IEEE Access (Jan 2022)

A Case Study of a Hydraulic Servo Drive Flexibly Connected to a Boom Manipulator Excited by the Cyclic Impact Force Generated by a Hydraulic Rock Breaker

  • Ryszard Dindorf,
  • Piotr Wos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3143257
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 7734 – 7752

Abstract

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This study deals with the mathematical modeling, dynamic analysis, hybrid control structure, and experimental tests of a hydraulic servo drive (HSD) flexibly connected by a vibration isolator as a spring damping device (SDD) to a boom manipulator excited by the cyclic impact force generated by a rock breaker. Based on the dynamic model of the HSD-SDD system, the frequency ratios of the rigid and flexible connections to the mass load were determined. The HSD-SDD model was saved as a Hammerstein model with unknown parameters. The dynamic linear part of the HSD-SDD model was adopted as an autoregressive model with an exogenous input (ARX) model. The online proportional integral derivative (PID) controller parameter-tuning algorithm was implemented in several steps. The PID controller tuning process occurs in real time, and the optimal setting of the PID controller depends on the critical ultimate gain and period set at the stability limit. A hybrid control structure consisting of a feedback controller and feedforward controller was proposed. A combination of input shaping and feedforward filters is used, thus the badly damped vibrations are more effectively compensated, resulting in better control accuracy of the HSD-SDD system. The goal of optimizing the hybrid control structure is to determine a feedforward filter coefficient that minimizes the objective function. Finally, the global minimum is calculated from the control error based on the measurement of the input and output signals. The highlight of this study is the development of a new hybrid control structure to compensate for badly damped vibrations.

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