diarmuid
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2. Two poles contribute 180deg phase shift. In a -ve feedback system, if this 180deg occurs when gain > 1, instability occurs.
Eg. If I have 2 LHP poles they will give a 180degC phase shift. If the gain > 1, does this suddenly make these RHP or something?
Im clearly missing something here. Any insights?
If the PM of an open loop plot is negative, why does this mean the closed loop is unstable? Could the closed loop not stabilise things?
Yes - in case there are no "hidden" or unwanted feedback effects"An open loop never can be unstable" - makes sense given that there is no feedback. Does that mean an open loop transfer function will never
have a RHP pole?
There are some circuits with more than only one single feedback loops.Also, a lecturer once told me that Bode plots can only be used to test for stability if the system is open loop stable. Given that an open loop
can never be unstable was he not just stating the obvious?
"why is open loop analysis so common when determining stability of a closed loop? Why not just perform the
entire analysis on the closed loop"
No. If there are no hidden or unknown loops a circuit without feedback is always stable. How would you explain such an unstability? Do you know how stability is defined?From the above discussion I have the following comments:
first of all an open loop system can be unstable. An example for that is an inverted pendulumn
Sounds a bit confusing to me. We "plot the root locus" for the open-loop TF - and "see where your closed loop poles are"?Second the root locus technique could be used for stability testing and it works for unstable open loop tf. It is a technique in which you can have a plot in the s plane that shows you how the closed loop poles move as you increase the open loop gain. It is pretty easy to plot with Matlab for example. You only have to define the open loop tf and then plot the root locus for it and see where your closed loop poles are.
Again, do you know how stability is defined? You are mixing frequency and time domain.Third an unstable closed loop is not only unstable for the frequency where the Phase is larger than 180degrees and the gain is larger than one but it is also unstable for a step response.
On the first point - why exactly can you not do ac analysis on an unstable loop?
Eg. In simulation, I configure my closed loop, apply an ac source at its input and check the ac response. If it is
stable I presume I would see something like < 1dB gain for a 360deg phase shift and if unstable > 1dB. Would
this not suffice?
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