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Journal ArticleDOI

Dissipative dynamical systems part I: General theory

TLDR
In this paper, a general theory of dissipative dynamical systems is presented, where dissipativeness is defined in terms of an inequality involving the storage function and the supply function, which is bounded from below by the available storage and from above by the required supply.
Abstract
The first part of this two-part paper presents a general theory of dissipative dynamical systems. The mathematical model used is a state space model and dissipativeness is defined in terms of an inequality involving the storage function and the supply function. It is shown that the storage function satisfies an a priori inequality: it is bounded from below by the available storage and from above by the required supply. The available storage is the amount of internal storage which may be recovered from the system and the required supply is the amount of supply which has to be delivered to the system in order to transfer it from the state of minimum storage to a given state. These functions are themselves possible storage functions, i.e., they satisfy the dissipation inequality. Moreover, since the class of possible storage functions forms a convex set, there is thus a continuum of possible storage functions ranging from its lower bound, the available storage, to its upper bound, the required supply. The paper then considers interconnected systems. It is shown that dissipative systems which are interconnected via a neutral interconnection constraint define a new dissipative dynamical system and that the sum of the storage functions of the individual subsystems is a storage function for the interconnected system. The stability of dissipative systems is then investigated and it is shown that a point in the state space where the storage function attains a local minimum defines a stable equilibrium and that the storage function is a Lyapunov function for this equilibrium. These results are then applied to several examples. These concepts and results will be applied to linear dynamical systems with quadratic supply rates in the second part of this paper.

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Citations
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A new model for control of systems with friction

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Journal ArticleDOI

Memristive devices and systems

TL;DR: In this article, a broad generalization of memristors to an interesting class of nonlinear dynamical systems called memristive systems is introduced, which are unconventional in the sense that while they behave like resistive devices, they can be endowed with a rather exotic variety of dynamic characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

System analysis via integral quadratic constraints

TL;DR: A stability theorem for systems described by IQCs is presented that covers classical passivity/dissipativity arguments but simplifies the use of multipliers and the treatment of causality.
Journal ArticleDOI

L/sub 2/-gain analysis of nonlinear systems and nonlinear state-feedback H/sub infinity / control

TL;DR: In this article, the results on L2-gain analysis of smooth nonlinear systems are unified and extended using an approach based on Hamilton-Jacobi equations and inequalities, and their relation to invariant manifolds of an associated Hamiltonian vector field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Passivity, feedback equivalence, and the global stabilization of minimum phase nonlinear systems

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that weakly minimum phase nonlinear systems with relative degree one can be globally asymptotically stabilized by smooth state feedback, provided that suitable controllability-like rank conditions are satisfied.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the input-output stability of time-varying nonlinear feedback systems Part one: Conditions derived using concepts of loop gain, conicity, and positivity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline a stability theory for input-output problems using functional methods and derive open loop conditions for the boundedness and continuity of feedback systems, without, at the beginning, placing restrictions on linearity or time invariance.
Book

The Analysis of Feedback Systems

TL;DR: "Parts of this monograph appeared in the author's doctoral dissertation entitled 'Nonlinear harmonic analysis' ... 1968."
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