DocumentCode
2536153
Title
A plant taxonomy for designing control experiments
Author
Bernstein, Dennis S.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Aerosp. Eng., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Volume
6
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
3969
Abstract
Control experiments can have a significant impact on control theory by forcing researchers to confront real world issues. The definition of a control experiment is open as are guidelines for verification and reproducibility. The author deals with the problem of choosing a plant that is appropriate for investigating system-theoretic problems in feedback technology. The term “system-theoretic” refers to fundamental control issues such as nonlinearity, uncertainty, dimensionality, and coupling that transcend a specific hardware realization. This discussion of control experimentation venues is based on a plant taxonomy, that is, a systematic classification of plant properties and the challenges that they present to control experimentation and, indirectly, to control engineering practice. This paper is partially motivated by paper of Hagan et al. (1996), which lists 16 candidate plants for undergraduate control experiments
Keywords
control nonlinearities; control system analysis; feedback; uncertain systems; control engineering; control experiment design; control theory; dimensionality; feedback; nonlinearity; plant taxonomy; systematic classification; uncertainty; Appropriate technology; Control systems; Control theory; Couplings; Feedback; Guidelines; Hardware; Reproducibility of results; Taxonomy; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
American Control Conference, 2000. Proceedings of the 2000
Conference_Location
Chicago, IL
ISSN
0743-1619
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5519-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ACC.2000.876967
Filename
876967
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