high control requirements. Thus, rolling mills, double-hulled tankers, and high-precision digital tools can be mentioned as examples of such systems. Generally, to control the stepless velocity and smoothness, adjustment of the armature voltage of the motor is used [1]; while, certainly, applying pulse width modulation Manuscript
This paper presents a two-stage control design for the “Buck power converter/DC motor” system, which allows to perform the sensorless angular velocity trajectory tracking task. The differential flatness property of the DC-motor model is exploited in order to propose a first-stage controller, which is designed to achieve the desired angular velocity trajectory. This controller provides the voltage profiles that must be tracked by the Buck converter. Then, a second-stage controller is meant to assure the aforementioned. This controller is based on flatness property of the Buck power converter model, which provides the input voltage to the DC motor. Due to the fact that the two-stage controller proposed uses the average model of the system, as a practical and effective implementation of this controller, aΣ − Δ-modulator is employed. Finally, in order to verify the control performance of this approach, numerical simulations are included.
A sensorless control based on the exact tracking error dynamics passive output feedback (ETEDPOF) methodology is proposed for executing the angular velocity trajectory tracking task on the "full-bridge Buck inverter-DC motor" system. When such a methodology is applied to the system, the tracking task is achieved by considering only the current sensing and by using some reference trajectories for the system. The reference trajectories are obtained by exploiting the flatness property associated with the mathematical model of the "full-bridge Buck inverter-DC motor" system. Experimental tests are developed for different desired angular velocity trajectories. With the aim of obtaining the experimental results in closed-loop, a "full-bridge Buck inverter-DC motor" prototype, Matlab-Simulink, and a DS1104 board from dSPACE are employed. The experimental results show the effectiveness of the proposed control.INDEX TERMS Motor drivers, power converters, full-bridge Buck inverter, DC motor, passivity control, differential flatness, trajectory tracking.
The trajectory tracking task in a wheeled mobile robot (WMR) is solved by proposing a three-level hierarchical controller that considers the mathematical model of the mechanical structure (differential drive WMR), actuators (DC motors), and power stage (DC/DC Buck power converters). The highest hierarchical level is a kinematic control for the mechanical structure; the medium level includes two controllers based on differential flatness for the actuators; and the lowest hierarchical level consists of two average controllers also based on differential flatness for the power stage. In order to experimentally validate the feasibility of the proposed control scheme, the hierarchical controller is implemented via a Σ-Δ-modulator in a differential drive WMR prototype that we have built. Such an implementation is achieved by using MATLAB-Simulink and the real-time interface ControlDesk together with a DS1104 board. The experimental results show the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed control scheme.
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