Bode's Sensitivity Integral Constraints: The Waterbed Effect in Discrete Time
Provides a discrete-time counterpart to known continuous-time results, offering theoretical insight for control engineers working with sampled-data systems.
This paper extends Bode's sensitivity integral constraints (the waterbed effect) to discrete-time systems, showing that the integral constraint is related to unstable open-loop poles, and similar constraints for complementary sensitivity depend on transmission zeros outside the unit circle.
Bode's sensitivity integral constraints define a fundamental rule about the limitations of feedback and is referred to as the waterbed effect. In a companion paper, we took a fresh look at this problem using a direct approach to derive our results. In this paper, we will address the same problem, but now in discrete time. Although similar to the continuous case, the discrete-time case poses its own peculiarities and subtleties. The main result is that the sensitivity integral constraint is crucially related to the locations of the unstable open-loop poles of the system. This makes much intuitive sense. Similar results are also derived for the complementary sensitivity function. In that case the integral constraint is related to the locations of the transmission zeros outside the unit circle. Hence all performance limitations are inherently related to the open-loop poles and the transmission zeros outside the unit circle. A number of illustrative examples are presented.