1,571 research outputs found
Model predictive control techniques for hybrid systems
This paper describes the main issues encountered when applying model predictive control to hybrid processes. Hybrid model predictive control (HMPC) is a research field non-fully developed with many open challenges. The paper describes some of the techniques proposed by the research community to overcome the main problems encountered. Issues related to the stability and the solution of the optimization problem are also discussed. The paper ends by describing the results of a benchmark exercise in which several HMPC schemes were applied to a solar air conditioning plant.Ministerio de Eduación y Ciencia DPI2007-66718-C04-01Ministerio de Eduación y Ciencia DPI2008-0581
Robustly stable feedback min-max model predictive control
Published versio
Fast Non-Parametric Learning to Accelerate Mixed-Integer Programming for Online Hybrid Model Predictive Control
Today's fast linear algebra and numerical optimization tools have pushed the
frontier of model predictive control (MPC) forward, to the efficient control of
highly nonlinear and hybrid systems. The field of hybrid MPC has demonstrated
that exact optimal control law can be computed, e.g., by mixed-integer
programming (MIP) under piecewise-affine (PWA) system models. Despite the
elegant theory, online solving hybrid MPC is still out of reach for many
applications. We aim to speed up MIP by combining geometric insights from
hybrid MPC, a simple-yet-effective learning algorithm, and MIP warm start
techniques. Following a line of work in approximate explicit MPC, the proposed
learning-control algorithm, LNMS, gains computational advantage over MIP at
little cost and is straightforward for practitioners to implement
Stochastic model predictive control for constrained networked control systems with random time delay
In this paper the continuous time stochastic constrained optimal control problem is formulated for the class of networked control systems assuming that time delays follow a discrete-time, finite Markov chain . Polytopic overapproximations of the system's trajectories are employed to produce a polyhedral inner approximation of the non-convex constraint set resulting from imposing the constraints in continuous time. The problem is cast in a Markov jump linear systems (MJLS) framework and a stochastic MPC controller is calculated explicitly, oine, coupling dynamic programming with parametric piecewise quadratic (PWQ) optimization. The calculated control law leads to stochastic stability of the closed loop system, in the mean square sense and respects the state and input constraints in continuous time
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