Iterative learning control and repetitive control for engineering practice

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Abstract

This paper discusses linear iterative learning and repetitive control, presenting general purpose control laws with only a few parameters to tune. The method of tuning them is straightforward, making tuning easy for the practicing control engineer. The approach can then serve the same function for learning/repetitive control, as PID controllers do in classical control. Anytime one has a controller that is to perform the same tacking command repeatedly, one simply uses such a law to adjust the command given to an existing feedback controller and achieves a substantial decrease in tracking error. Experiments with the method show that decreases by a factor between 100 and 1000 in the RMS tracking error on a commercial robot, performing a high speed trajectory can easily be obtained in 8 to 12 trials for learning. It is shown that in engineering practice, the same design criteria apply to learning control as apply to repetitive control. Although the conditions for stability are very different for the two problems, one must impose a good transient condition, and once such a condition is formulated, it is likely to be the same for both learning and repetitive control.

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APA

Longman, R. W. (2000). Iterative learning control and repetitive control for engineering practice. International Journal of Control, 73(10), 930–954. https://doi.org/10.1080/002071700405905

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