Unimodal self-oscillations and their sign-symmetry for discrete-time relay feedback systems with dead zone
This work addresses a specific problem in control theory for systems with relay feedback, providing incremental analytical insights into self-oscillation behavior.
The paper tackled the problem of characterizing unimodal self-oscillations in discrete-time linear time-invariant relay feedback systems with a nonnegative dead zone, establishing existence criteria based on sign-symmetry and deriving conditions for their existence, uniqueness, and period bounds.
This paper characterizes self-oscillations in discrete-time linear time-invariant (LTI) relay feedback systems with nonnegative dead zone. Specifically, we aim to establish existence criteria for unimodal self-oscillations, defined as periodic solutions where the output exhibits a single-peaked period. Assuming that the linear part of system is stable, with a strictly monotonically decreasing impulse response on its infinite support, we propose a novel analytical framework based on the theory of total positivity to address this problem. We demonstrate that unimodal self-oscillations subject to mild variation-based constraints exist only if the number of positive and negative values of the system's loop gain coincides within a given strictly positive period, i.e., the self-oscillation is sign-symmetric. Building upon these findings, we derive conditions for the existence of such self-oscillations, establish tight bounds on their periods, and address the question of their uniqueness.