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Response of Higher Order Systems
Steady-State In terms of the deviation variables deviation variables
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Response of Higher Order Systems
Reduce the parameters from 4 to 3
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Response of Higher Order Systems
Laplace Transform Characteristic roots
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
The two time constants are equal
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Response of Higher Order Systems
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Rules of block diagrams
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Rules of block diagrams
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The Output Responses Output Response:
If all the roots of the denominator of the transfer function are real, then 1- The response is monotonic (nonoscillatory). 2- It is stable only if all the roots are negative.
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The Output Responses Output Response: Monotonic stable
Monotonic unstable
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The Output Responses Output Response:
The time it takes for the transients to die out, we can see that each exponential term starts at unity (e0 = 1) and, if the root is negative, decays to zero with time. We define the threshold for each term of the response to become less than 1% of its initial value, as the threshold of each term to die out. To use a good round number, let erf = e-5 = , or 0.67%, which is less than 1%. Then the time required for the kth exponential term to reach 0.67% of its initial value is tk = -5/rk Thus the root with the smallest absolute value (least negative) will take the longest to die out. Such a root is called the dominant root of the response.
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The Output Responses Output Response: Pair of Complex Conjugate Roots
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The Output Responses Output Response: 1- The response is oscillatory.
Pair of Complex Conjugate Roots 1- The response is oscillatory. 2- The oscillations grow with time (unstable) if any of the pairs of complex roots has a positive real part.
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The Output Responses Output Response: Pair of Complex Conjugate Roots
Oscillatory Unstable Oscillatory Stable
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The Output Responses Output Response: Final Steady-State Value SUMMARY
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF FIRST-ORDER SYSTEMS
Step Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF FIRST-ORDER SYSTEMS
Ramp Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF FIRST-ORDER SYSTEMS
Sinusoidal Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF FIRST-ORDER SYSTEMS
Response with Time Delay
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF FIRST-ORDER SYSTEMS
Response of a Lead-Lag Unit
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Step Response a- overdamped b- critically damped
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Ramp Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Sinusoidal Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Sinusoidal Response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Underdamped step response
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The Output Responses Output Response: RESPONSE OF SECOND-ORDER SYSTEMS
Rise Time. This is the time it takes for the response to first reach its final steady-state value, tR Settling Time. This is the time it takes for the response to come within some prescribed band of the final steady-state value and remain in this band. Typical band limits are +/- 5%, +/- 3%, and +/-1% of the total change.
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