Title: Chaos Control in a Transmission Line Model
1 Chaos Control in a Transmission Line Model
Dr. Ioana Triandaf Nonlinear Dynamical Systems
Section Code 6792 Naval Research
Laboratory Washington, DC 20375 Ioana.triandaf_at_nr
l.navy.mil IEEE International Conference on
Electronics,Circuits and Systems, December 12-15,
2010, Athens, Greece Work supported by Office
of Naval Research
2Problem and Objective
- Problem Modeling electromagnetic interference
- Analytical and numerical models exist only for
simple networks of electronic devices. - Prominence was given to computational methods
rather than to the analysis of the - qualitative behavior of the solutions.
- Many open questions remain in the area of
relating field tests to current theory for the - analysis, design, and control of dynamically
interacting nonlinear networks. - Understanding failure mechanisms in such
networks is highly relevant to defense as well - as commercial applications.
- Objective Predict disruption and damage in
electronic devices - Obtain a qualitative analysis of solutions of
circuit networks over a wide parameter space. - Understanding at a fundamental level of how the
transition to damage occurs - Our intention is to understand the underlying
dynamics, forecast future effects, and control
effects. -
3Talk Outline
- Statement of the problem and motivation
- Present the broad research goal
- Transmission line equations and properties
- Chaotic dynamics in an infinite-dimensional
electromagnetic system - Control of the chaotic behavior
4The Dynamic Equations of Transmission Lines
Approach assume that the transverse electric
and magnetic fields surrounding the conductor is
transverse to the conductor (the quasi-TEM
approximation), these are dominant modes when the
cross-sectional dimensions of the guiding
structure are less than the smallest
characteristic wavelength of the electromagnetic
field propagating along it. Ideal transmission
lines ideal guiding structures, model
interconnections without losses, uniform in space
and with parameters independent of frequency. The
equations for the voltage and current
distribution are where L is the
inductance per-unit-length and C is the
capacitance per-unit-length.
Sketch of a two-conductor transmission line
5 Lossy Transmission Lines with Distributed
Sources
- Lossy transmission lines
- R the per-unit-length resistance and G the
per-unit-length conductance - Transmission lines with distributed sources
- The distributed sources depend on the incident
electromagnetic field and on the structure - of the guiding system modeled by the transmission
line.
6 DAlembert Solution of Two-Conductor
Transmission Lines
Equations
-
- The general solution of the line equation
in dAlembert form is -
-
- is the forward
voltage wave, is the
backward voltage wave - This solution can be represented in terms of
forward and backward voltage waves only, - we can also represent it through the
superposition of forward and backward current
waves -
-
- and are univocally determined by
the initial conditions -
-
7The Case of a Semi-infinite Line Connected to a
Nonlinear resistor
-
- We consider the case in which
the semi-infinite line is connected to a
nonlinear resistor -
-
- Impose that the solution satisfies
, g is the
characteristic of the resistor. The equation for
is -
-
-
- There may be multiple solution depending on
the characteristic curve of the resistor.
8A Semi-infinite Line Connected to a Nonlinear
Resistor in Parallel to a Capacitor
-
-
- We consider the case in which the
semi-infinite line is connected to a nonlinear
resistor connected in parallel to a linear
capacitor. The equivalent circuit is illustrated
as -
-
- The equation for is
-
-
- this equation must be solved together with
the initial condition for . -
- Because of the presence of the capacitor the
relation between and is no longer of
the - instantaneous type, but is of the functional
type, with memory.
9Chaotic Dynamics in an Infinite-Dimensional
Electromagnetic System
- Bifurcation and chaos phenomena theoretically
observed in a simple electromagnetic - system consisting of a linear resistor and a
pn-junction diode connected by a transmission - line
- The system is infinite-dimensional because of the
presence of the transmission line and the - nonlinearity arises due to the pn-junction diode.
- We solve the above equation obeying initial
conditions , - and nonlinear boundary conditions
-
- L. Corti, L. De Menna, G. Miano and L. Verolino,
IEEE Trans on Circuits and Systems, Vol. 41, No.
11, November 1994 -
10Solving the Transmission Line Initial Boundary
Value Problem
- By imposing initial conditions and to
the general solution for - we obtain for
- By imposing the voltages and currents at line
ends, , and , we obtain the
relation - between the state of the line and the electrical
variables at the line ends, for in
implicit form -
-
-
- The relationship between the value of the
backward wave at a boundary point and the value
of this wave at a point - inside the spatial domain is given by
-
11Formulation of the Problem as a Dynamical System
- The general solution of the Telegraphers
equation is - By imposing boundary conditions
-
-
- we obtain the nonlinear implicit functional
equation - We are making it explicit in the form
12Formulation of the Problem as a Dynamical System
- The equation
- provides a convenient way to compute the forward
travelling wave at the point - and at time when its value at time
is known. -
- We formulate the functional equation as a
recurrence relation in which the time is - discretized obtaining
- The dynamic of the voltage at and at
is given by
13The pn-junction Diode Dynamics
- We investigate the system with a pn-junction
diode defined by the constitutive equation
- where is the saturation current and the
thermal voltage. The maximum of the function - F is reached when the incremental resistance of
the diode is equal to the characteristic - impedance.
- In this case the Poincare map
- becomes
-
14Chaotic Dynamics of the System
- If the linear resistor is active ,
oscillations and chaotic motion appear. - We consider corresponding to
As increases, a period-doubling
cascade - of bifurcations forms, leading to chaos.
- The solution a
-
-
-
Spatial profile of the wave at
15Control of the Chaotic Dynamics of the System
- We stabilize a period one orbit of the map
, using small
fluctuations of the parameter for - each spatial point.
-
-
-
- Tracking unstable orbits in
experiments by Schwartz Ira B. and Triandaf
Ioana , Phys. Rev. A, vol. 46, number 12,
(7439-7444) , Dec 199. - Tracking sustained chaos A
segmentation method, by Triandaf, Ioana and
Schwartz, Ira B., Phys. Rev. E, vol. 62, number
3, (3529-3534), Sep 2000. - Tracking unstable steady states
Extending the stability regime of a multimode
laser system, by Gills, Zelda and Iwata,
Christina and Roy, Rajarshi - and Schwartz, Ira B. and
Triandaf, Ioana , Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 69,
number 22, (3169-3172), 1992. - Quantitative and qualitative
characterization of zigzag spatiotemporal chaos
in a system of amplitude equations for nematic
electroconvection
Controlled spatial profile of the wave
Spatial profile of the wave at
16Control of the Chaotic Dynamics of the System
- We stabilize a period one orbit of the map
, using small
fluctuations of the parameter for - each spatial point.
- The relationship between the value of the forward
wave at a boundary point and the value of this
wave at a point inside - the spatial domain is given by
-
-
-
Spatial profile of the forward at
Controlled spatial profile of the wave
17The Control Method of the Chaotic Dynamics
- We stabilize a period one orbit of the map
, using small
fluctuations of the parameter for - each spatial point.
- The fluctuation in for a given spatial
point is given by
, is the fixed point of the
map, - is the unstable eigenvalue of the
fixed point, - measures the local drift in the fixed
point. -
-
-
Control parameters over the spatial domain
The maps used to determine
18Control of the Chaotic Dynamics of the System
- We stabilize a period one orbit of the map
, using small
fluctuations of the parameter for - each spatial point.
- The relationship between the value of the forward
wave at a boundary point and the value of this
wave at a point inside - the spatial domain is given by
-
-
-
Spatial profile of the wave at
Controlled spatial profile of the wave
19Control of the Chaotic Dynamics of the System
- We stabilize a period one orbit of the map
, using small
fluctuations of the parameter for - each spatial point.
- The relationship between the value of the forward
wave at a boundary point and the value of this
wave at a point inside - the spatial domain is given by
-
-
-
Spatial profile of the wave at
Controlled spatial profile of the wave
20Summary of our Approach
-
- We considered simple electromagnetic networks
modelled by the wave equation with nonlinear
boundary conditions. - Objectives
- Recast the equations as lower dimensional
systems, possibly maps. - Study chaotic behavior of networks.
- Design algorithms that mimick disruption of
networks in real devices. - Understand how to solve coupled problems of a
profoundly different nature - Transmission line equations are linear and
time-invariant pdes of hyperbolic type - Lumped circuits equations are algebraic odes,
time-varying and nonlinear - Derive representations that take into account
only the terminal behaviour - of the transmission line
- Describe terminal behaviour by linear
algebraic difference equations with one delay - Study the existence and uniqueness of the
difference-delay equations or solve in the - multi-valued case
- Explain the occurrence of chaos
encountered typically when frequencies increase
21Conclusions
- We have presented a chaos control method applied
to a simple electromagnetic system. - Control is achieved at times which are integer
multiples of the round-trip time of the wave
along the transmission line. - The current method will be extended to the full
simulation and will provide valuable insight on
how to achieve control in that case. - The understanding gained will be used in models
derived from basic principles and a full
stability analysis of solutions will be
performed, leading to a deterministic approach to
predict upset and failure of electronic networks. - Gain understanding of disruption in circuits at
a fundamental level possibly avoiding intensive
computing and data storage required by
probabilistic techniques. - Prediction of conditions that lead to upset in
electronic device, prediction of pathways to
failure in network of circuits. -
22Radiating Disturbances
- Examples of radiated disturbances
- crosstalk between circuits, problems related to
printed circuit board, surges produced by
switching operations, electrical short produced
by a conductor fault in a system. - antenna radiation, lightning or nuclear effects
- interconnection between two computer boards
- radiation of radio emitters, mobile radio
communication, radar interference
23 Multiconductor Transmission Lines Equations
- Transmission line having (n1) conductors
- The voltage and the current are
vectors, - , the per-unit-length
self-inductance and - , is the per-unit-length
self-capacitance.
The equations for multiconductor transmission
lines
24Two-conductor Transmission Lines as Two - Ports
- Transmission line connecting generic lumped
circuits - The general solution of the line equations is
- where .
- The voltage and current distributions along the
line are completely identified by the - functions and and
viceversa. We consider them as state variables of
the - line.