Added note on derivative-on-measurement.
If you want to use derivative-on-measurement, you will need to negate the 'D'-gain you would typically use in a 'standard derivative-on-error' PID controller - I did not mention that in the video. Since the 'error signal' effectively going into the differentiator does not depend on the setpoint: e[n] = 0 - measurement, and therefore (e[n] - e[n - 1]) = (0 - measurement) - (0 - prevMeasurement) = -Kd * (measurement - prevMeasurement). So, for example, if you require a controller with a D-gain of 10, you would set pid->Kd = -10. This is a slight quirk of the derivative-on-measurement form - however, the code can of course be adapted to include the minus sign.
This commit is contained in:
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ float TestSystem_Update(float inp);
|
||||
int main()
|
||||
{
|
||||
/* Initialise PID controller */
|
||||
PIDController pid = { PID_KP, PID_KI, PID_KD,
|
||||
PIDController pid = { PID_KP, PID_KI, -PID_KD,
|
||||
PID_TAU,
|
||||
PID_LIM_MIN, PID_LIM_MAX,
|
||||
SAMPLE_TIME_S };
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user