2010
DOI: 10.1260/1756-8250.2.4.219
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Multivariable Control in a Critically Loaded Compressor Cascade

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…As both systems behave rather similarly, it could be expected that with similar approaches in controller synthesis rather similar control laws are obtained. As in other setups [32], a cascaded control architecture turns out to be important to improve the results. Spending a higher effort in mathematical modeling of the process in the first place pays out with a more aggressive or a more robust but still aggressive controller, as it is seen for the glider.…”
Section: Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…As both systems behave rather similarly, it could be expected that with similar approaches in controller synthesis rather similar control laws are obtained. As in other setups [32], a cascaded control architecture turns out to be important to improve the results. Spending a higher effort in mathematical modeling of the process in the first place pays out with a more aggressive or a more robust but still aggressive controller, as it is seen for the glider.…”
Section: Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Robust controllers act conservatively to respect neglected nonlinearities in this linear approach, and thus limit the achievable bandwidth. In many AFC applications [3,59,61,62], this conservatism can be reduced significantly by postmultiplying the controller with the inverse of the nonlinear static gain of the plant. By this, the H ∞ controller acts on a seemingly linear plant, at least from the steadystate point of view.…”
Section: Closed-loop Controlmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On highly loaded compressor cascades, Wiederhold et al 6 used jet flows to suppress the development of boundary layers on the blade surfaces and reduce blockages in the cascade passages. The results showed that when the jet flow rate was 0.5% of the main flow rate, the static pressure ratio increased by more than 10%.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%