DynamicSystems ModelingSimulation VB Part1
DynamicSystems ModelingSimulation VB Part1
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Control Design
Requirement Requirement
Analysis Specifications
Modeling & Simulation
Classification of models
● Static/Dynamic
𝑑
– Static: time derivative 𝑑𝑡=0
– Dynamic: function of time
In control, the model must be dynamic to represent the rate change of the variables
as a function of time
● Deterministic/Probabilist
– Deterministic: variables known anytime with no randomness
– Probabilist: a probability distribution describes the uncertainties and variations
of the system variables
● Continuous/Discrete
– variables known at every point in time
– variables known at every sampling time
● Mathematical/Physical
– Model described by coefficients with no physical meaning (black box)
– Physical model (based on convervative laws or physical fundamental laws )
Classical modeling methods for physical models
Note: most examples of this course can be found in Control Engineering: A Modern Approach by P. Belanger,
Ed. Oxford University Press
Modeling from conservative principles
The conservation law of energy states that the total quantity of energy in an
isolated system does not change .
But its nature may change !
Example of conservative principles
Kirchoff’s laws
Motion of a fluid
• Conservation of the mass
𝝏𝝆
+ 𝐝𝐢𝐯𝝆𝒗 = 𝟎
𝝏𝒕
with 𝝆: density and 𝒗: fluid velocity
𝟏
Note: 𝒗. 𝛁 𝒗 = 𝛁 𝒗 𝟐
+ 𝒓𝒐𝒕𝒗Λ𝒗
𝟐
Example of conservative principles
● First law:
Every object will remain at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless
compelled to change its state by the action of an external force
● Second law:
Force is equal to change in momentum (mass times velocity) per change in time. For
an object with a constant mass m, force 𝑭 is the product of an object's mass and its
acceleration 𝒂
𝒅𝒑 𝒅(𝒎𝒗)
𝑭= = = 𝒎𝒂
𝒅𝒕 𝒅𝒕
● Third law:
For every action (force) in nature there is an equal and opposite reaction. In other
words, if object A exerts a force on object B, then object B also exerts an equal force
on object A.
Modeling from fundamental physic laws
● Translation motion:
Force is equal to change in momentum (mass times velocity 𝑝Ԧ = 𝑚𝑣)
Ԧ per change in
time.
𝒅𝒑 𝒅𝒗
𝑭= =𝒎 = 𝒎𝒂
𝒅𝒕 𝒅𝒕
● Rotational motion:
Torque is equal to change in angular momentum (inertia moment times angular
velocity 𝜏Ԧ = 𝐼Ω) per change in time.
𝒅𝝉 𝒅𝛀
𝑻= =𝑰
𝒅𝒕 𝒅𝒕
Example of fundamental physic laws
𝒅𝒗𝟏
𝑴 = −𝑲𝟏 𝒙𝟏 − 𝒙𝟐 − 𝒙𝟏𝟎 − 𝑫 𝒗𝟏 − 𝒗𝟐 − 𝑴𝒈 + 𝒖
𝒅𝒕
𝒅𝒗𝟐
𝒎
𝒅𝒕
= 𝑲𝟏 𝒙𝟏 − 𝒙𝟐 − 𝒙𝟏𝟎 − 𝑲𝟐 𝒙𝟐 − 𝒚𝑹 − 𝒙𝟐𝟎 + 𝑫 𝒗𝟏 − 𝒗𝟐
− 𝒎𝒈 − 𝒖
Example of fundamental physic laws and
conservative laws
Electromechanical actuator connected to a load: system in rotation
Mechanical equation
Gear model:
𝝎𝒎 = 𝑵𝝎
Note: 𝒌𝒆 =𝒌𝒎
Examples of fundamental physic laws
Aircraft model
Notation:
m: aircraft mass
𝚪: acceleration
𝑽: linear speed
𝛀: rotation speed
𝑴: angular momentum
𝑭𝒘 : gravity force
𝑭𝒂𝒆 and 𝑴𝒂𝒆 : aerodynamic forces and couples
𝑭𝑷 and 𝑴𝑷 : propulsion forces and couples
𝚯, 𝝋 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝝍: euler angles (yaw, pitch, roll)
𝜶: incidence angle
Examples of fundamental physic laws
Aircraft model
Force equations:
𝒎𝚪 = 𝑭𝒘 + 𝑭𝒂𝒆 + 𝑭𝑷
Moment equations:
𝑴ሶ + 𝛀Λ𝑴 = 𝑴𝒂𝒆 + 𝑴𝑷
Kinematic equations:
𝚪 = 𝑽ሶ + 𝛀Λ𝑽
with
𝟏
𝑭𝒂𝒆 = − 𝟐 𝝆 𝒛 𝑺𝑽𝟐 𝑪𝑭
𝟏
𝑴𝒂𝒆 = − 𝝆 𝒛 𝑺𝑳𝑽𝟐 𝑪𝑴
𝟐
and
𝝆 𝒛 : air density, S: aircraft reference surface, L: aircraft reference length
𝑪𝑭 and 𝑪𝑴 : aerodynamic coefficients
Modeling with Lagrange’s Equations
Lagrange’s equations are a powerful tool for modeling systems. The approach is based
on the computation of energy.
𝟏 𝟏
Lagrangian: 𝑳 = 𝟐 𝑴 + 𝒎 𝒙ሶ 𝟐 + 𝟐 𝒎𝒍²𝜽ሶ 𝟐 + 𝒎𝒍𝒙ሶ 𝜽𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽
ሶ − 𝑽𝟎 − 𝒎𝒈𝒍 cos 𝜽
Example of Lagrange’s Equations
𝒅 𝝏𝑳 𝝏𝑳
Lagranges’ equations are derived from: 𝒅𝒕 𝝏𝒙ሶ
− 𝝏𝒙 = 𝑭
𝝏𝑳 𝝏𝑳
= 𝑴 + 𝒎 𝒙ሶ + 𝒎𝒍𝜽ሶ cos 𝜽 and 𝝏𝒙 = 𝟎
𝝏𝒙ሶ
𝑴 + 𝒎 𝒙ሷ + 𝒎𝒍𝜽ሷ cos 𝜽 − 𝒎𝒍𝜽ሶ 𝟐 sin 𝜽 = 𝑭
𝒅 𝝏𝑳 𝝏𝑳
− =𝟎
𝒅𝒕 𝝏𝜽ሶ 𝝏𝜽
𝝏𝑳 𝒅 𝝏𝑳
= 𝒎 ሶ 𝟐 + 𝒎𝒍𝒙𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽
𝜽𝒍 ሶ = 𝒎𝒍𝟐 𝜽ሷ − 𝒎𝒍𝒙ሶ 𝜽𝒔𝒊𝒏𝜽
ሶ ሷ
+ 𝒎𝒍𝒙𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽
𝝏𝜽ሶ 𝒅𝒕 𝝏𝜽ሶ
𝝏𝑳
= −𝒎𝒍 𝒙 ሶ
ሶ 𝜽𝒔𝒊𝒏𝜽 + 𝒎𝒈𝒍𝒔𝒊𝒏𝜽
𝝏𝜽
𝒙ሷ cos 𝜽 + 𝒍𝜽ሷ − 𝒈 sin 𝜽 = 𝟎
Conclusion on the modeling
Linear case:
Analysis Analysis
in the frequency domain in the time-domain
𝑑𝑓 1 𝑑²𝑓 1 𝑑3 𝑓 3
𝑓 𝑥 = 𝑓 𝑥0 + ቚ 𝑥 − 𝑥0 + ቚ 𝑥− 𝑥0 ²+ 3ቚ 𝑥 − 𝑥0 +…
𝑑𝑥 𝑥0 2 𝑑𝑥² 𝑥0 6 𝑑𝑥 𝑥0
Some definitions:
nc nk
ak + bk s
ci
G( s) = +
i =1
s + pi k =1 s 2 + 2 k nk s + n2k
Frequency domain analysis
from transfer function
BODE plot:
- magnitude plot: GdB = 20Log10 ( F( jw ) )
- phase plot: f = arg(F( jw ))
NICHOLS plot:
Parametric curve scaled according to :
20Log10 ( F( jw ) ) = f (arg(F( jw )))
NYQUIST plot:
Parametric curve scaled according to :
Im(F( jw )) = f (Re(F( jw ))
Example of frequential analysis
𝐾
𝐻 𝑠 = 𝑠
1+𝜔
0
Example of frequential analysis
𝐾
𝐻 𝑠 =
2𝜀𝑠 𝑠2
1+ 𝜔 +
0 𝜔²0
Example of frequential analysis
1 1
𝐻 𝑠 = 𝑠
1 + 10 1 + 2 ∗ 0.7 𝑠 + 𝑠²
100 100²
𝒅𝒊
𝑳 𝒅𝒕 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝒌𝒆 𝑵𝝎 𝑳𝒔𝒊 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝒌𝒆 𝑵𝝎
𝒗−𝒌𝒆 𝑵𝝎
𝒊= 𝑳𝒔+𝑹
State-space representation
State equations
𝑑𝑦 𝑛 𝑡 𝑑𝑦 𝑘 𝑡
𝑎𝑛 + ⋯ +𝑎𝑘 + ⋯ + 𝑎0 𝑦 𝑡 = 𝑢(𝑡)
𝑑𝑡 𝑛 𝑑𝑡𝑘
𝑡 is “continuous time”
● Question:
Can we write this equation as a set of first-order differential equations?
State equations
Example: Mass moving at the speed 𝑣 under the influence of an external force 𝐹 against a
friction force 𝑘 ∗ 𝑣
𝑑𝑣 𝑑𝑥
𝑀 = 𝐹 − 𝑘 ∗ 𝑣 with =𝑣
𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝑡
𝑑2 𝑥 𝑑𝑥
𝑀 =𝐹−𝑘∗ 1 equation of order 2
𝑑𝑡² 𝑑𝑡
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝑓(𝑥, 𝑢, 𝑡)
𝑦(𝑡) = ℎ(𝑥, 𝑢, 𝑡)
𝑥(𝑡) is a state vector for the system S if it is a vector containing the minimum
number of variables required to satisfy the following property:
If, at a given instant t0, x0(t) is known, then y(t1) and x(t1) can be uniquely determined
for all t1>t0 if u(t) is known on the interval [t0 t1].
u y
Input vector Output vector
System S
x state vector
State space representation: linear system
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝐴 𝑡 𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵 𝑡 𝑢(𝑡)
𝑦(𝑡) = 𝐶 𝑡 𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐷 𝑡 𝑢(𝑡)
If the system is linear and the matrices are constant, the system is linear time-
invariant (LTI).
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝐴𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
𝑦(𝑡) = 𝐶𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐷𝑢 (𝑡)
Example of linear state-space representation
𝑵 𝟏
𝑱𝒆 𝝎ሶ = 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑻𝑳 𝝎ሶ = 𝑱 𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑱 𝑻𝒍
𝒆 𝒆
𝒅𝒊 𝒅𝒊 𝑹 𝟏 𝒌𝒎 𝑵
𝑳 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝒌𝒎 𝑵𝝎 = − 𝒊+ 𝒗− 𝝎
𝒅𝒕 𝒅𝒕 𝑳 𝑳 𝑳
𝒅 𝝎 𝝎 𝒗
= + 𝑻𝒍
𝒅𝒕 𝒊 𝒊
𝝎
If 𝝎 is the output, 𝒀 =
𝒊
Example of linear state-space representation
𝑵 𝟏
𝑱𝒆 𝝎ሶ = 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑻𝑳 𝝎ሶ = 𝑱 𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑱 𝑻𝒍
𝒆 𝒆
𝒅𝒊 𝒅𝒊 𝑹 𝟏 𝒌𝒎 𝑵
𝑳 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝒌𝒎 𝑵𝝎 = − 𝒊+ 𝒗− 𝝎
𝒅𝒕 𝒅𝒕 𝑳 𝑳 𝑳
𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝟏
𝒅 𝝎 𝟎 𝟎 − 𝒗
𝑱𝒆 𝝎 𝑱𝒆
= + 𝑻𝒍
𝒅𝒕 𝒊 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝑹 𝒊 𝟏
− − 𝟎
𝑳 𝑳 𝑳
𝝎
If 𝝎 is the output, 𝒀 = 𝟏 𝟎
𝒊
Example of linear state-space representation
𝑵 𝟏
𝑱𝒆 𝝎ሶ = 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑻𝑳 𝝎ሶ = 𝑱 𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑱 𝑻𝒍
𝒆 𝒆
𝒅𝒊 𝒅𝒊 𝑹 𝟏 𝑵𝒌𝒆
𝑳 𝒅𝒕 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝑵𝒌𝒆 𝝎 𝒅𝒕 = − 𝑳 𝒊 + 𝑳 𝒗 − 𝝎
𝑳
𝒅 𝜽 𝜽 𝒗
𝝎 = 𝝎 + 𝑻𝒍
𝒅𝒕
𝒊 𝒊
𝜽
If 𝜽 is the output, 𝒀 = 𝝎
𝒊
Example of linear state-space representation
𝑵 𝟏
𝑱𝒆 𝝎ሶ = 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑻𝑳 𝝎ሶ = 𝑱 𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑱 𝑻𝒍
𝒆 𝒆
𝒅𝒊 𝒅𝒊 𝑹 𝟏 𝑵𝒌𝒆
𝑳 𝒅𝒕 + 𝑹𝒊 = 𝒗 − 𝑵𝒌𝒆 𝝎 𝒅𝒕 = − 𝑳 𝒊 + 𝑳 𝒗 − 𝝎
𝑳
𝟎 𝟏 𝟎
𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝜽 𝟎 𝟎
𝜽
𝒅 𝟎 𝟎 𝟎 −𝟏 𝒗
𝝎 = 𝑱𝒆 𝝎 + 𝟏 𝑱𝒆 𝑻𝒍
𝒅𝒕
𝒊 𝑵𝒌𝒆 𝑹 𝒊
𝟎 − − 𝑳 𝟎
𝑳 𝑳
𝜽
If 𝜽 is the output, 𝒀 = 𝟏 𝟎 𝟎 𝝎
𝒊
Non uniqueness of state space representation
𝑵 𝟏
𝝎ሶ = 𝒌𝒎 𝒊 − 𝑻𝒍
𝑱𝒆 𝑱𝒆
𝒅𝒊 𝑹 𝟏 𝑵
= − 𝒊 + 𝒗 − 𝒌𝒆 𝝎
𝒅𝒕 𝑳 𝑳 𝑳
𝑻𝒎 = 𝒌𝒎 𝒊
𝟎 𝟏 𝟎 𝟎 𝟎
𝜽 𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝜽 𝒗
𝒅 𝟎 𝟎 −𝟏
1° state-space representation:
𝒅𝒕
𝝎 = 𝑱𝒆 𝝎 + 𝟎
𝟏 𝑱𝒆 𝑻𝒍
𝒊 𝑵𝒌𝒆 𝑹 𝒊
𝟎 − − 𝑳 𝟎
𝑳 𝑳
𝑵𝒌𝒆 𝑹
𝒊 𝟎 − − 𝒊
𝟏 𝟎
𝑳 𝑳 𝒗
𝒅 𝑳 −𝟏
2° state-space representation: 𝝎 = 𝟎 𝟎
𝑵𝒌𝒎 𝝎 + 𝟎 𝑱 𝑻
𝒅𝒕 𝒆 𝒍
𝜽 𝑱𝒆 𝜽
𝟎 𝟏 𝟎 𝟎 𝟎
𝟎 𝟏 𝟎
𝜽 𝑵 𝜽 𝟎 𝟎
𝒅 𝟎 𝟎 −𝟏 𝒗
3° state-space representation: 𝝎 = 𝑱𝒆 𝝎 + 𝟎 𝑱 𝑻
𝒅𝒕 𝒌𝒎 𝒆 𝒍
𝑻𝒎 𝑵𝒌 𝒌 𝑹𝒌𝒎 𝑻𝒎
𝟎 − 𝒆 𝒎 − 𝑳 𝟎
𝑳 𝑳
Example of nonlinear state-space representation
We define 𝑿 = 𝒙 𝜽 𝒗 𝝎 𝒕
𝑥ሶ = 𝑣
𝜃ሶ = 𝜔
𝐹 + 𝑚𝑙𝜔2 sin 𝜃 − 𝑚𝑔 sin 𝜃 cos 𝜃
𝒙ሷ = 𝑣ሶ =
𝑀 + 𝑚(1 − 𝑐𝑜𝑠 2 𝜃)
−𝐹 cos 𝜃 − 𝑚𝑙𝜔2 sin 𝜃 cos 𝜃 + 𝑀 + 𝑚 𝑔 sin 𝜃
𝜃ሷ = 𝜔ሶ =
𝑙(𝑀 + 𝑚 1 − 𝑐𝑜𝑠 2 𝜃 )
Linearization
For small deviations, expanding the components of 𝑓 and 𝑔 in a Taylor series, we get
the linearized system:
𝛿𝑓 𝛿𝑓
Δ𝑥ሶ = ቤ Δ𝑥 + ቤ Δ𝑢
𝛿𝑥 𝑥=𝑥∗ 𝛿𝑢 𝑢=𝑢∗
𝛿𝑔 𝛿𝑔
Δ𝑦ሶ = ቤ Δ𝑥 + ቤ Δ𝑢
𝛿𝑥 𝑦=𝑦∗ 𝛿𝑢 𝑢=𝑢∗
where
𝛿𝑓
ቚ is the Jacobian of 𝑓 with respect to 𝑥
𝛿𝑥 𝑥=𝑥∗
𝛿𝑔
ቚ is the Jacobian of 𝑔 with respect to 𝑥
𝛿𝑥 𝑥=𝑥∗
𝛿𝑓
ቚ is the Jacobian of 𝑓 with respect to 𝑢
𝛿𝑢 𝑢=𝑢∗
𝛿𝑔
ቚ is the Jacobian of 𝑔 with respect to 𝑢
𝛿𝑢 𝑢=𝑢∗
Example of linearization
𝑐 𝐹𝑖𝑛
𝑙ሶ = − 𝐴 𝑢 𝑙 + = 𝑓(𝑙, 𝑢, 𝐹𝑖𝑛 )
𝐴
Compute u*
𝑐 𝐹∗𝑖𝑛 𝐹𝑑
− 𝐴 𝑢 ∗ 𝑙𝑑 + =0 𝑢 ∗=
𝐴 𝑐 𝑙𝑑
Compute
𝜕𝑓 𝑐 𝜕𝑓 𝑐 𝜕𝑓 1
= − 2𝐴 𝑙 𝑢 = −𝐴 𝑙 =𝐴
𝜕𝑙 𝜕𝑢 𝜕𝐹𝑖𝑛
Linearized model
𝒄𝒖∗ 𝒄 𝟏
∆𝒍ሶ = − ∆𝒍 − 𝑨 𝒍𝒅 ∆𝒖 + 𝑨 ∆𝑭𝒊𝒏
𝟐𝑨 𝒍𝒅
Example of linearization
𝑥ሶ = 𝑣
𝜃ሶ = 𝜔
𝐹+𝑚𝑙𝜔2 sin 𝜃−𝑚𝑔 sin 𝜃 cos 𝜃
𝑥ሷ = 𝑣ሶ =
𝑀+𝑚(1−𝑐𝑜𝑠 2 𝜃)
−𝐹 cos 𝜃−𝑚𝑙𝜔2 sin 𝜃 cos 𝜃+ 𝑀+𝑚 𝑔 sin 𝜃
𝜃ሷ = 𝜔ሶ = 𝑙(𝑀+𝑚 1−𝑐𝑜𝑠 2 𝜃 )
Starting from:
𝑥ሶ 𝑡 = 𝐴𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
We get:
e𝑒−−𝐴𝑡
At
x (𝑥t )ሶ = − At −𝐴𝑡
𝑡 e= + Bu (t ))+ 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
𝑒( Ax(t) 𝐴𝑥(𝑡)
− At
𝑒e−𝐴𝑡 ( x𝑥(tሶ )𝑡− Ax t )) = e − At=Bu𝑒(−𝐴𝑡
− (𝐴𝑥(𝑡) t ) 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
t
d − At x(t ) = e A ( t −t 0 )
x(t0 ) + e A(t − ) Bu ( )d
[e x(t )] = e − At Bu (t )
dt t0
t t
d − A − A
d [e x( )]d = e Bu( )d
t0 t0
Initial condition response Particular solution
t
e − At x(t ) − e − At 0 x(t0 ) = e − A Bu ( )d
t0
Observability
𝐶
𝐶𝐴
𝑟𝑎𝑛𝑘 𝑂 = 𝑟𝑎𝑛𝑘 =𝑛
𝐶𝐴𝑛−1
𝑂 is called observability matrix.
Controllability
An LTI system is controllable if, for every 𝑥𝑡 , there exists an input function 𝑢 𝑡 such
that the system state is taken from 𝑥0 to 𝑥𝑡 between 0 and 𝑡.
The controllability allows the state to get any desired value.
The concept of controllability indicates if the actuators can control the state of the
system. If a state is uncontrollable, the it cannot be altered by the input 𝑢.
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝐴𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
𝑦(𝑡) = 𝐶𝑥(𝑡)
And let apply the Laplace transform:
𝑠𝐼𝑋 𝑠 − 𝑥 0 = 𝐴𝑋 𝑠 + 𝐵𝑈 𝑠
𝑌 𝑠 = 𝐶𝑋(𝑠)
Solve and get:
𝑋 𝑠 = 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴 −1 𝐵𝑈 𝑠 + 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴 −1 𝑥(0)
𝑌 𝑠 = 𝐶 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴 −1 𝐵𝑈 𝑠 + 𝐶 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴 −1 𝑥(0)
𝑌 𝑠 −1 𝐵
𝑇 𝑠 = = 𝐶 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴
𝑈 𝑠
Link Transfer function – State-space
representation
𝑌 𝑠 −1
𝑇 𝑠 = = 𝐶 𝑠𝐼 − 𝐴 𝐵
𝑈 𝑠
The order of the LTI model is the highest degree of the characteristic polynomial.
It is egal to the number of states of the model.
Time-domain analysis
from state space representation
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝐴𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵𝑢(𝑡) x(t ) = e A ( t −t 0 )
x(t0 ) + e A(t − ) Bu ( )d
t0
b0 + b1s + ... + bm s m N ( p)
F ( p) = =K
initial conditions : x(0) = x0 a0 + a1s + ... + an s n
D( p )
non uniqueness of state space representation:
poles : pi such than D ( pi ) = 0
x = Mx˜ zeros : zi such that N ( zi ) = 0
!
• The transfer function allows:
• studying the dynamic properties of a system without integrating differential equations
• making a frequential interpretation of the system behaviour.
• State space representation allows:
• representing MIMO (Multi Inputs Multi Outputs) systems using the same formalism,
• analysing governability and observability
• taking into account the initial conditions in a simple way.
Simulation issue
Block diagram representation
Blocks diagrams: interconnection
Differential equation
1
𝜃ሷ = (Γ −mgl sinθ − kl𝜃)ሶ
m𝑙2
Block diagram
𝜃ሷ 𝜃ሶ 𝜃
Block diagram:
State space representation of linear invariant system
X Y
U
B C
A
𝑥(𝑡)
ሶ = 𝐴𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐵𝑢(𝑡)
𝑦(𝑡) = 𝐶𝑥(𝑡) + 𝐷𝑢 (𝑡)
D
Simulation from bloc diagrams is based on causality: inputs are chosen when
implementing the model and the outputs are computed for defined inputs .
Outputs are consequences or effects of inputs (causes).
Matlab/ Simulink ® simulation program only deals with causal models: the model is
defined by mean of assignments (block diagram have an input and an output).
Causal Acausal
Model Model
● Origin of uncertainties:
– Unmodelled (usually high-frequency) dynamics
– nonlinearities in the modelling
– effects of deliberate reduced-order models,
– system-parameter variations due to environmental changes and system wear
Modeling of uncertainties
● Example:
Model of a mass-stiffner-damper system
𝑚𝑥ሷ + 𝑐 𝑥ሶ + 𝑘𝑥 = 𝑓
with 𝑚 , 𝑐, 𝑘 : mass, damping constant and spring stiffness
Model with uncertainties
𝑚𝑂 + 𝛿𝑚 𝑥ሷ + 𝑐0 + 𝛿𝑐 𝑥ሶ + 𝑘0 + 𝛿𝑘 𝑥 = 𝑓
with 𝑚𝑂 , 𝑐0 ,𝑘0 : nominal parameter values
Modeling of uncertainties
Unstructured uncertainties
𝑦 = 𝑥1
Block diagram:
representation of structured uncertainties
d1, d2 and d3 are the signals coming out from the perturbation blocks
𝑑1 = 𝛿𝑚 𝑧1 ; 𝑑2 = 𝛿𝑐 𝑧2 ; 𝑑3 = 𝛿𝑘 𝑧3