H2 optimal actuator and sensor placement in the linearised complex Ginzburg-Landau system

被引:67
|
作者
Chen, Kevin K. [1 ]
Rowley, Clarence W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Dept Mech & Aerosp Engn, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
absolute/convective instability; control theory; instability control; SPATIALLY DEVELOPING FLOWS; LOW REYNOLDS-NUMBERS; GLOBAL INSTABILITIES; VIBRATION CONTROL; CYLINDER WAKE; MODEL; STABILITY;
D O I
10.1017/jfm.2011.195
中图分类号
O3 [力学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0801 ;
摘要
The linearised complex Ginzburg-Landau equation is a model for the evolution of small fluid perturbations, such as in a bluff body wake. By implementing actuators and sensors and designing an H-2 optimal controller, we control a supercritical, infinite-domain formulation of this system. We seek the optimal actuator and sensor placement that minimises the H-2 norm of the controlled system, from flow disturbances and sensor noise to a cost on the perturbation and input magnitudes. We formulate the gradient of the H-2 squared norm with respect to the actuator and sensor placements and iterate towards the optimal placement. When stochastic flow disturbances are present everywhere in the spatial domain, it is optimal to place the actuator just upstream of the origin and the sensor just downstream. With pairs of actuators and sensors, it is optimal to place each actuator slightly upstream of each corresponding sensor, and scatter the pairs throughout the spatial domain. When disturbances are only introduced upstream, the optimal placement shifts upstream as well. Global mode and Gramian analyses fail to predict the optimal placement; they produce H-2 norms about five times higher than at the true optimum. The wavemaker region is a better guess for the optimal placement.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 260
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Optimal uniform elliptic estimates for the Ginzburg-Landau system
    Fournais, S.
    Helffer, B.
    ADVENTURES IN MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS, 2007, 447 : 83 - +
  • [2] Fluid flow control applications of H2 optimal actuator and sensor placement
    Chen, Kevin K.
    Rowley, Clarence W.
    2014 AMERICAN CONTROL CONFERENCE (ACC), 2014, : 4044 - 4049
  • [3] Iterative learning control of complex Ginzburg-Landau system
    Cai, Liuchi
    Dai, Xisheng
    Zhang, Jianxiang
    Huang, Qingnan
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF MEASUREMENT AND CONTROL, 2023, 45 (06) : 1169 - 1179
  • [4] Wave dynamics in a modified quintic complex Ginzburg-Landau system
    Pelap, Francois B.
    Kamga, Jules H.
    Fomethe, Anaclet
    Kenfack, Aurelien J.
    Faye, Mansour M.
    PHYSICS LETTERS A, 2009, 373 (11) : 1015 - 1018
  • [5] Intermittencies in complex Ginzburg-Landau equation by varying system size
    Li Hai-Hong
    Xiao Jing-Hua
    Hu Gang
    Hu Bambi
    CHINESE PHYSICS B, 2010, 19 (05) : 0505161 - 0505169
  • [6] Intermittencies in complex Ginzburg-Landau equation by varying system size
    李海红
    肖井华
    胡岗
    胡斑比
    Chinese Physics B, 2010, 19 (05) : 176 - 184
  • [7] Front explosion in a resonantly forced complex Ginzburg-Landau system
    Hemming, C
    Kapral, R
    PHYSICA D-NONLINEAR PHENOMENA, 2002, 168 : 10 - 22
  • [8] Optimal actuator/sensor placement for linear parabolic PDEs using spatial H2 norm
    Armaou, Antonios
    Demetriou, Michael A.
    CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2006, 61 (22) : 7351 - 7367
  • [9] Sensor and Actuator Placement for Linear Systems Based on H2 and H∞ Optimization
    Muenz, Ulrich
    Pfister, Maximilian
    Wolfrum, Philipp
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON AUTOMATIC CONTROL, 2014, 59 (11) : 2984 - 2989
  • [10] A computational scheme for the optimal sensor/actuator placement of flexible structures using spatial H2 measures
    Liu, W
    Hou, ZK
    Demetriou, MA
    MECHANICAL SYSTEMS AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, 2006, 20 (04) : 881 - 895