Open-Loop Control Systems | Understanding Control Systems, Part 1
From the series: Understanding Control Systems
Melda Ulusoy, MathWorks
Explore open-loop control systems by walking through some introductory examples. Learn how open-loop systems are found in every day appliances like toasters or showers, and discover how they can be tuned by trial-and-error to achieve a desired output.
The first example shows how open-loop control is used to toast bread to the desired color. The second example outlines how open-loop control can help regulate water temperature in a shower. In these open-loop systems, you will explore the input and output to the system, and learn how to find the required input for a desired output by performing experiments.
Also, explore situations where open-loop control may fail due to unexpected environmental changes or variations in the system. In the next video, you will learn how you can handle the shortcomings of open-loop control by using feedback control.
Recorded: 15 Nov 2016
Today, we will talk about open-loop control systems. For this, we’re gonna visit your house and see if we can find everyday examples.
Let’s start with the kitchen. One of the devices you use daily is your toaster. You place a slice of bread in it, then set its timer, and when it’s done, your toast pops out. The bread’s color has changed based on the timer setting you chose. Here, the toaster with the bread is an open-loop system that takes an input, time, and gives an output, bread color.
Now suppose that you’re using the toaster for the first time. You don’t know what setting the timer should be at to get your desired bread color. In this case, you can do a couple of experiments. You can input different timer settings, and wait until your output settles to a value, then mark your findings on this plot. Putting a slice of bread in the toaster and setting the timer to a level of 2 gives you, let’s say, light brown bread. In the next experiment, for an input of level 4, you get medium brown. And in the last one, your input is 6, and you get a dark brown color. If you now fit a curve through these points, this represents the model of the toaster with the bread at steady state.
Remember that you wanna find the time setting for your desired bread color. To find this mathematically, let’s equate the input to u and the output to y. In the experiments, for different values of u, you found the corresponding values of y. So you can write y as a function of u. But now you wanna do the opposite. Given the desired value of y, you wanna calculate the value of u. In mathematical terms, this corresponds to taking the inverse of the function. Therefore, to calculate the time you need for your desired bread color, you take the inverse of it. See, open-loop control is really easy.
Actually, what we’re looking at here is pretty typical behavior of any standard car suspension. The first peak corresponds to the resonant frequency of the suspension itself, and the second corresponds to the resonant frequency of the tire. For anybody that has ever wandered off the freeway on to one of those rumble strips on the emergency lane and felt that the car beginning to shake so bad that it felt like it was going to fall apart: The reason why that happened was that the speed of the car, combined with the road profile underneath, was generating an excitation that was probably very close to the resonant frequency of the tire.
Let’s jump to another room and see if we can find an open-loop system there. Oh, this is little Timmy who wants to take a warm shower, but he’s not tall enough to turn the shower handle. So, he asks for your help. In this open-loop system, the handle position is the input and water temperature is the output. To help little Timmy, you turn the handle to different positions, and based on this the water temperature changes.
Open-loop control seems to work perfectly. All you need is to do couple of experiments and, once you have an idea of the model of your system, you can easily find the input needed to get a desired output. But are there any situations where open-loop control may fail?
Now let’s go back to the shower example. You positioned the handle such that little Timmy gets a nice warm shower, but what happens when someone runs the dishwasher? Water gets freezing cold. The reason is that when the dishwasher is running, the hot water supply is used up and therefore less hot water is available for the shower. So, the water temperature drops. This is another shortcoming of open-loop control. Unexpected environmental changes acting on the system affect the output.
Let’s summarize what we’ve seen in this video. Open-loop control is easy and conceptually simple. Through experiments, you find the model of your system. If there are no variations or unexpected events, you know what input to give the system to get a desired output. However, when there are variations in the system or unexpected events, open-loop control is unreliable. So, the question is: how do we handle the shortcomings of open-loop control? We’ll answer this question in the next video, where we’ll discuss feedback control.
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