Position control of charged spherical particles suspended in laminar flow within a channel

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 10 - Trang 853-864 - 2022
Ehsan Motamedi1, Behrooz Rahmani1, Amin Moosaie2
1Control Research Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Yasouj University, Yasouj, Iran
2Turbulence Research Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Yasouj University, Yasouj, Iran

Tóm tắt

In this paper, steering a set of charged particles suspended in fluid flow within a plane channel is considered. In this way, the linear-state feedback control methodology is used to determine the external electric field. In order to design the proposed controller, at first, the governing mathematical ordinary differential equations are derived by the combination of Newton’s second law, Coulomb’s law and Navier–Stokes equations. Then, a linear quadratic regulator, which is one of the optimal control methods, is used to design the state-feedback control gains. For this purpose, continuous-time and discrete-time control methods are utilized. Simulation studies demonstrate the efficiency of the implemented control strategy for controlling the particles position and also tracking desired trajectories within the fluid flow. These results can contribute substantially to the development of related industrial processes.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Sun T, Zhang YS, Pang B, Hyun DC, Yang M, Xia Y (2014) Engineered nanoparticles for drug delivery in cancer therapy. Angew Chem Int Ed 53(46):12320–12364 Nacev A, Komaee A, Sarwar A, Probst R, Kim SH, Emmert-Buck M, Shapiro B (2012) Towards control of magnetic fluids in patients: directing therapeutic nanoparticles to disease locations. IEEE Control Syst Mag 32(3):32–74 Wei W, Gu Z (2015) Electrification of particulate entrained fluid flows—mechanisms, applications, and numerical methodology. Phys Rep 600:1–53. Electrification of particulate entrained fluid flows—Mechanisms, applications, and numerical methodology Saiyasitpanich P, Keener TC, Khang S-J, Lu M (2007) Removal of diesel particulate matter (DPM) in a tubular wet electrostatic precipitator. J Electrostat 65(10):618–624 Law SE, Giles DK (2009) Electrostatic abatement of airborne respirable dust emission from mechanized tree-nut harvesting: theoretical basis. J Electrost 67(2):84–88. 11th international conference on electrostatics Komaee A, Shapiro B (2011) Magnetic steering of a distributed ferrofluid spot towards a deep target with minimal spreading. In: 2011 50th IEEE conference on decision and control and European control conference, pp 7950–7955 Komaee A, Shapiro B (2012) Steering a ferromagnetic particle by optimal magnetic feedback control. IEEE Trans Control Syst Technol 20:1011–1024 Amiahmadi H, Beigzadeh BA (2017) Numerical simulation of micro/nano magnetic particles movement in bloodstream considering interaction of particles. Modares Mech Eng 17(4):307–314 Komaee A (2017) Feedback control for transportation of magnetic fluids with minimal dispersion: a first step toward targeted magnetic drug delivery. IEEE Trans Control Syst Technol 25(1):129–144 Yu K, Yi J, Shan J (2018) Simultaneous multiple-nanowire motion control, planning, and manipulation under electric fields in fluid suspension. IEEE Trans Autom Sci Eng 15(1):80–91 Yu K, Yi J, Shan JW (2018) Real-time motion planning of multiple nanowires in fluid suspension under electric-field actuation. Int J Intell Robot Appl 2:383–399 Ablay G, Böyük M, İçöz K (2019) Design, modeling, and control of a horizontal magnetic micromanipulator. Trans Inst Meas Control 41(11):3190–3198 Böyük M, Eroǧlu Y, Ablay G, İçöz K (2020) Feedback controller designs for an electromagnetic micromanipulator. Proc Inst Mech Eng I J Syst Control Eng 234(6):759–772 Watanabe T (1989) Calculation of fly ash particle motion and its migration velocity in an electrostatic precipitator. In: Conference record of the IEEE industry applications society annual meeting, vol 2, pp 2126–2136 Meroth AM, Rastogi AK, Schwab AJ (1996) Numerical computation of the turbulent particulate flow in an electrostatic precipitator. In: International symposium on filtration and separation of fine dust (Vienna), pp 994–1001 Cristina S, Feliziani M (1995) Calculation of ionized fields in DC electrostatic precipitators in the presence of dust and electric wind. IEEE Trans Ind Appl 31(6):1446–1451 Choi B, Fletcher C (1998) Turbulent particle dispersion in an electrostatic precipitator. Appl Math Model 22(12):1009–1021 Jung JH, Oh H, Kim SS (2010) Numerical simulation of the deposition pattern in multiple electrohydrodynamic spraying. Powder Technol 198(3):439–444 Liu Q, Song Zhang S, Pei Chen J (2015) Numerical analysis of charged particle collection in wire-plate ESP. J Electrost 74:56–65 Durst F, Miloievic D, Schönung B (1984) Eulerian and Lagrangian predictions of particulate two-phase flows: a numerical study. Appl Math Model 8(2):101–115 Rezvanpour A, Wang CH (2014) The effects of auxiliary electric field within the electrohydrodynamic atomization encapsulation chamber on particle size, morphology and collection efficiency. Chem Eng J 239:8-18 White HJ (1984) Control of particulates by electrostatic precipitation. Wiley, New York Belanger PR (1995) Control engineering: a modern approach, 1st edn. Oxford University Press, Oxford Neves GP, Angélico BA (2021) A discrete LQR applied to a self-balancing reaction wheel unicycle: modeling, construction and control. In: 2021 American control conference (ACC), pp 777–782 Franklin GF, Powell JD, Workman ML (2006) Digital control of dynamic systems, 3rd edn. Ellis-Kagle Press, Austin Ogata K (1995) Discrete-time control systems, 2nd edn. Prentice-Hall, Hoboken Hockney RW, Eastwood JW (1988) Computer simulation using particles. CRC Press, Boca Raton Greengard L, Rokhlin V (1997) A fast algorithm for particle simulations. J Comput Phys 135:280–292 Essmann U, Perera L, Berkowitz ML, Darden T, Lee H, Pedersen LG (1995) A smooth particle mesh Ewald method. J Chem Phys 103(19):8577–8593