In one application an AC voltage sourced by a generator is applied to aLooks like an unusual feature to me. Can you share what the purpose of varying the supply voltage?
load as a PWM waveform. The period PER is fixed (for example, 100ms) and
the pulse-width PW has a maximum (for example, 20ms).
The user can change the voltage peak (and consequently the voltage RMS)
by an handle, while the controller manages automatically the PW.
The load changes its temperature when the PWM waveform is applied to itI think the easiest solution is to cap the error/PW value.
and a sensor that read the temperature is present.
There's a temperature upper limit (for example, 40°C) that mustn't be exceeded. If needed, the controller should decrease the PW accordingly
to avoid temperature overshoot. Otherwise, the PW is the maximum allowed (20ms).
Of course, when the voltage peak is low, PW could be the maximum. When
the user increases the voltage, the controller should be smart enough to reduce PW accordingly and fast to avoid temperature overshoot.
I was thinking to implement a PID controller with the load temperature
as the process variable PV and the thermal power as the control variable
CV. From the thermal power I could calculate the PW to use.
CV = Vrms^2 / Z * PW / PER
Apart calibrating the PID constants, there's another problem. When the voltage is low, the CV from the PID algorithm would be greater than the maximum allowed (limited by PW maximum duration). The system could stay
in this state for minutes, so the PW calculated by the PID assumes very great values with time.
When the user decides to increase the voltage and there's the moment to reduce the PW, the PID behaviour could be very slow, because it would
start from a very high PW (very high sum of errors of the integrative part).
What's the trick here to avoid this behaviour? Should I limit the sum of errors of the I term? Should I re-initialize the PID state in some way?
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