
Experimental validation of the simultaneous damping and tracking controller design strategy for high‐bandwidth nanopositioning – a PAVPF approach
Author(s) -
Babarinde Adedayo K.,
Li Linlin,
Zhu LiMin,
Aphale Sumeet S.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
iet control theory and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.059
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 1751-8652
pISSN - 1751-8644
DOI - 10.1049/iet-cta.2020.0679
Subject(s) - control theory (sociology) , bandwidth (computing) , tracking (education) , damping ratio , computer science , control engineering , acceleration , transient response , engineering , vibration , physics , acoustics , control (management) , artificial intelligence , psychology , pedagogy , computer network , electrical engineering , classical mechanics
For scanning applications, damping and tracking controllers are employed in a dual‐loop fashion. Whilst these damping and tracking controllers are designed sequentially in literature (damping first, tracking later), it has been found that the tracking controller (typically integral or proportional–integral) influences the ‘desired’ pole locations (and thereby its damping performance) achieved by the positive acceleration, velocity and position feedback (PAVPF) damping controller. This work starts by first highlighting this unwanted effect that results in low positioning bandwidth. To address this drawback, this work presents the design, analysis and experimental validation of the simultaneous design method for the PAVPF control‐based combined damping and tracking scheme, aimed at achieving accurate, high‐bandwidth nanopositioning. It also details a recursive analytical method to simultaneously optimise the damping and tracking controller parameters resulting in almost a three‐fold increase in closed‐loop bandwidth when compared with the traditional sequential method. To further confirm the advantages of the proposed simultaneous design method, comparative experimental results conducted on one axis of a piezo‐actuated nanopositioner are presented. Significant improvements in the steady‐state positioning as well as transient response are noted. These improvements combined, result in significant gains in the raster scanning performance of nanopositioning stages.