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Control of period-1 and period-2 orbits

Examples of the successful stabilizing of period-1 and period-2 orbits are shown in Fig. 2.

 
Figure: The minima in anodic current plotted over a time period during which the control algorithm is switched on and off twice. The perturbations added to the anodic potential to maintain control are shown in the bottom graph. (a) shows period-1 control and (b) shows period-2 control.  

The rotation rate for the copper disk anode was 2670 rpm, the anodic potential with control off was 0.724 V, and the values of the RPF proportionality constants were K = -5.0 mV/mA and R = -0.3 for the period-1 control shown in Fig. 2a. For the period-2 control shown in Fig. 2b, 2160 rpm, 0.745 V, K = -5.0 mV/mA, and R = 0.21. As described in reference[2], we chose a region of parameter space where the electrochemical system exhibits a sequence of periodic mixed mode oscillations separated by bands of chaotic behavior as a function of anodic potential. The period-1 control was done while in the chaotic region between a period-1 state with large amplitude oscillations only and a period-2 state with one large amplitude oscillation followed by one small oscillation. We were unsuccessful in controlling on the period-2 oscillation in this chaotic band. Successful control of a period-2 state was attained in the chaotic band between the period-2 (one large--one small) and period-3 (one large and two small) mixed mode oscillations. We found that control of the period-2 orbit was much more difficult than the period-1. This is partially because the period is about twice as long (about 5 sec) and the feedback corrections are made just once each cycle. Thus the system can drift further away from its fixed point before the next feedback correction is calculated and applied.

The corresponding return maps for the two cases are shown in Fig. 3 while Fig. 4 and 5 show the chaotic attractors and controlled periodic orbits reconstructed from the time series of the anodic current using a two-dimensional time delay embedding.

 
Figure: (a) The first iterate return map (open circles) obtained from the sequence of current minima for the chaotic state shown in Fig. 2a. The superimposed filled circles are the minima in the anodic current while the control algorithm was implemented. (b) the corresponding second-iterate return map for the period-2 case shown in Fig. 2b.  

 
Figure: (a) The two-dimensional time delay embedding with 120 msec showing the chaotic attractor for the situation shown in Figs. 2a and 3a. (b) the corresponding period-1 trajectory with control on. 

 
Figure: (a) The two-dimensional time delay embedding with 120 msec showing the chaotic attractor for the situation shown in Figs. 2b and 3b. (b) the corresponding period-2 trajectory with control on. 



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Next: Why use RPF Up: Results and Discussion Previous: Results and Discussion



Roger Rollins
Wed Nov 15 12:11:04 EST 1995