A system can have any number of poles and zeros below the unity gain crossover. For stability, we need only a good first order roll off around unity gain crossover. Your example of (1+s/wz)/s^2/wu^2 is perfectly stable. This is what happens in a pll or in a multipath opamp/feedforward opamp. Another example (1+s)^2/s^3.
One cannot determine stability by looking at a single frequency. Only Nyquist criterion can give the complete picture of stability.
A system can have any number of poles and zeros below the unity gain crossover. For stability, we need only a good first order roll off around unity gain crossover.
Now for minimum phase systems, (systems which have no pole/zero in right half plane), there is a unique relation between magnitude and phase of the system. That is, for minimum phase systems, only magnitude information is enough to know about the system. These systems are also unidirectional, meaning you increase the open loop gain and beyond some gain they become unstable.
The reasoning intuitively is ok, but is wrong. For ex: Assume the open loop response P, at some frequency is -10 i.e. P(jw1) = -10. By your reasoning, it will be unstable. But lets say P(s) = -10 for all frequencies. The closed loop loop response is 10/9, it is stable.
Looking at a single frequency, one cannot say anything about stability of the system. The blowup phenomenon is only applicable when loop transfer function is exactly equal to -1. And that's why phase only at gain crossover is important. In other words, for oscillations, P=-1 is only a necessary condition.
Thanks for your answer.
My simplistic understanding was that in a closed-loop feedback system, you have stability if you have both positive gain margin AND positive phase margin.
In the case of CL(s) = G(s)/(1+G(s)H(s))
I!
The gain margin is evaluated at the frequency where the loop gain phase is -360deg (including the sign inversion at the inv. input).The gain margin is evaluated where the gain is 1, not at s=0.
The foregoing examples indicate that it is not possible to
formulate a Bode stability criterion that is simple to use and
applicable to all possible cases at the same time
The gain margin is evaluated at the frequency where the loop gain phase is -360deg (including the sign inversion at the inv. input).
The phase margin is evaluated at the frequency where the loop gain is unity.
Systems with more than one croosover frequencies or frequencies which give -180º should be analized with Nyquist stability criterion, NOT with Bode.
By JUERGEN HAHN, THOMAS EDISON, THOMAS F. EDGAR 2001.
Burr Brown said:PHASE ONLY MATTERS AT THE INTERCEPT
Another concept fundamental to op amp feedback in composite-amplifier
circuits becomes apparent when you examine
phase shift and stability. Composite amplifiers such as
the one in Figure 10 produce a –40dB/decade slope over
wide ranges both before and after the 1/β intercept. Because
this slope corresponds to a 180° phase shift, frequent concern
over stability conditions arises at points other than that
of the critical intercept.
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