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Nonsmooth Modeling and Simulation for Switched Circuits concerns
the modeling and the numerical simulation of switched circuits with
the nonsmooth dynamical systems (NSDS) approach, using
piecewise-linear and multivalued models of electronic devices like
diodes, transistors, switches. Numerous examples (ranging from
introductory academic circuits to various types of power
converters) are analyzed and many simulation results obtained with
the INRIA open-source SICONOS software package are presented.
Comparisons with SPICE and hybrid methods demonstrate the power of
the NSDS approach. Nonsmooth Modeling and Simulation for Switched
Circuits is intended to researchers and engineers in the field of
circuits simulation and design, but may also attract applied
mathematicians interested by the numerical analysis for nonsmooth
dynamical systems, as well as researchers from Systems and Control.
This book concerns the numerical simulation of dynamical systems
whose trajec- ries may not be differentiable everywhere. They are
named nonsmooth dynamical systems. They make an important class of
systems, rst because of the many app- cations in which nonsmooth
models are useful, secondly because they give rise to new problems
in various elds of science. Usually nonsmooth dynamical systems are
represented as differential inclusions, complementarity systems,
evolution va- ational inequalities, each of these classes itself
being split into several subclasses. The book is divided into four
parts, the rst three parts being sketched in Fig. 0. 1. The aim of
the rst part is to present the main tools from mechanics and
applied mathematics which are necessary to understand how nonsmooth
dynamical systems may be numerically simulated in a reliable way.
Many examples illustrate the th- retical results, and an emphasis
is put on mechanical systems, as well as on electrical circuits
(the so-called Filippov's systems are also examined in some detail,
due to their importance in control applications). The second and
third parts are dedicated to a detailed presentation of the
numerical schemes. A fourth part is devoted to the presentation of
the software platform Siconos. This book is not a textbook on -
merical analysis of nonsmooth systems, in the sense that despite
the main results of numerical analysis (convergence, order of
consistency, etc. ) being presented, their proofs are not provided.
This volume constitutes an advanced introduction to the field of
analysis, modeling and numerical simulation of rigid body
mechanical systems with unilateral constraints. The topics include
Moreau's sweeping process, the numerical analysis of nonsmooth
multibody systems with friction, the study of energetical
restitution coefficients for elasto-plastic models, the study of
stability and bifurcation in systems with impacts, and the
development of a multiple impact rule for Newton's cradle and the
simple rocking model. Combining pedagogical aspects with innovative
approaches, this book will not only be of interest to researchers
working actively in the field, but also to graduate students
wishing to get acquainted with this field of research through
lectures written at a level also accessible to nonspecialists.
This second edition of Dissipative Systems Analysis and Control
has been substantially reorganized to accommodate new material and
enhance its pedagogical features. It examines linear and nonlinear
systems with examples of both in each chapter. Also included are
some infinite-dimensional and nonsmooth examples. Throughout,
emphasis is placed on the use of the dissipative properties of a
system for the design of stable feedback control laws.
Nonsmooth Modeling and Simulation for Switched Circuits concerns
the modeling and the numerical simulation of switched circuits with
the nonsmooth dynamical systems (NSDS) approach, using
piecewise-linear and multivalued models of electronic devices like
diodes, transistors, switches. Numerous examples (ranging from
introductory academic circuits to various types of power
converters) are analyzed and many simulation results obtained with
the INRIA open-source SICONOS software package are presented.
Comparisons with SPICE and hybrid methods demonstrate the power of
the NSDS approach. Nonsmooth Modeling and Simulation for Switched
Circuits is intended to researchers and engineers in the field of
circuits simulation and design, but may also attract applied
mathematicians interested by the numerical analysis for nonsmooth
dynamical systems, as well as researchers from Systems and Control.
Thank you for opening the second edition of this monograph, which
is devoted to the study of a class of nonsmooth dynamical systems
of the general form: :: i; = g(x, u) (0. 1) f(x, t) 2: 0 where x E
JRn is the system's state vector, u E JRm is the vector of inputs,
and the function f (-, . ) represents a unilateral constraint that
is imposed on the state. More precisely, we shall restrict
ourselves to a subclass of such systems, namely mechanical systems
subject to unilateral constraints on the position, whose dynamical
equations may be in a first instance written as: ii= g(q, q, u) (0.
2) f(q, t) 2: 0 where q E JRn is the vector of generalized
coordinates of the system and u is an in put (or controller) that
generally involves a state feedback loop, i. e. u= u(q, q, t, z),
with z= Z(z, q, q, t) when the controller is a dynamic state
feedback. Mechanical systems composed of rigid bodies interacting
fall into this subclass. A general prop erty of systems as in (0.
1) and (0. 2) is that their solutions are nonsmooth (with respect
to time): Nonsmoothness arises primarily from the occurence of
impacts (or collisions, or percussions) in the dynamical behaviour,
when the trajectories attain the surface f(x, t) = O. They are
necessary to keep the trajectories within the subspace " = {x: f(x,
t) 2: O} of the system's state space."
This volume constitutes an advanced introduction to the field of
analysis, modeling and numerical simulation of rigid body
mechanical systems with unilateral constraints. The topics include
Moreau's sweeping process, the numerical analysis of nonsmooth
multibody systems with friction, the study of energetical
restitution coefficients for elasto-plastic models, the study of
stability and bifurcation in systems with impacts, and the
development of a multiple impact rule for Newton's cradle and the
simple rocking model. Combining pedagogical aspects with innovative
approaches, this book will not only be of interest to researchers
working actively in the field, but also to graduate students
wishing to get acquainted with this field of research through
lectures written at a level also accessible to nonspecialists.
This book concerns the numerical simulation of dynamical systems
whose trajec- ries may not be differentiable everywhere. They are
named nonsmooth dynamical systems. They make an important class of
systems, rst because of the many app- cations in which nonsmooth
models are useful, secondly because they give rise to new problems
in various elds of science. Usually nonsmooth dynamical systems are
represented as differential inclusions, complementarity systems,
evolution va- ational inequalities, each of these classes itself
being split into several subclasses. The book is divided into four
parts, the rst three parts being sketched in Fig. 0. 1. The aim of
the rst part is to present the main tools from mechanics and
applied mathematics which are necessary to understand how nonsmooth
dynamical systems may be numerically simulated in a reliable way.
Many examples illustrate the th- retical results, and an emphasis
is put on mechanical systems, as well as on electrical circuits
(the so-called Filippov's systems are also examined in some detail,
due to their importance in control applications). The second and
third parts are dedicated to a detailed presentation of the
numerical schemes. A fourth part is devoted to the presentation of
the software platform Siconos. This book is not a textbook on -
merical analysis of nonsmooth systems, in the sense that despite
the main results of numerical analysis (convergence, order of
consistency, etc. ) being presented, their proofs are not provided.
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