Abstract
Abstract
This paper discusses thermodynamic models of air inside pneumatic actuator chambers. In servo-pneumatics common practice, these models are simplified by neglecting the temperature dynamics. Classical models in the literature assume the temperature inside the pneumatic chamber either to be constant or to follow a polytropic law. Furthermore, the mixing process of air entering the chamber and heat transfer between air and cylinder walls is often neglected or only implicitly taken into account.
This work evaluates the impact of these simplifications and order reductions in the prediction of pressure inside the actuator chamber. Classical models are compared with several others not only taking into account the mixing process but also explicitly including the heat transfer between air and cylinder walls. Simulation studies show that the reduced-order models proposed in this paper can lead to a mean square error in pressure prediction of only 10 per cent of that obtained using classical models.
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