Publication | Closed Access
Automated system identification and controller tuning for digitally controlled dc–dc converters
17
Citations
13
References
2012
Year
Electrical EngineeringAutomated System IdentificationEngineeringDc–dc ConvertersPower Electronics ConverterComputer EngineeringSystems EngineeringController Design ProcessController TuningPower ElectronicsSystem IdentificationPrecise Frequency-domain Characterisations
Digital controllers are often used in interleaved multi-phase dc–dc converters. System identification is desirable for precise frequency-domain characterisations and subsequent stability assessment and/or controller design. The digital nature of the feedback signal facilitates the communication between the converter and a processing unit, which is used here to estimate the system parameters by means of system identification in situ. The phase loss, zero-order-hold effect and asynchronised sampling of the digital controller are discussed. Design limitations and desired dynamic behaviours complicate the controller design process and necessitate automated tuning of the controller. Therefore a computer-generated auto-tuning framework is set forth that provides the required controller coefficients to meet desired time and frequency performance criteria. This is an offline optimisation-based process that minimises a cost function formulated using appropriate error terms. The identification results for single- and multi-phase dc–dc converters closely match those obtained from conventional network analysers. Also, the auto-tuning performance is verified in time and frequency domains using hardware measurements and numerical simulations.
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