Ogden Calendar
Tuesday, November 12th
- Location: COHH 3119
- Time: 2:00pm
Title: Exponential Stability of the PDE Model for Heat and Piezoelectric Beam Interactions with Static or Hybrid Feedback Controllers and its Stability-Preserving Finite-Difference Model Reductions
Abstract:
This research investigates a strongly coupled system of partial differential equations (PDEs) governing heat transfer in a copper rod, longitudinal vibrations, and charge accumulation at electrodes within a magnetizable piezoelectric beam, analyzed within a transmission line framework. The analysis reveals significant interactions at the contact point between traveling electromagnetic and mechanical waves in magnetizable piezoelectric beams, despite differences in wave velocities. Findings indicate that, in an open-loop configuration, the coupling between heat dynamics and beam vibrations alone does not ensure exponential stability when only thermal effects are considered. To address this, we propose two boundary feedback control designs at the right end of the piezoelectric beam: (i) a pair of static feedback controllers and (ii) a hybrid design combining a dynamic electrical controller with a static mechanical feedback controller to enhance system performance. An energy-equivalent Lyapunov function is constructed to satisfy Grönwall's inequality, supported by rigorous functional-analytic estimates, and system parameters are carefully selected to ensure exponential stability with an explicit decay rate.
Transitioning from the continuous PDE model, the study introduces a novel order-reduction-based Finite Difference (FD) approximation that incorporates midpoint discretization and average operators. This approach enables the construction of a discrete analog of the Lyapunov function used in the PDE model. By leveraging this discrete Lyapunov function we demonstrate exponential stability for the FD-approximated systems, preserving the exact decay rate of the original PDE model. Notably, this proof technique avoids the exhaustive spectral approach, which typically requires constructing the system's eigenvalues asymptotically or analytically. Instead, by mirroring the stability proof structure of the PDE model, this framework provides a rigorous basis for verifying the exponential stability of Finite Difference-based model reductions as the discretization parameter approaches zero. This method advances both theoretical understanding and practical applications for complex piezoelectric systems.
References:
[1] The Exponential Stabilization of Thermal and Piezoelectric Beam Interactions with Various Types of Feedback Controllers, 2024 American Control Conference, Toronto, Canada, (2024), 5327-5332, doi: 10.23919/ACC60939.2024.10644174.
[2] Uniformly Exponentially Stable Finite-Difference Model Reduction of a Heat and Piezoelectric Beam Interaction with Static or Hybrid Feedback Controllers, Evolution Equations and Control Theory (2024), early access available at doi:10.3934/eect.2024057.
- Location: TBD
- Time: 4:00pm
Have you ever wondered what some of the benefits are to studying mathematics at WKU? Are you unsure of what to do after graduation? A great resource for answers to these questions are the people who have been in your shoes before! In the Pi Mu Epsilon Math Alumni Speaker Series (PME MASS), WKU Mathematics alumni speak about their career paths and how studying mathematics at WKU has been beneficial to them. Each event ends with a Q&A session.
We are pleased to announce this month’s speaker, Dr. J. Scott Little, Technical Program Manager II and Subject Matter Expert at Fluor-BWXT, LLC. Dr. Little will be speaking to us via Zoom on Tuesday, November 12, at 4:00 PM. You have the option of joining us in person (in COHH 3119, where light refreshments will be served) or via Zoom (https://wku.zoom.us/j/98525182079).
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