Title :
Speed and Position Controllers Using Indirect Field-Oriented Control: A Classical Control Approach
Author :
Amezquita-Brooks, L. ; Liceaga-Castro, J. ; Liceaga-Castro, E.
Author_Institution :
Center for Res. & Innovation in Aerosp. Eng., Autonomous Univ. of Nuevo Leon, San Nicolás de Los Garza, Mexico
Abstract :
Torque control for induction motors under the scheme of indirect field-oriented control (IFOC) considering rotor resistance perturbations is analyzed via linear approximations. Several important characteristics of IFOC are elucidated, leading to the design of linear, robust, and performance-based torque, speed, and position controllers. In particular, the resulting controllers are of a low order, robust to rotor resistance perturbations, and are designed according to classical performance specifications, which is a combination of characteristics that have been historically difficult to achieve. General control design guidelines valid for any induction motor are presented. In addition, the stability and minimum phase conditions of the IFOC torque controller are fully derived for any induction motor. These conditions are of prime importance when designing fixed linear speed or position controllers. A case study for a typical motor, including the design of a series of robust controllers and real-time experimental results, is presented. The proposed approach makes use of well-known classical control methods that allow the results presented here to be further extended using any linear single-input-single-output controller design tool, such as H∞ and quantitative feedback theory.
Keywords :
H∞ control; angular velocity control; approximation theory; control system synthesis; feedback; induction motors; linear systems; machine vector control; position control; robust control; torque control; H∞ control; IFOC; control design guidelines; indirect field-oriented control; induction motors; linear approximations; linear single-input-single-output controller design tool; performance-based torque controller; position controllers; quantitative feedback theory; robust controller; rotor resistance perturbations; speed controllers; Classical control; field-oriented control; induction-motor control;
Journal_Title :
Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIE.2013.2262750