School problems are not permitted in this forum.
True but they should be with a huge but......
Just as well, I have no idea what he's talking about LOL
This is why student questions should be allowed. I bet most that view this forum can't solve the problem and they could learn something.
What I think the OP wants are the PID gains so that the set point or position will be reached in 10 seconds.
The OP's wording is awful. He misuses the word delay but I doubt English is his first language.
I didn't answer because I thought the thread would be deleted by now.
I could have immediately posted this solution within minutes
The OP would just need to change where the closed loop poles are to yield a 10 second response instead of a 0.3 second response.
Now for the but.....
Obviously this is homework and we SHOULD NOT provide answers within 1 week so the home work will be past due before we give the student a the answer. They should come here for the education but not for the answers.
Meanwhile we should quiz the student about his problem to make him think.
I would ask:
Where did that transfer function come from? This is one of my pet peeves about college control classes and books.
What kind of system is it for?
What are the units for K?
What does the first s in the denominator do? It integrates but it integrates what?
Can you write the differential equation from the Laplace Transform.
Why use a PID instead of a PI controller?
Now assume this is for a simple motor in position control.
If the current position is far from the set point position, what will be the velocity? Can it move that fast. When the control signal is at 100%
When control signal is the saturated at 100% the system is doesn't care about the feed back. It is essentially open loop. That is not good. How do you avoid that?
I think we could have some fun with the students and it would be education to non-students.
Peter Nachtwey
Delta Computer Systems