Quantitative Feedback Theory
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control theory Control theory is a field of mathematics that deals with the control of dynamical systems in engineered processes and machines. The objective is to develop a model or algorithm governing the application of system inputs to drive the system to a ...
, quantitative feedback theory (QFT), developed by
Isaac Horowitz Isaac Horowitz (December 15, 1920 - 2005) was a notable scientist with significant contributions to automatic control theory. He developed and championed the Quantitative Feedback Theory which for the first time introduced a formal combination of ...
(Horowitz, 1963; Horowitz and Sidi, 1972), is a
frequency domain In physics, electronics, control systems engineering, and statistics, the frequency domain refers to the analysis of mathematical functions or signals with respect to frequency, rather than time. Put simply, a time-domain graph shows how a s ...
technique utilising the Nichols chart (NC) in order to achieve a desired robust design over a specified region of plant uncertainty. Desired
time-domain Time domain refers to the analysis of mathematical functions, physical signals or time series of economic or environmental data, with respect to time. In the time domain, the signal or function's value is known for all real numbers, for the ca ...
responses are translated into frequency domain tolerances, which lead to bounds (or constraints) on the loop transmission function. The design process is highly transparent, allowing a designer to see what trade-offs are necessary to achieve a desired performance level.


Plant templates

Usually any system can be represented by its Transfer Function ( Laplace in continuous time domain), after getting the model of a system. As a result of experimental measurement, values of coefficients in the Transfer Function have a range of uncertainty. Therefore, in QFT every parameter of this function is included into an interval of possible values, and the system may be represented by a family of plants rather than by a standalone expression. \mathcal(s) = \left \lbrace \dfrac, \forall z_i \in _, z_ p_j \in _, p_{j,max}\right \rbrace A frequency analysis is performed for a finite number of representative frequencies and a set of ''templates'' are obtained in the NC diagram which encloses the behaviour of the open loop system at each frequency.


Frequency bounds

Usually system performance is described as robustness to instability (phase and gain margins), rejection to input and output noise disturbances and reference tracking. In the QFT design methodology these requirements on the system are represented as frequency constraints, conditions that the compensated system loop (controller and plant) could not break. With these considerations and the selection of the same set of frequencies used for the templates, the frequency constraints for the behaviour of the system loop are computed and represented on the Nichols Chart (NC) as curves. To achieve the problem requirements, a set of rules on the Open Loop Transfer Function, for the nominal plant L_0(s) = G(s)P_0(s) may be found. That means the nominal loop is not allowed to have its frequency value below the constraint for the same frequency, and at high frequencies the loop should not cross the ''Ultra High Frequency Boundary'' (UHFB), which has an oval shape in the center of the NC.


Loop shaping

The controller design is undertaken on the NC considering the frequency constraints and the ''nominal loop'' L_0(s) of the system. At this point, the designer begins to introduce controller functions (G(s)) and tune their parameters, a process called Loop Shaping, until the best possible controller is reached without violation of the frequency constraints. The experience of the designer is an important factor in finding a satisfactory controller that not only complies with the frequency restrictions but with the possible realization, complexity, and quality. For this stage there currently exist different CAD (''Computer Aided Design'') packages to make the controller tuning easier.


Prefilter design

Finally, the QFT design may be completed with a pre-filter (F(s)) design when it is required. In the case of tracking conditions a shaping on the Bode diagram may be used. Post design analysis is then performed to ensure the system response is satisfactory according with the problem requirements. The QFT design methodology was originally developed for ''Single-Input Single-Output'' (SISO) and ''Linear Time Invariant Systems'' (LTI), with the design process being as described above. However, it has since been extended to weakly nonlinear systems, time varying systems, distributed parameter systems, multi-input multi-output (MIMO) systems (Horowitz, 1991), discrete systems (these using the
Z-Transform In mathematics and signal processing, the Z-transform converts a discrete-time signal, which is a sequence of real or complex numbers, into a complex frequency-domain (z-domain or z-plane) representation. It can be considered as a discrete-tim ...
as transfer function), and non minimum phase systems. The development of
CAD Computer-aided design (CAD) is the use of computers (or ) to aid in the creation, modification, analysis, or optimization of a design. This software is used to increase the productivity of the designer, improve the quality of design, improve co ...
tools has been an important, more recent development, which simplifies and automates much of the design procedure (Borghesani et al., 1994). Traditionally, the pre-filter is designed by using the Bode-diagram magnitude information. The use of both phase and magnitude information for the design of pre-filter was first discussed in (Boje, 2003) for SISO systems. The method was then developed to MIMO problems in (Alavi et al., 2007).


See also

*
Control engineering Control engineering or control systems engineering is an engineering discipline that deals with control systems, applying control theory to design equipment and systems with desired behaviors in control environments. The discipline of controls o ...
* Feedback * Process control * Robotic unicycle *
H infinity ''H''∞ (i.e. "''H''-infinity") methods are used in control theory to synthesize controllers to achieve stabilization with guaranteed performance. To use ''H''∞ methods, a control designer expresses the control problem as a mathematical optimiz ...
* Optimal control * Servomechanism *
Nonlinear control Nonlinear control theory is the area of control theory which deals with systems that are nonlinear, time-variant, or both. Control theory is an interdisciplinary branch of engineering and mathematics that is concerned with the behavior of dyn ...
*
Adaptive control Adaptive control is the control method used by a controller which must adapt to a controlled system with parameters which vary, or are initially uncertain. For example, as an aircraft flies, its mass will slowly decrease as a result of fuel consumpt ...
*
Robust control In control theory, robust control is an approach to controller design that explicitly deals with uncertainty. Robust control methods are designed to function properly provided that uncertain parameters or disturbances are found within some (typicall ...
*
Intelligent control Intelligent control is a class of control techniques that use various artificial intelligence computing approaches like neural networks, Bayesian probability, fuzzy logic, machine learning, reinforcement learning, evolutionary computation and geneti ...
*
State space (controls) In control engineering, a state-space representation is a mathematical model of a physical system as a set of input, output and state variables related by first-order differential equations or difference equations. State variables are variables wh ...


References

* Horowitz, I., 1963, Synthesis of Feedback Systems, Academic Press, New York, 1963. * Horowitz, I., and Sidi, M., 1972, "Synthesis of feedback systems with large plant ignorance for prescribed time-domain tolerances," International Journal of Control, 16(2), pp. 287–309. * Horowitz, I., 1991, "Survey of Quantitative Feedback Theory (QFT)," International Journal of Control, 53(2), pp. 255–291. * Borghesani, C., Chait, Y., and Yaniv, O., 1994, Quantitative Feedback Theory Toolbox Users Guide, The Math Works Inc., Natick, MA. * Zolotas, A. (2005, June 8).
QFT - Quantitative Feedback Theory
'. Connexions. * Boje, E. Pre-filter design for tracking error specifications in QFT, International Journal of Robust and Nonlinear Control, Vol. 13, pp. 637–642, 2003. * Alavi, SMM., Khaki-Sedigh, A., Labibi, B. and Hayes, M.J., Improved multivariable quantitative feedback design for tracking error specifications, IET Control Theory & Applications, Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 1046–1053, 2007.


External links


Mario Garcia-Sanz, Quantitative Robust Control Engineering:Theory and Applications
Control theory