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Next: Modulated Impulsive Forces Up: Examples Previous: Local Conservation

Explicit Interaction

In case of explicitly modeled interaction with the system environment, conservation principles may be violated. Consider the electrical circuit in Fig. 6 which has a modulated voltage source VR, i.e., the voltage drop across R is enforced on C2. The system of equations can be compiled as \begin{displaymath}
\left.\begin{array}
{c}
\left[\begin{array}
{cccccc}
C_1 & 0...
 ...} \\ {i}_{C_2} \\ {i}_{C_3}\end{array}\right]\end{array}\right.\end{displaymath}
In this system, the first three rows contain the equations that model the constituent time-derivative behavior of the three capacitors, C1, C2, and C3, and, therefore, are part of f. So, \begin{displaymath}
\dot{\bar{x}} =
\left[\begin{array}
{c}
\dot{v}_{C_1} \\ \do...
 ...egin{array}
{c}
v_{C_1} \\ v_{C_2} \\ v_{C_3}\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
The equation on the fourth row represents the nodal equation summing the currents of C1, C3, and R to . The last two rows contain equations that represent the algebraic constraints vC3 = vC1 and vC2 = vC1 (due to the modulated source, VR), respectively. The equations on the last three rows constitute h, and the last two of them have no algebraic variables so they are part of $\bar{h}$.The remaining equation in h yields \begin{displaymath}
\hat{y} =
\left[\begin{array}
{c}
i_{C_1} \\ i_{C_3}\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
and, therefore, \begin{displaymath}
\tilde{y} =
\left[\begin{array}
{c}
i_{C_2}\end{array}\right].\end{displaymath}


  
Figure 6: Explicit interaction with the environment.
\begin{figure}
\center\mbox{
\psfig {figure=mse.eps}
}\end{figure}

This results in the matrix partitioning \begin{displaymath}
F' = 
\left[\begin{array}
{cc}
1 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1\end{a...
 ...& 0 & 0 \\ 0 & C_2 & 0 & 1 \\ 0 & 0 & C_3 & 0\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
and \begin{displaymath}
\hat{H}' = 
\left[\begin{array}
{cc}
-1 & -1\end{array}\righ...
 ...[\begin{array}
{cccc}
\frac{1}{R} & 0 & 0 & 0\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
Now, the pseude-inverse of F' is \begin{displaymath}
F'^+ = 
\left[\begin{array}
{ccc}
1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
and \begin{displaymath}
\hat{H}' F'^+ F'' =
\left[\begin{array}
{cccc}
-C_1 & 0 & -C_3 & 0\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}
which yields the conservation equations \begin{displaymath}
\left[\begin{array}
{cccc}
\frac{1}{R} & 0 & 0 & 0\end{array...
 ...\ \dot{v}_{C_2} \\ \dot{v}_{C_3} \\ {i}_{C_2}\end{array}\right]\end{displaymath}

Integrating the conservation equations gives the projection direction \begin{displaymath}
C_1 {v}_{C_1} + C_3 {v}_{C_3} = C_1 {v}_{C_1}^0 + C_3 {v}_{C_3}^0\end{displaymath}
which, combined with the differentiated equations \begin{displaymath}
\left[\begin{array}
{ccc}
1 & -1 & 0 \\ 1 & 0 & -1 \\ \end{a...
 ...ray}\right]
=
\left[\begin{array}
{c}
0 \\ 0\end{array}\right],\end{displaymath}
constitutes a system of equations of rank three with three variables. The solution in terms of the conserved quantity, charge (q = C v), is

\begin{eqnarray}
\html{eqn85}q_{C_1} = \frac{C_1}{C_1 + C_3}(q_{C_1}^0 + q_{C_3}...
 ... q_{C_1} \\ q_{C_3} = \frac{C_3}{C_1 + C_3}(q_{C_1}^0 + q_{C_3}^0)\end{eqnarray}


which shows that the charge on C1 and C3 is conserved, but there may be an instantaneous change of charge on C2. This is conform the model, which shows explicit interaction with the environment between C2 and the battery VR.

Note that the current of C2, iC2, cannot be solved in terms of differentiated variables. To find the value of this variable, all $\dot{x}$ have to be eliminated from its equation. The result is an algebraic relation that poses no additional constraints on the dynamic, differential equation, behavior of the system. The only additional information is about system variable values (e.g., required for graphing purposes).


next up previous
Next: Modulated Impulsive Forces Up: Examples Previous: Local Conservation
Pieter J. Mosterman ER
7/27/1998