48,436 research outputs found

    Cooperative Control of Nonlinear Multi-Agent Systems

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    Multi-agent systems have attracted great interest due to their potential applications in a variety of areas. In this dissertation, a nonlinear consensus algorithm is developed for networked Euler-Lagrange multi-agent systems. The proposed consensus algorithm guarantees that all agents can reach a common state in the workspace. Meanwhile, the external disturbances and structural uncertainties are fundamentally considered in the controller design. The robustness of the proposed consensus algorithm is then demonstrated in the stability analysis. Furthermore, experiments are conducted to validate the effectiveness of the proposed consensus algorithm. Next, a distributed leader-follower formation tracking controller is developed for networked nonlinear multi-agent systems. The dynamics of each agent are modeled by Euler-Lagrange equations, and all agents are guaranteed to track a desired time-varying trajectory in the presence of noise. The fault diagnosis strategy of the nonlinear multi-agent system is also investigated with the help of differential geometry tools. The effectiveness of the proposed controller is verified through simulations. To further extend the application area of the multi-agent technique, a distributed robust controller is then developed for networked Lipschitz nonlinear multi-agent systems. With the appearance of system uncertainties and external disturbances, a sampled-data feedback control protocol is carried out through the Lyapunov functional approach. The effectiveness of the proposed controller is verified by numerical simulations. Other than the robustness and sampled-data information exchange, this dissertation is also concerned with the event-triggered consensus problem for the Lipschitz nonlinear multi-agent systems. Furthermore, the sufficient condition for the stochastic stabilization of the networked control system is proposed based on the Lyapunov functional method. Finally, simulation is conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed control algorithm. In this dissertation, the cooperative control of networked Euler-Lagrange systems and networked Lipschitz systems is investigated essentially with the assistance of nonlinear control theory and diverse controller design techniques. The main objective of this work is to propose realizable control algorithms for nonlinear multi-agent systems

    Advancements in Adversarially-Resilient Consensus and Safety-Critical Control for Multi-Agent Networks

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    The capabilities of and demand for complex autonomous multi-agent systems, including networks of unmanned aerial vehicles and mobile robots, are rapidly increasing in both research and industry settings. As the size and complexity of these systems increase, dealing with faults and failures becomes a crucial element that must be accounted for when performing control design. In addition, the last decade has witnessed an ever-accelerating proliferation of adversarial attacks on cyber-physical systems across the globe. In response to these challenges, recent years have seen an increased focus on resilience of multi-agent systems to faults and adversarial attacks. Broadly speaking, resilience refers to the ability of a system to accomplish control or performance objectives despite the presence of faults or attacks. Ensuring the resilience of cyber-physical systems is an interdisciplinary endeavor that can be tackled using a variety of methodologies. This dissertation approaches the resilience of such systems from a control-theoretic viewpoint and presents several novel advancements in resilient control methodologies. First, advancements in resilient consensus techniques are presented that allow normally-behaving agents to achieve state agreement in the presence of adversarial misinformation. Second, graph theoretic tools for constructing and analyzing the resilience of multi-agent networks are derived. Third, a method for resilient broadcasting vector-valued information from a set of leaders to a set of followers in the presence of adversarial misinformation is presented, and these results are applied to the problem of propagating entire knowledge of time-varying Bezier-curve-based trajectories from leaders to followers. Finally, novel results are presented for guaranteeing safety preservation of heterogeneous control-affine multi-agent systems with sampled-data dynamics in the presence of adversarial agents.PHDAerospace EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/168102/1/usevitch_1.pd

    Time-and event-driven communication process for networked control systems: A survey

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    Copyright © 2014 Lei Zou et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.In recent years, theoretical and practical research topics on networked control systems (NCSs) have gained an increasing interest from many researchers in a variety of disciplines owing to the extensive applications of NCSs in practice. In particular, an urgent need has arisen to understand the effects of communication processes on system performances. Sampling and protocol are two fundamental aspects of a communication process which have attracted a great deal of research attention. Most research focus has been on the analysis and control of dynamical behaviors under certain sampling procedures and communication protocols. In this paper, we aim to survey some recent advances on the analysis and synthesis issues of NCSs with different sampling procedures (time-and event-driven sampling) and protocols (static and dynamic protocols). First, these sampling procedures and protocols are introduced in detail according to their engineering backgrounds as well as dynamic natures. Then, the developments of the stabilization, control, and filtering problems are systematically reviewed and discussed in great detail. Finally, we conclude the paper by outlining future research challenges for analysis and synthesis problems of NCSs with different communication processes.This work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants 61329301, 61374127, and 61374010, the Royal Society of the UK, and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany

    Consensus in multi-agent systems with non-periodic sampled-data exchange and uncertain network topology

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    In this paper consensus in second-order multi-agent systems with a non-periodic sampled-data exchange among agents is investigated. The sampling is random with bounded inter-sampling intervals. It is assumed that each agent has exact knowledge of its own state at any time instant. The considered local interaction rule is PD-type. Sufficient conditions for stability of the consensus protocol to a time-invariant value are derived based on LMIs. Such conditions only require the knowledge of the connectivity of the graph modeling the network topology. Numerical simulations are presented to corroborate the theoretical results.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1407.300

    Consensus in multi-agent systems with second-order dynamics and non-periodic sampled-data exchange

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    In this paper consensus in second-order multi-agent systems with a non-periodic sampled-data exchange among agents is investigated. The sampling is random with bounded inter-sampling intervals. It is assumed that each agent has exact knowledge of its own state at all times. The considered local interaction rule is PD-type. The characterization of the convergence properties exploits a Lyapunov-Krasovskii functional method, sufficient conditions for stability of the consensus protocol to a time-invariant value are derived. Numerical simulations are presented to corroborate the theoretical results.Comment: The 19th IEEE International Conference on Emerging Technologies and Factory Automation (ETFA'2014), Barcelona (Spain
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