Modelling for Robust Feedback Control of Fluid Flows
Bryn Ll. Jones, Peter H. Heins, Eric C. Kerrigan, Jonathan F., Morrison, Ati S. Sharma

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel numerical method for creating low-order, linear models of fluid flows suitable for robust feedback control, demonstrated through a shear stress controller in channel flow.
Contribution
It presents a new approach to model reduction that simplifies boundary sensing and actuation modeling, enabling robust control design for complex fluid systems.
Findings
Robust shear stress attenuation achieved across various Reynolds numbers.
The method simplifies boundary condition modeling without analytical transformations.
A single linear controller effectively stabilizes flow perturbations.
Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of obtaining low-order models of fluid flows for the purpose of designing robust feedback controllers. This is challenging since whilst many flows are governed by a set of nonlinear, partial differential-algebraic equations (the Navier-Stokes equations), the majority of established control theory assumes models of much greater simplicity, in that they are firstly: linear, secondly: described by ordinary differential equations, and thirdly: finite-dimensional. Linearisation, where appropriate, overcomes the first disparity, but attempts to reconcile the remaining two have proved difficult. This paper addresses these two problems as follows. Firstly, a numerical approach is used to project the governing equations onto a divergence-free basis, thus converting a system of differential-algebraic equations into one of ordinary differential equations. This…
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