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Formula Sheet

The document provides information about Laplace transforms including: 1) Common Laplace transform pairs such as the unit step function and exponential functions. 2) Laplace transform theorems including linearity, time shifting, and differentiation. 3) Models for circuit elements like capacitors, inductors, resistors using Laplace transforms. 4) Models for physical systems involving springs, dampers, masses using Laplace transforms. 5) Details of a canonical second-order system and its transfer function.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views

Formula Sheet

The document provides information about Laplace transforms including: 1) Common Laplace transform pairs such as the unit step function and exponential functions. 2) Laplace transform theorems including linearity, time shifting, and differentiation. 3) Models for circuit elements like capacitors, inductors, resistors using Laplace transforms. 4) Models for physical systems involving springs, dampers, masses using Laplace transforms. 5) Details of a canonical second-order system and its transfer function.

Uploaded by

geyoxi5098
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

ECE4132 Formula sheet

Laplace transform pairs


f (t) F (s)

δ(t) 1

1
1(t)
s
1
t1(t)
s2
n!
tn 1(t)
sn+1
1
e−at 1(t)
s+a
ω
sin(ωt)1(t)
s2 + ω2
s
cos(ωt)1(t)
+ ω2 s2
In the table above, δ denotes the unit impulse and 1 denotes the unit step.

Laplace transform theorems


Signal Laplace transform Name
R∞
f (t) F (s) = 0− f (t)e−st dt Definition

k1 f1 (t) + k2 f2 (t) k1 F1 (s) + k2 F2 (s) Linearity

e−at f (t) F (s + a) Frequency shifting (modulation)

f (t − T ) e−sT F (s) Time shifting

1 s

f (at) (where a > 0) aF a Time-scaling

df
dt sF (s) − f (0− ) Differentiation

d2 f
dt2
s2 F (s) − sf (0− ) − f 0 (0− ) Differentiation

dn f Pn n−k f (k−1) (0− )


dtn sn F (s) − k=1 s Differentiation
Rt F (s)
0− f (τ ) dτ s Integration

limt→∞ f (t) = lims→0 sF (s) Final value theorem

limt→0+ f (t) = lims→∞ sF (s) Initial value theorem


In the table above, for the final value theorem to be valid, the denominator of F (s) must have at
most one root at the origin, and all other roots must have negative real part. For the initial value
theorem to be valid, the integral of f must be continuous at t = 0.

Page 1 of 4
Models for capacitors, inductors, and resistors
Component Voltage-current Current-voltage Voltage-charge Impedence Admittance
V (s)/I(s) I(s)/V (s)
Z t
1 dv(t) 1 1
Capacitor v(t) = i(τ ) dτ i(t) = C v(t) = q(t) Cs
C 0− dt C Cs

1 dq(t) 1
Resistor v(t) = Ri(t) i(t) = v(t) v(t) = R R G=
R dt R

t
d2 q(t)
Z
di(t) 1 1
Inductor v(t) = L i(t) = v(τ ) dτ v(t) = L Ls
dt L 0− dt2 Ls

In the table above, voltage v is in units of volts (V). Current i is in units of amps (A). Charge q is in units of Coulombs
(Q). C is in units of Farads (F). R is in units of Ohms Ω. G is in units of mhos (Ω−1 ). L is in units of Henries (H).

Models for springs, viscous dampers, and masses


Component Diagram Force-velocity Force-displacement Impedence (F (s)/X(s))

Z t
Spring f (t) = K v(τ ) dτ f (t) = Kx(t) K
0−

dx(t)
Viscous damper f (t) = fv v(t) f (x) = fv fv s
dt

dv(t) d2 x(t)
Mass f (t) = M f (t) = M M s2
dt dt2

In the table above, force f is in units of Newtons (N). Position x is in units of metres (m). Velocity v is in units of
metres/second (m/s). K is in units of N/m. fv is in units of N s/m. M is in units of kilograms (kg).

Models for rotational springs, viscous dampers, and inertia


Component Diagram Torque- Torque- Impedence
angular velocity angular disp. (T (s)/Θ(s))

Z t
Spring T (t) = K ω(τ ) dτ T (t) = Kθ(t) K
0−

dθ(t)
Viscous damper T (t) = Dω(t) T (t) = D Ds
dt

dω(t) d2 θ(t)
Inertia T (t) = J T (t) = J Js2
dt dt2

In the table above, torque T is in units of Newton-metres (N m). Angle θ is in units of radians (rad). Angular
velocity ω is in units of radians/second (rad/s). K is in units of N m/rad. D is in units of N m s/rad. J is in units of
N m s2 /rad.

Page 2 of 4
Canonical second-order system
σd2 + ωd2 ωn2
Transfer function: G(s) = =
s2 + 2σd s + (σd2 + ωd2 ) s2 + 2ζωn s + ωn2
If 0 ≤ ζ ≤ 1 and ωn > 0 and ωd > 0:
p
• Poles: −σd ± ωd j = ωn (−ζ ± j 1 − ζ 2 )
 
−σd t σd
• Step response: ystep (t) = 1 − e (cos(ωd t) + sin(ωd t)) for t ≥ 0
ωd
σ
−π ωd 4 π 1
π/2 + tan−1 (ωd /σd )

• Properties: %OS = e d , Ts = σd , Tp = ωd , T0−100 = ωd

Steady-state error
reference
System type unit step unit ramp unit parabola
1
0 1+Kp ∞ ∞
1
1 0 Kv ∞
1
2 0 0 Ka
3 0 0 0

where Kp = lims→0 L(s), Kv = lims→0 sL(s), Ka = lims→0 s2 L(s)

Partial fraction decomposition


Qm nk
r X
(s − z` ) X c`k 1 dnk −`
G(s) = K Qr `=1
= where c`k = [(s − pk )nk G(s)]|s=pk
k=1 (s − pk )
n k (s − pk )` (nk − `)! dsnk −`
k=1 `=1

State space models


Nonlinear: Linear:
dx dx
= f (x(t), u(t)) = Ax(t) + Bu(t)
dt dt
y(t) = h(x(t), u(t)) y(t) = Cx(t) + Du(t)

Linearisation:

∂ f˜i ∂ f˜i ∂ h̃i ∂ h̃i


Aij = Bij = Cij = Dij =
∂zj ∂vj ∂zj ∂vj
(z,v)=(0,0) (z,v)=(0,0) (z,v)=(0,0) (z,v)=(0,0)

where z = x − xe , v = u − ue , w = y − h(xe , ue ), dz
dt = f˜(z(t), v(t)), and w(t) = h̃(z(t), v(t))
Z t
Response of linear state-space models: x(t) = eAt x(0) + eA(t−τ ) Bu(τ ) dτ
0

Reference gain: With state feedback of the form u = kr r − Kx and when D = 0, choosing
kr = −(C(A − BK)−1 B)−1 gives unity DC gain.

Page 3 of 4
Reachable canonical form:
   
−a1 −a2 ··· −an−1 −an 1
 1
 0 ··· 0 0 
0
 
A=
 0 1 ··· 0 0  B = 0
 
 .. .. .. .. ..   .. 
 . . . . .  .
0 0 ··· 1 0 0
 
C = b1 b2 · · · bn−1 bn D=d

An−1 B has full rank.


 
Reachability: if and only if Wr = B AB · · ·

Observable canonical form:


   
−a1
1 0 ··· 0 b1

 −a2
0 1 ··· 0 



 b2
A=
 ..
.. .. . . ..  B=
  ..
 .
. . . . 

 .
−an−1 0 0 · · · 1 bn−1 
−an 0 0 · · · 0 bn
 
C = 1 0 0 ··· 0 D=d
 
C
 CA

Observability: if and only if Wo =   has full rank.
 
..
  .
CAn−1

Transfer functions for continuous-time linear state space models


General formula: Reachable/observable canonical form:

G(s) = C(sI − A)−1 B + D. b1 sn−1 + b2 sn−2 + · · · + bn−1 s + bn


G(s) = +d
sn + a1 sn−1 + · · · + an−1 s + an

Bode’s integral formula: Z ∞ X


log |S(jω)| dω = π pk
0

Page 4 of 4

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