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How to estimate settling time of an overdamped system?

Electrical Engineering Asked on November 23, 2021

I’ve been trying to figure out how to estimate the settling time of a second order system in response to a step input of magnitude 5.
The systems transfer function is $$G(s) = frac{1}{(s+2)(s+4)}$$ and I have already determined the time response with the step input R(s): $$C(s)=R(s)G(s)qquad therefore c(t) = frac{5}{8}+frac{5}{8}e^{-4t}-frac{5}{4}e^{-2t}$$
Now I need to estimate the 2% settling time of the response using this information, but I’m not sure how. I know the system is overdamped as ζ>1, so I can’t use the normal settling time equation $$T_s =frac{4}{zetaomega_n}$$
I looked into this post: (over and critically damped systems settling time) but the answers only explain long winded ways to get an accurate result. I’ve already used MATLAB to obtain an exact result of 2.3 seconds, but I need to be able to estimate it without MATLAB.

I was thinking I could try trial and error with different values of t until c(t) is within 2% of the steady state value (which is 0.625) but while this would work I doubt its the correct way to do it, so is anyone able to help me out with a better method?

3 Answers

Well, let's solve this in a more general case. We have the following transfer function (assuming real positive value for $epsilon$):

$$mathcal{H}left(text{s}right):=frac{text{Y}left(text{s}right)}{text{X}left(text{s}right)}=frac{1}{left(text{s}+epsilonright)left(text{s}+2epsilonright)}tag1$$

When we look at the step-response we are using $text{X}left(text{s}right)=mathcal{L}_tleft[thetaleft(tright)right]_{left(text{s}right)}=frac{1}{text{s}}$, so the output is given by:

$$text{Y}left(text{s}right)=frac{1}{text{s}}cdotfrac{1}{left(text{s}+epsilonright)left(text{s}+2epsilonright)}tag2$$

Using inverse Laplace transform, we find:

$$text{y}left(tright)=mathcal{L}_text{s}^{-1}left[frac{1}{text{s}}cdotfrac{1}{left(text{s}+epsilonright)left(text{s}+2epsilonright)}right]_{left(tright)}=frac{expleft(-2epsilon tright)left(expleft(epsilon tright)-1right)^2}{2epsilon^2}tag3$$

It is not hard to show that when $ttoinfty$ (assuming real positive value for $epsilon$), we get:

$$lim_{ttoinfty}text{y}left(tright)=frac{1}{2epsilon^2}tag4$$

Now, for the settling time, we want to find the time $t$ when $text{n}text{%}$ of the final value is reached:

$$text{y}left(t_text{n}right)=frac{text{n}text{%}}{100}cdotfrac{1}{2epsilon^2}Longleftrightarrowspace t_text{n}=dotstag5$$

Solving that gives:

$$t_text{n}=frac{1}{epsilon}cdotlnleft(frac{10}{10-sqrt{text{n}text{%}}}right)tag6$$

Answered by Jan on November 23, 2021

For systems with real left-half plane poles, you can usually estimate it by only considering the dominant pole (the pole with the lowest frequency). In your case this would be $p_d=-2$. The result gets more accurate as the non-dominant pole ($p_{nd}$) moves further away from the dominant pole.

By only considering the dominant pole, you get a rather simple equation:

$$begin{align} frac{5}{4}cdot e^{-2t}&=0.02cdot frac{5}{8} \ t &= -frac{1}{2}cdot lnleft( 0.02cdot frac{5}{8}cdot frac{4}{5} right) approx 2.30258509299s\ end{align}$$

The idea is that the non-dominant pole at $p_{nd}=-4$ leads to a term $e^{-4t}$ which will be damping so quickly that it doesn't affect the overall settling time. The advantage is the simplicity of the equation, and the fact that is actually a pretty common occurrence to have a very dominant pole and far-away non-dominant poles in electronic circuits.

In your specific case, it is possible to analytically calculate the settling time. The time it takes for the time-dependent terms to damp to 2% of the final value can be calculated using (similar to Andy's answer, but using the absolute value):

$$begin{align} left| e^{-4t}-2cdot e^{-2t} right| &=0.02 \ &Updownarrow (y=e^{-2t})\ y^2-2cdot y &= pm 0.02 \ &Updownarrow (text{There are 4 distinct solutions, but I only take the relevant one}) \ y = e^{-2t} &= 1 - frac{7}{5sqrt{2}} \ &Updownarrow \ t &= -frac{1}{2}cdot lnleft(1 - frac{7}{5sqrt{2}}right) approx 2.30006613189s end{align}$$

So a factor of 2 for $p_{nd}/p_d$ leads to about an error of 0.1% on the calculated settling time when using the dominant-pole approximation. Whether or not this is sufficient I leave to you.

Answered by Sven B on November 23, 2021

Yes, your inverse Laplace calculation is correct.

The final steady state value will be 5/8 - this is the DC value after a long length of time. So, you are really looking for the rest of the equation to fall in magnitude to 2% of 5/8: -

$$dfrac{5}{8}e^{-4t} - dfrac{5}{4}e^{-2t} = dfrac{5}{8}cdot text{0.02}$$

$$=dfrac{8}{8}e^{-4t} - dfrac{8}{4}e^{-2t} = dfrac{8}{8}cdot text{0.02}$$

$$= e^{-4t} - 2e^{-2t} = 0.02$$

Does that help?

Answered by Andy aka on November 23, 2021

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