控制电路设计电气专业毕业论文外文翻译(可编辑) .doc
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1、控制电路设计-电气专业毕业论文外文翻译 本科毕业设计外文文献及译文 文献、资料题目:Designing Stable Control Loops 文献、资料来源:期刊 文献、资料发表(出版)日期:2010.3.25 院 (部): 信息与电气工程学院 专 业: 电气工程与自动化 班 级: 姓 名: 学 号: 指导教师: 翻译日期: 2011.3.10外文文献:Designing Stable Control Loops The objective of this topic is to provide the designer with a practical review of loop co
2、mpensation techniques applied to switching power supply feedback control. A top-down system approach is taken starting with basic feedback control concepts and leading to step-by-step design procedures, initially applied to a simple buck regulator and then expanded to other topologies and control al
3、gorithms. Sample designs are demonstrated with Math cad simulations to illustrate gain and phase margins and their impact on performance analysisI. INTRODUCTION Insuring stability of a proposed power supply solution is often one of the more challenging aspects of the design process. Nothing is more
4、disconcerting than to have your lovingly crafted breadboard break into wild oscillations just as its being demonstrated to the boss or customer, but insuring against this unfortunate event takes some analysis which many designers view as formidable. Paths taken by design engineers often emphasize ei
5、ther cut-and-try empirical testing in the laboratory or computer simulations looking for numerical solutions based on complex mathematical models. While both of these approach a basic understanding of feedback theory will usually allow the definition of an acceptable compensation network with a mini
6、mum of computational effort.II. STABILITY DEFINED Fig. 1. Definition of stability Fig. 1 gives a quick illustration of at least one definition of stability. In its simplest terms, a system is stable if, when subjected to a perturbation from some source, its response to that perturbation eventually d
7、ies out. Note that in any practical system, instability cannot result in a completely unbounded response as the system will either reach a saturation level ? or fail. Oscillation in a switching regulator can, at most, vary the duty cycle between zero and 100% and while that may not prevent failure,
8、it wills ultimate limit the response of an unstable system. Another way of visualizing stability is shown in Fig. 2. While this graphically illustrates the concept of system stability, it also points out that we must make a further distinction between large-signal and small-signal stability. While s
9、mall-signal stability is an important and necessary criterion, a system could satisfy thisrt quirement and yet still become unstable with a large-signal perturbation. It is important that designers remember that all the gain and phase calculations we might perform are only to insure small-signal sta
10、bility. These calculations are based upon ? and only applicable to ? linear systems, and a switching regulator is ? by definition ? a non-linear system. We solve this conundrum by performing our analysis using small-signal perturbations around a large-signal operating point, a distinction which will
11、 be further clarified in our design procedure discussion。 Fig. 2. Large-signal vs. small-signal stabilityIII. FEEDBACK CONTROL PRINCIPLES Where an uncontrolled source of voltage or current, or power is applied to the input of our system with the expectation that the voltage or current, or power at t
12、he output will be very well controlled. The basis of our control is some form of reference, and any deviation between the output and the reference becomes an error. In a feedback-controlled system, negative feedback is used to reduce this error to an acceptable value ?as close to zero as we want to
13、spend the effort to achieve. Typically, however, we also want to reduce the error quickly, but inherent with feedback control is the tradeoff between system response and system stability. The more responsive the feedback network is, the greater becomes the risk of instability. At this point we shoul
14、d also mention that there is another method of control ? feedforward.With feed forward control, a control signal is developed directly in response to an input variation or perturbation. Feed forward is less accurate than feedback since output sensing is not involved, however, there is no delay waiti
15、ng for an output error signal to be developed, andfeedforward control cannot cause instability. It should be clear that feed forward control will typically not be adequate as the only control method for a voltage regulator, but it is often used together with feedback to improve a regulators response
16、 to dynamic input variations.The basis for feedback control is illustrated with the flow diagram of Fig. 3 where the goal is for the output to follow the reference predictably and for the effects of external perturbations, such as input voltage variations, to be reduced to tolerable levels at the ou
17、tput Without feedback, the reference-to-output transfer function y/u is equal to G, and we can express the output asyGuWith the addition of feedback actually the subtraction of the feedback signalyGuyHGand the reference-to-output transfer function becomesy/uG/1+GHIf we assume that GH _ 1, then the o
18、verall transfer function simplifies toy/u1/H Fig. 3. Flow graph of feedback control Not only is this result now independent of G,it is also independent of all the parameters of the system which might impact G supply voltage, temperature, component tolerances, etc. and is determined instead solely by
19、 the feedback network H and, of course, by the reference.Note that the accuracy of H usually resistor tolerances and in the summing circuit error amplifier offset voltage will still contribute to an output error. In practice, the feedback control system, as modeled in Fig. 4, is designed so thatG _
20、H and GH _ 1 over as wide a frequency range as possible without incurring instability. We can make a further refinement to our generalized power regulator with the block diagram shown in Fig. 5. Here we have separated the power system into two blocks ? the power section and the control circuitry. Th
21、e power section handles the load current and is typically large, heavy, and subject to wide temperature fluctuations. Its switching functions are by definition, large-signal phenomenon, normally simulated in most stability analyses as just a two states witch with a duty cycle. The output filter is a
22、lso considered as a part of the power section but can be considered as a linear block Fig. 4. The general power regulatorIV. THE BUCK CONVERTER The simplest form of the above general power regulator is the buck ? or step down ? topology whose power stage is shown in Fig. 6. In this configuration, a
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