| Literature DB >> 30983627 |
Nicholas Vlajic1, Melissa Davis2, Corey Stambaugh3.
Abstract
This paper explains the control scheme that is to be used in the Magnetic Suspension Mass Comparator (MSMC), an instrument designed to directly compare mass artifacts in air to those in vacuum, at the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology. More specifically, the control system is used to apply a magnetic force between two chambers to magnetically suspend mass artifacts, which allows for a direct comparison (i.e., a calibration) between the mass held in air and a mass held in vacuum. Previous control efforts that have been demonstrated on a proof-of-concept of this system utilized PID-based control with measurements of the magnetic field as the control signal. Here, we implement state-feedback control using a laser interferometric displacement measurement with a noise floor of approximately 5 nm (root-mean-square). One of the unique features and main challenges in this system is that, in order to achieve the necessary accuracy (relative uncertainty of 20 × 10-9 in the MSMC), the magnetic suspension must not impose appreciable lateral forces or moments. Therefore, in this design, a single magnetic actuator is used to generate a suspension force in the vertical direction, while gravity and the symmetry of the magnetic field provide the lateral restoring forces. The combined optical measurement and state-feedback control strategy presented here demonstrate an improvement over the previously reported results with magnetic field measurements and a PID-based control scheme.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30983627 PMCID: PMC6459188 DOI: 10.1115/1.4040504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dyn Syst Meas Control ISSN: 0022-0434 Impact factor: 1.372