To understand the purpose of a control system, it is useful to examine examples of control systems through the course of history. These early systems incorporated many of the same ideas of feedback that are in use today. Modern control engineering practice includes the use of control design strategies for improving manufacturing processes, the efficiency of energy use, advanced automobile control, including rapid transit, among others.
CO1 : Identify the basic of control system and process.
CO2 : Able to handle the design gap effectively while accomplishing necessary tradeoffs in complexity, performance, and cost in order to meet the design specifications.
CO3 : Analyze and derive the mathematical model system in frequency domain and time domain.
CO4 : Analyze the transient response, system stability and state response for first and second order systems.
CO5 : Design the PD, PI, PID, Lag, Lead and Lag-Lead compensator using root locus technique and frequency response technique.
CO6 : Evaluate the systems performance between compensated and uncompensated based on transient and steady-state response.