Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Dynamic Modeling and Control of Engineering Systems
- 1 INTRODUCTION
- 2 MECHANICAL SYSTEMS
- 3 MATHEMATICAL MODELS
- 4 ANALYTICAL SOLUTIONS OF SYSTEM INPUT–OUTPUT EQUATIONS
- 5 NUMERICAL SOLUTIONS OF ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 6 SIMULATION OF DYNAMIC SYSTEMS
- 7 ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
- 8 THERMAL SYSTEMS
- 9 FLUID SYSTEMS
- 10 MIXED SYSTEMS
- 11 SYSTEM TRANSFER FUNCTIONS
- 12 FREQUENCY ANALYSIS
- 13 CLOSED-LOOP SYSTEMS AND SYSTEM STABILITY
- 14 CONTROL SYSTEMS
- 15 ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS
- 16 DIGITAL CONTROL SYSTEMS
- APPENDIX 1 Fourier Series and the Fourier Transform
- APPENDIX 2 Laplace Transforms
- APPENDIX 3 MATLAB Tutorial
- APPENDIX 4 Simulink Tutorial
- Index
15 - ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Dynamic Modeling and Control of Engineering Systems
- 1 INTRODUCTION
- 2 MECHANICAL SYSTEMS
- 3 MATHEMATICAL MODELS
- 4 ANALYTICAL SOLUTIONS OF SYSTEM INPUT–OUTPUT EQUATIONS
- 5 NUMERICAL SOLUTIONS OF ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
- 6 SIMULATION OF DYNAMIC SYSTEMS
- 7 ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
- 8 THERMAL SYSTEMS
- 9 FLUID SYSTEMS
- 10 MIXED SYSTEMS
- 11 SYSTEM TRANSFER FUNCTIONS
- 12 FREQUENCY ANALYSIS
- 13 CLOSED-LOOP SYSTEMS AND SYSTEM STABILITY
- 14 CONTROL SYSTEMS
- 15 ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS
- 16 DIGITAL CONTROL SYSTEMS
- APPENDIX 1 Fourier Series and the Fourier Transform
- APPENDIX 2 Laplace Transforms
- APPENDIX 3 MATLAB Tutorial
- APPENDIX 4 Simulink Tutorial
- Index
Summary
LEARNING OBJECTIVES FOR THIS CHAPTER
15–1 To use the finite-difference approximation of a derivative to develop an approximate discrete-time model corresponding to a continuous input–output model.
15–2 To derive discrete-time state models for linear dynamic systems.
15–3 To develop block diagrams of a digital control system including sampling and holding devices.
15–4 To use the z transform to develop pulse transfer functions of discrete-time systems.
INTRODUCTION
In almost all existing engineering systems, the system variables (input, output, state) are continuous functions of time. The first 14 chapters of this book deal with this category of systems, classified in Chap. 1 as continuous dynamic systems. The last two chapters are devoted to discrete-time systems in which, according to the definition given in Chap. 1, the system variables are defined only at distinct instants of time. It may seem that there are not many such systems, and, indeed, very few examples of intrinsically discrete engineering systems come to mind. There are, however, many systems involving continuous subsystems that are classified as discrete because of the discrete-time elements used to monitor and control the continuous processes. Any system in which a continuous process is measured and/or controlled by a digital computer is considered discrete. Although some variables in such systems are continuous functions of time, they are known only at distinct instants of time determined by the computer sampling frequency, and therefore they are treated as discrete-time variables.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Dynamic Modeling and Control of Engineering Systems , pp. 389 - 409Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007