Washout filters in feedback control: benefits, limitations and extensions

Advantages and limitations of washout filters in feedback control of both continuous-time and discrete-time systems are discussed, and generalizations that alleviate the limitations are presented. The generalized washout filters presented involve feedback through auxiliary state variables that are i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in2004 American Control Conference Proceedings; Volume 5 of 6 Vol. 5; pp. 3950 - 3955 vol.5
Main Authors Hassouneh, M.A., Hsien-Chiarn Lee, Abed, E.H.
Format Conference Proceeding Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Piscataway NJ IEEE 01.01.2004
Evanston IL American Automatic Control Council
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISBN9780780383357
0780383354
ISSN0743-1619
DOI10.23919/ACC.2004.1383925

Cover

More Information
Summary:Advantages and limitations of washout filters in feedback control of both continuous-time and discrete-time systems are discussed, and generalizations that alleviate the limitations are presented. The generalized washout filters presented involve feedback through auxiliary state variables that are intercoupled. This is in contrast to the more traditional washout filter-aided control, in which these variables couple to the system state but not to each other. The generalized washout filter results obtained in the paper include a systematic feedback control design procedure, which is not available for traditional washout filter-aided control. Some previously unpublished results in the Ph.D. dissertation of one of the authors (Lee, 1991) are presented in the context of their relation to the generalized results and to recent publications on delayed feedback control. We observe that delayed feedback control for discrete-time systems, used in a number of controls of chaos studies, is a special case of washout filter-aided feedback. Moreover, the limitations of delayed feedback control can be overcome by the use of washout filter-aided feedback, which gives rise to the possibility of stabilizing a much larger class of systems.
Bibliography:SourceType-Scholarly Journals-2
ObjectType-Feature-2
ObjectType-Conference Paper-1
content type line 23
SourceType-Conference Papers & Proceedings-1
ObjectType-Article-3
ISBN:9780780383357
0780383354
ISSN:0743-1619
DOI:10.23919/ACC.2004.1383925