Globally Stable Discrete Time PID Passivity-based Control of Power Converters: Simulation and Experimental Results
Alessio Moreschini, Wei He, Romeo Ortega, Yiheng Lu, Tao Li

TL;DR
This paper develops a discretized PID passivity-based control method for power converters, ensuring stability and passivity preservation through implicit midpoint discretization, supported by simulations and experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a passivity-preserving discretization of PID controllers and outputs for power converters, enabling practical implementation with guaranteed stability.
Findings
Discrete-time PID-PBC defines a passive map for the incremental model
The method guarantees global stability of power converters under discretized control
Simulations and experiments confirm the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
Abstract
The key idea behind PID Passivity-based Control (PID-PBC) is to leverage the passivity property of PIDs (for all positive gains) and wrap the PID controller around a passive output to ensure global stability in closed-loop. However, the practical applicability of PID-PBC is stymied by two key facts: (i) the vast majority of practical implementations of PIDs is carried-out in discrete time -- discretizing the continuous time dynamical system of the PID; (ii) the well-known problem that passivity is not preserved upon discretization, even with small sampling times. Therefore, two aspects of the PID-PBC must be revisited for its safe practical application. First, we propose a discretization of the PID that ensures its passivity. Second, since the output that is identified as passive for the continuous time system is not necessarily passive for its discrete time version, we construct a new…
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