When you click the Amazon logo to the left of any citation and purchase the book (or other media) from Amazon.com, MIT OpenCourseWare will receive up to 10% of this purchase and any other purchases you make during that visit. This will not increase the cost of your purchase. Links provided are to the US Amazon site, but you can also support OCW through Amazon sites in other regions. Learn more. |
Text
Nise, Norman S. Control Systems Engineering. 4th ed. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley, 2003. ISBN: 9780471445777.
Problem Sets
Problem sets are due in class as shown on the class schedule.
Quizzes
There will be two quizzes as shown on the class schedule.
Final Examination
There will be a three hour final examination (closed book) covering all of the course material during the final examination period; the exact time to be scheduled by the Registrar's Office.
Grading
Grading criteria.
| ACTIVITIES |
PERCENTAGES |
| Quizzes (2) |
20% |
| Final exam |
30% |
| Labs (required) |
25% |
| Homework |
25% |
Homework Grading
3 points/problem: 3=perfect, 2=small mistake(s), 1=major mistake(s), 0=no attempt.
Lab Grading
3 points/lab: 3=exemplary, 2=adequate, 1=fair, 0=inadequate or no show.
Late Policies
20% of the grade will be deducted for every working day past the due date (i.e., no credit after 5 days).
Course Ethics
Collaboration is prohibited in the quizzes and the final examination. You are encouraged to discuss problem sets and lab assignments but you must write the solutions yourselves.
Use of material from previous years is forbidden.
Topics
Course syllabus.
| SES # |
TOPICS |
| 1 |
Introduction; mechanical elements |
| 2 |
Solving ODEs; cruise control |
| 3 |
Laplace transforms; transfer functions; translational and rotational mechanical transfer functions |
| 4 |
Electrical and electro-mechanical system transfer functions |
| 5 |
DC motor transfer function |
| 6 |
Poles and zeros; 1st order systems |
| 7 |
2nd order systems |
| 8 |
2nd order systems (cont.) |
| 9 |
More than 2 poles; zeros; nonlinearities and linearization |
| 10 |
Examples of modeling and transfer functions |
| 11 |
Block diagrams; feedback |
| 12 |
Analysis of feedback systems |
| 13 |
Quiz 1 |
| 14 |
Stability; Routh-Hurwitz criterion |
| 15 |
Stability analysis |
| 16 |
Steady state error analysis |
| 17 |
Root locus introduction |
| 18 |
Root locus example |
| 19 |
Design of transient response using root locus |
| 20 |
Positive feedback |
| 21 |
Examples of design via root locus |
| 22 |
Steady-state error compensation |
| 23 |
Transient response compensation; transient and steady-state error compensation |
| 24 |
Compensation examples |
| 25 |
Feedback compensation and its physical realization |
| 26 |
Feedback design examples |
| 27 |
Quiz 2 |
| 28 |
Frequency response; bode plots |
| 29 |
Bode plot examples |
| 30 |
Gain margin and phase margin |
| 31 |
Design using the frequency response; lead, lag, lead-lag compensators |
| 32 |
The state-space representation |
| 33 |
Solving the state equations in the time and space domains |
| 34 |
State equation examples |
| 35 |
Stability and steady-state error in state space; controllability and observability |
| 36 |
Optimal control; the minimum time problem |
| 37 |
Review: modeling and transfer functions |
| 38 |
Review: root locus, feedback design |
| 39 |
Review: frequency domain and design |