Chapter - 01
Chapter - 01
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Menschen für Menschen Foundation
Agro – Technical and Technology College
Electrical and Electronics Technology Department
I. Course Description:
❑ Fundamentals of Control Systems
❖ Classification : Open-Loop and Closed-Loop control systems.
❖ Components: Sensors, Controllers, Actuators.
❖ Block Diagram Algebra: Simplifies complex system representation.
❖ Signal Flow Graphs: Graphically represents complex control systems to
visualize and determine system model.
❑ The output is neither measured nor fed back for comparison with the
input.
❑ In the presence of disturbances, an open-loop control system will not
perform the desired task.
❑ It can be used, in practice, only if the relationship between the input and
output is known and if there are neither internal nor external disturbances
Instructor: Mr. Biruk Simaani (M.Sc.) 12
Examples of Open-Loop Control:
A Pop-up Toaster
❑ Uses electric heating elements to toast bread by
exposing it to radiant heat.
❑ Does not measure how well roasted.
Laundry machine
❑ Washes clothes, by setting a program.
❑ Does not measure how clean the clothes become.
Disadvantages:
❑ Disturbances and changes in calibration cause errors, and the output may be
different from what is desired.
❑ Recalibration is necessary from time to time.
Disadvantages:
❑ More Complex, and More Expensive.
❑ Possibility of instability.
❑ Need for output measurement.
❑ Recalibration is necessary from time to time.
We can test a system for this property using ideas from the figure.
KEY POINT: It is necessary to understand how the system works naturally in order to
know how to be able to change how it works using a feedback controller.
≅
The surface friction is modeled by a viscous
Draw a free-body diagram damper with damping constant 𝑏
The forces acting on the mass due to the spring and
damper are opposite to the direction of motion.
By Newton’s law
❑ Control Systems: Widely used in control system design and analysis to determine
system stability, transient response, and steady-state behavior.
Impulse Function
Exponential Function
The third-order transfer function G(s) is proper but not strictly proper because the
numerator and denominator polynomials have the same degree. Also, G(∞) = 2.
Hence
⇒ ⇒
❑ BASIC configurations:
Solution
❑ Loop: a closed path that originates and terminates on the same node and along
the path no node is met twice.
❑ Nontouching loops: two loops are said to be nontouching if they do not have a
common node.