SYSYMay 1, 2018

Control of a nonlinear continuous stirred tank reactor via event triggered sliding modes

arXiv:1712.0336065 citationsh-index: 19
AI Analysis

For chemical process control engineers, this work offers a computationally efficient robust controller for CSTRs, but it is an incremental application of existing event-triggered SMC methods to a specific nonlinear system.

The paper presents an event-triggered sliding mode controller for a nonlinear continuous stirred tank reactor (CSTR) that regulates temperature and concentration near equilibrium points, reducing computational load while maintaining robustness. Simulation results validate the controller's efficiency.

Continuous Stirred Tank Reactors (CSTR) are the most important and central equipment in many chemical and biochemical industry that exhibit second order complex nonlinear dynamics. The nonlinear dynamics of CSTR poses many design and control challenges. The proposed controller guarantees a stable closed loop behavior over multiple operating points even in presence of disturbances and parametric uncertainties. An event driven sliding mode control is presented in this work to regulate the temperature and concentration very close to the equilibrium points of CSTR. The control is executed only when a predefined condition gets violated and hence the controller is relaxed when the system is operating under tolerable limits in terms of closed loop performance. A novel dynamic event triggering rule is presented to maintain desired performance with minimum computational cost. The inter event execution time is shown to be lower bounded by a finite positive quantity to exclude Zeno behavior. Sliding mode control (SMC) combined with event triggering scheme retains the inherent robustness of traditional SMC and aids in reducing computational load on the controller involved. Simulation results validate the efficiency of the proposed controller.

Foundations

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