Full-order optimal compensators for flow control: the multiple inputs case

O Semeraro, JO Pralits - Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics, 2018 - Springer
Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics, 2018Springer
Flow control has been the subject of numerous experimental and theoretical works. We
analyze full-order, optimal controllers for large dynamical systems in the presence of
multiple actuators and sensors. The full-order controllers do not require any preliminary
model reduction or low-order approximation: this feature allows us to assess the optimal
performance of an actuated flow without relying on any estimation process or further
hypothesis on the disturbances. We start from the original technique proposed by Bewley et …
Abstract
Flow control has been the subject of numerous experimental and theoretical works. We analyze full-order, optimal controllers for large dynamical systems in the presence of multiple actuators and sensors. The full-order controllers do not require any preliminary model reduction or low-order approximation: this feature allows us to assess the optimal performance of an actuated flow without relying on any estimation process or further hypothesis on the disturbances. We start from the original technique proposed by Bewley et al. (Meccanica 51(12):2997–3014, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11012-016-0547-3 ), the adjoint of the direct-adjoint (ADA) algorithm. The algorithm is iterative and allows bypassing the solution of the algebraic Riccati equation associated with the optimal control problem, typically infeasible for large systems. In this numerical work, we extend the ADA iteration into a more general framework that includes the design of controllers with multiple, coupled inputs and robust controllers ( methods). First, we demonstrate our results by showing the analytical equivalence between the full Riccati solutions and the ADA approximations in the multiple inputs case. In the second part of the article, we analyze the performance of the algorithm in terms of convergence of the solution, by comparing it with analogous techniques. We find an excellent scalability with the number of inputs (actuators), making the method a viable way for full-order control design in complex settings. Finally, the applicability of the algorithm to fluid mechanics problems is shown using the linearized Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation and the Kármán vortex street past a two-dimensional cylinder.
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