The 
IMC structure, a control structure incorporating the internal model of plant 
control, has been widely utilized in the design of PID-type controllers, usually 
denoted IMC-PID controllers, because of its simplicity, flexibility, and 
apprehensibility. The most important advantage of IMC-PID tuning rules is that 
the tradeoff between closedloop performance and robustness can be directly 
obtained using a single parameter related to the closed-loop time constant. 
IMC-PID tuning rules can provide good set-point tracking, but have been lacking 
regarding disturbance rejection, which can become severe for processes with a 
small time-delay/time constant ratio. Disturbance rejection is more important 
than set-point tracking in many process control applications, and thus is an 
important research topic. 
A 
2DOF control scheme can be used to improve disturbance performance for various 
time-delay processes. The controller’s performance can be significantly enhanced 
using a PID controller cascaded with a conventional filter, something easily 
implementable in modern control hardware. Consequently, several controller 
tuning rules have been reported despite PID controllers cascading with 
conventional filters being often more complicated than a conventional PID 
controller for processes with time delay. However, this difficulty can be 
overcome by using appropriate low-order Padé approximations of the time delay 
term in the process model. Therefore, the PID-type controller can be indirectly 
obtained by considering the Padé approximations. Accordingly, first-order Padé 
approximations have been used by a number of authors. This expansion does 
introduce some modeling errors, though within acceptable limits. To reduce this 
problem, a higher order Padé approximation has been used. Alternatively, a 
Taylor expansion can be directly applied to transform an ideal feedback 
controller into a standard 
PID-type 
controller. The performance of the resulting IMC-PID controller is largely 
dependent on how closely the PID controller approximates an ideal controller 
equivalent to the IMC controller. It also depends on the structure of the IMC 
filter. Many methods for approximating an ideal controller to a PID controller 
have been discussed, but most are case dependent. Few unified approaches to PID 
controller design that can be employed for all typical time-delay processes have 
been fully achieved. PID filter controllers closely approximating ideal feedback 
controllers are also obtained by using directly high order Padé approximations, 
since those of previous works are only indirectly used Padé approximations in 
terms of the time delay part. The study is focused on the design of PID 
controllers cascaded with a lead-lag filters to fulfill various control 
purposes; tuning rules should be simple, of analytical form, model-based, and 
easy to implement in practice with excellent performance for both regulatory and 
servo problems.