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Lecture 19

This document is a lecture on Root Locus Techniques in feedback control systems, detailing methods for sketching root loci, identifying breakaway and break-in points, and analyzing jω-axis crossings. It includes examples and mathematical formulations to illustrate the concepts, such as calculating angles of departure and arrival from complex poles and zeros. The lecture emphasizes the importance of these techniques in determining system stability and behavior.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views14 pages

Lecture 19

This document is a lecture on Root Locus Techniques in feedback control systems, detailing methods for sketching root loci, identifying breakaway and break-in points, and analyzing jω-axis crossings. It includes examples and mathematical formulations to illustrate the concepts, such as calculating angles of departure and arrival from complex poles and zeros. The lecture emphasizes the importance of these techniques in determining system stability and behavior.

Uploaded by

Aleena Malik
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Feedback Control System

Lecture 19
Chapter 8: Root Locus Techniques

Prepared By: Muhammad Abdullah


muhammad.abdullah@nu.edu.pk , uetian.09@gmail.com

National University FAST (CFD Campus)

My YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/@BlueFish506

1|Page
Sketching a Root Locus with Asymptotes

The root locus approaches straight lines as asymptotes as the locus approaches
infinity. Further, the equation of the asymptotes is given by the real-axis intercept,
𝜎𝑎 and angle, 𝜃𝑎 as follows:
∑ finite poles − ∑ finite zeros
𝜎𝑎 =
# finite poles − # finite zeros
(2𝑘 + 1)𝜋
𝜃𝑎 =
# finite poles − # finite zeros
where 𝑘 = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3 and the angle is given in radians with respect to the
positive extension of the real axis.

Example 1
Sketch the root locus for the system shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Root locus and Asymptotes for the System of Figure 1

Solution:
Real-axis intercept, 𝜎𝑎 is calculated as:
∑ finite poles − ∑ finite zeros
𝜎𝑎 =
# finite poles − # finite zeros
(−1 − 2 − 4) − (−3) 4
𝜎𝑎 = =−
4−1 3
The angles of the lines that intersect at −4/3 are given as;
(2𝑘 + 1)𝜋 (2𝑘 + 1)𝜋
𝜃𝑎 = =
# finite poles − # finite zeros 3

2|Page
𝜋/3 for 𝑘 = 0
𝜃𝑎 = { 𝜋 for 𝑘 = 1
5𝜋/3 for 𝑘 = 2

Figure 2

Refining the Sketch

Purpose of Refinement
• To accurately locate key points on the root locus such as:
o Real-axis breakaway and break-in points
o jω-axis crossings

3|Page
o Angles of departure/arrival from complex poles and zeros
• Helps determine gain values and stability behavior more precisely.

Real-Axis Breakaway and Break-In Points

Concept
• Occur where root loci:
o Leave the real axis (breakaway)
o Return to the real axis (break-in)
• Common when poles/zeros transition between real and complex locations.
Identification
• Breakaway happens between two poles, break-in between two zeros or as
complex poles become real again.

Figure 3: Root locus showing real-axis breakaway (−𝝈𝟏 ) and break-in points (𝝈𝟐 )

4|Page
Example:
• Root locus leaves real axis between -1 and -2
• Returns between +3 and +5
Angle at Breakaway/Break-In Points
• At these points, the branches form an angle of.
180∘
𝑛
where n = number of closed-loop poles arriving or departing.
• For 2 poles, the angle is:
180∘
= 90∘
2
• This helps in estimating the direction of the root locus at critical transition
points.
Finding Breakaway and Break-In Points – Gain Method

Key Concept

• Breakaway and break-in points occur at extrema of gain (K) along the real
axis.
• These points correspond to local maximum or minimum values of gain.

Method 1: Using Calculus on the Gain Function


For all points on the root locus: 1 + 𝐾𝐺(𝑠)𝐻(𝑠) = 0
1
𝐾=−
𝐺(𝑠)𝐻(𝑠)
For points specifically along the real-axis segment, where 𝑠 = 𝜎 :
1
𝐾=−
𝐺(𝜎)𝐻(𝜎)
This equation represents a curve of 𝐾 vs. 𝜎, where:
• 𝜎 is a real value along the axis.

5|Page
• Points of maximum/minimum K indicate potential breakaway or break-in.
Procedure

1. Evaluate 𝐾(𝜎) using Equation given above


2. Differentiate 𝐾(𝜎) with respect to 𝜎.
𝑑𝐾
3. Set derivative = 0 to find critical points.
𝑑𝜎
4. Solve for values of 𝜎 where extrema occur.
5. These values correspond to breakaway or break-in points.
Example 2
Find the breakaway and break-in points for the root locus of Figure 3.
The open-loop transfer function is:
𝐾(𝑠 − 3)(𝑠 − 5) 𝐾(𝑠 2 − 8𝑠 + 15)
𝐾𝐺(𝑠)𝐻(𝑠) = =
(𝑠 + 1)(𝑠 + 2) 𝑠 2 + 3𝑠 + 2
On the root locus, we use the condition:
𝐾𝐺(𝑠)𝐻(𝑠) = −1
Restricting to the real-axis segment (𝑠 = 𝜎), we write:
𝐾(𝜎 2 − 8𝜎 + 15)
= −1
𝜎 2 + 3𝜎 + 2
Step 1: Solve for Gain 𝐾
−(𝜎 2 + 3𝜎 + 2)
𝐾= 2
𝜎 − 8𝜎 + 15
Step 2: Differentiate 𝐾 with respect to 𝜎
𝑑𝐾 11𝜎 2 − 26𝜎 − 61
= =0
𝑑𝜎 (𝜎 2 − 8𝜎 + 15)2
Step 3: Solve the Numerator Equation
Solving: 11𝜎 2 − 26𝜎 − 61 = 0
Gives: 𝜎 = −1.45 and 𝜎 = 3.82

6|Page
• Breakaway point: 𝜎 = −1.45
• Break-in point: 𝜎 = 3.82
These points are where the root locus leaves and re-enters the real axis.

Method 2: Transition Method (No Differentiation)


𝑚 𝑛
1 1
∑ =∑
𝜎 + 𝑧𝑖 𝜎 + 𝑝𝑖
𝑖=1 𝑖=1

• Where 𝑧𝑖 and 𝑝𝑖 are negatives of the system zeros and poles respectively.
• Solve for 𝜎 to find real-axis breakaway and break-in points.
Example 3
Repeat Example 2 without differentiating
Solution:
Using Equation for Transition method, gives
1 1 1 1
+ = +
𝜎−3 𝜎−5 𝜎+1 𝜎+2
From LHS:
1 1 (𝜎 − 5) + (𝜎 − 3) 2𝜎 − 8
+ = =
𝜎−3 𝜎−5 (𝜎 − 3)(𝜎 − 5) (𝜎 − 3)(𝜎 − 5)
Similarly, for RHS:
1 1 (𝜎 + 2) + (𝜎 + 1) 2𝜎 + 3
+ = =
𝜎+1 𝜎+2 (𝜎 + 1)(𝜎 + 2) (𝜎 + 1)(𝜎 + 2)
Equating Both Sides
2𝜎 − 8 2𝜎 + 3
=
(𝜎 − 3)(𝜎 − 5) (𝜎 + 1)(𝜎 + 2)
(2𝜎 − 8)(𝜎 + 1)(𝜎 + 2) = (2𝜎 + 3)(𝜎 − 3)(𝜎 − 5)
Simplifying both sides yields:
11𝜎 2 − 26𝜎 − 61 = 0
Solving the quadratic equation:

7|Page
𝜎 = −1.45 and 𝜎 = 3.82
Same breakaway and break-in points as in the previous (calculus-based) example—
method verified!

jω-Axis Crossings in Root Locus Analysis

Definition and Importance


• The jω-axis crossing is where the root locus intersects the imaginary axis.
• It marks the boundary between stable and unstable behavior in a feedback
system.
• Crossing into the RHP signifies instability as poles move from left-half to
right-half.
Behavior Insight from Root Locus
• Below a critical gain value, poles remain in the left-half plane → system is
stable.
• At a specific gain, poles move to the right-half plane → system becomes
unstable.
• The frequency (ω) at the jω-axis crossing indicates oscillation frequency.
• The gain (K) at this crossing is the maximum stable gain for the system.
Finding jω-Axis Crossings
• Use the Routh-Hurwitz criterion:
1. Construct the Routh table from the characteristic polynomial.
2. A row of zeros in the table indicates jω-axis crossing.
3. Go back one row to get the auxiliary polynomial.
4. Solve for roots to find the imaginary-axis frequency (ω).

8|Page
Example 4
For the system of Figure 4, find the frequency and gain, 𝐾, for which the root locus
crosses the imaginary axis. For what range of 𝐾 is the system stable?

Figure 4

Solution:
The closed-loop transfer function for the system of Figure 4 is;
𝐾(𝑠 + 3)
𝑇(𝑠) =
𝑠 4 + 7𝑠 3 + 14𝑠 2 + (8 + 𝐾)𝑠 + 3𝐾
Routh’s table of the system is drawn as;

For the system to be stable, there should be no sign change in the first column of
Routh’s table, so;
−𝐾 2 − 65𝐾 + 720
>0
90 − 𝐾 > 0 90 − 𝐾 21𝐾 > 0
𝐾 < 90 −𝐾 2 − 65𝐾 + 720 > 0 𝐾>0
𝐾 2 + 65𝐾 − 720 < 0

9|Page
(𝐾 + 74.65)(𝐾 − 9.65) < 0
Or
𝐾 < −74.65
𝐾 < 9.65
So, stability range for given system is: 0 < 𝐾 < 9.65. So, for gain 𝐾 = 9.65, the
root locus branches cross the 𝑗𝜔-axis.
With 𝐾 = 9.65, the 𝑠 2 row becomes the auxiliary polynomial:
(90 − 𝐾)𝑠 2 + 21𝐾 = 80.35𝑠 2 + 202.7 = 0
Solving:
𝑠 = ±𝑗1.59
• 𝑗𝜔-axis crossing frequency: 𝜔 = 1.59 rad/s
Angles of Departure and Arrival
Purpose: To improve the accuracy of root locus sketches by calculating:
• Angle of departure from complex poles
• Angle of arrival at complex zeros

Angle of Departure (from Complex Poles)

Rule: The sum of angles from all finite poles and zeros to a point ε close to a complex
pole is an odd multiple of 180°.
• Let 𝜃1 be the unknown angle (departure from the complex pole).
• Known angles 𝜃2 , 𝜃3 , … come from other poles and zeros.

10 | P a g e
Using the angle criterion:

∑(angles from zeros) − ∑(angles from poles) = (2𝑘 + 1)180∘

𝜃2 + 𝜃3 + 𝜃6 − 𝜃4 − 𝜃5 − 𝜃1 = (2𝑘 + 1)180∘
𝜃1 = 𝜃2 + 𝜃3 − 𝜃4 − 𝜃5 + 𝜃6 − (2𝑘 + 1)180∘

Angle of Arrival (at Complex Zeros)


Rule: The sum of angles from all finite poles and zeros to a point ε close to a complex
zero is an odd multiple of 180°.

11 | P a g e
Using the angle criterion:

∑(angles from zeros) − ∑(angles from poles) = (2𝑘 + 1)180∘

𝜃2 + 𝜃3 + 𝜃6 − 𝜃1 − 𝜃4 − 𝜃5 = (2𝑘 + 1)180∘
𝜃2 = 𝜃1 − 𝜃3 + 𝜃4 + 𝜃5 − 𝜃6 + (2𝑘 + 1)180∘

Example 5
Given the unity feedback system of Figure 5, find the angle of departure from the
complex poles and sketch the root locus.

12 | P a g e
Figure 5

Solution:

From above root locus plot, we get (Assume 𝑘 = 0);

∑(angles from zeros) − ∑(angles from poles) = (2𝑘 + 1)180∘ = 180∘

13 | P a g e
𝜃3 − 𝜃1 − 𝜃2 − 𝜃4 = 180∘
1 1
tan−1 ( ) − 𝜃1 − 90∘ − tan−1 ( ) = 180∘
1 2
45∘ − 𝜃1 − 90∘ − 26.56∘ = 180∘
−𝜃1 − 71.56∘ = 180∘
𝜃1 = −180∘ − 71.56∘ = −251.56∘ or
𝜃1 = −251.56∘ + 360∘ = 108.44∘

14 | P a g e

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