578 research outputs found

    Event-triggered synchronization of saturated lur’e type systems

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    This dissertation addresses the problem of master-slave synchronization of nonlinear discrete-time Lur’e systems subject to input saturation via event-triggered control (ETC) techniques. Synchronization, which is considered a remarkable property in the physics literature specially when chaotic systems are under investigation, is achieved through the stabilization of the error between the states of the master and the slave system. Regarding the Lur’e type nonlinearity, two different cases are studied along this work: generic slope-restricted state-dependent nonlinearity and piecewise-affine function. In the ETC paradigm, the control signal is updated aperiodically only after the occurrence of an event, which is generated according to a triggering criterion that depends on the evaluation of a triggering function. In the emulation-based design, a synchronization error feedback controller is given a priori and the task is to compute the event generator parameters ensuring performance and closed-loop stability. On the other hand, in the co-design approach the event generator and the control law are simultaneously designed. Theoretical results are obtained for three types of event-triggered mechanism (ETM), namely: static, dynamic and relaxed. In the last case, practical synchronization conditions are derived as form of ultimately boundedness stability. In order to tune the parameters of the event-based strategy, optimization problems are formulated aiming to reduce the number of control signal updates (number of events) with respect to a time-triggered implementation. Numerical simulations are presented to illustrate the application of the proposed methods.Esta dissertação aborda o problema de sincronização mestre-escravo de sistemas Lur’e não lineares de tempo discreto sujeitos à saturação de entrada via técnicas de controle baseado em eventos. A sincronização, que é considerada uma propriedade importante na literatura de Física especialmente quando sistemas caóticos são investigados, é alcançada através da estabilização do erro entre os estados do mestre e do sistema escravo. Em relação à não linearidade do tipo Lur’e, dois casos diferentes são estudados ao longo do trabalho: não linearidade genérica dependente do estado e restrita em inclinação e função afim por partes. No paradigma de controle baseado em eventos (ETC), o sinal de controle é atualizado aperiodicamente apenas após a ocorrência de um evento, que é gerado de acordo com um critério de disparo que depende da avaliação de uma função de disparo. No projeto baseado em emulação, um controlador por realimentação do erro de sincronização é dado a priori e a tarefa é calcular os parâmetros do gerador de eventos garantindo desempenho e estabilidade em malha fechada. Na abordagem de co-design, o gerador de eventos e a lei de controle são projetados simultaneamente. Resultados teóricos são obtidos para três tipos de mecanismo de geração de eventos (ETM), nomeadamente: estático, dinâmico e relaxado. Neste último caso, condições de sincronização prática são derivadas como uma forma de estabilidade ultimamente limitada. Para sintonizar os parâmetros da estratégia baseada em eventos, problemas de otimização são formulados visando reduzir o número de atualizações do sinal de controle (número de eventos) em relação a uma implementação time-triggered. Simulações numéricas são apresentadas para ilustrar a aplicação dos métodos propostos

    Synchronization of decentralized event-triggered uncertain switched neural networks with two additive time-varying delays

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    This paper addresses the problem of synchronization for decentralized event-triggered uncertain switched neural networks with two additive time-varying delays. A decentralized eventtriggered scheme is employed to determine the time instants of communication from the sensors to the central controller based on narrow possible information only. In addition, a class of switched neural networks is analyzed based on the Lyapunov–Krasovskii functional method and a combined linear matrix inequality (LMI) technique and average dwell time approach. Some sufficient conditions are derived to guarantee the exponential stability of neural networks under consideration in the presence of admissible parametric uncertainties. Numerical examples are provided to illustrate the effectiveness of the obtained results.&nbsp

    Synchronization of Complex-Valued Dynamical Networks

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    Dynamical networks (DNs) have been broadly applied to describe natural and human systems consisting of a large number of interactive individuals. Common examples include Internet, food webs, social networks, neural networks, etc. One of the crucial and significant collective behaviors of DNs is known as synchronization. In reality, synchronization phenomena may occur either inside a network or between two or more networks, which are called “inner synchronization” and “outer synchronization”, respectively. On the other hand, many real systems are more suitably characterized by complex-valued dynamical systems, such as quantum systems, complex Lorenz system, and complex-valued neural networks. The main focus of this thesis is on synchronization of complex-valued dynamical networks (CVDNs). In this thesis, we firstly design a delay-dependent pinning impulsive controller to study synchronization of time-delay CVDNs. By taking advantage of the Lyapunov function in the complex field, some delay-independent synchronization criteria of CVDNs are established, which generalizes some existing synchronization results. Then, by employing the Lyapunov functional in the complex field, several delay-dependent sufficient conditions on synchronization of CVDNs with various sizes of delays are constructed. Moreover, we study synchronization of CVDNs with time-varying delays under distributed impulsive controllers. By taking advantage of time-varying Lyapunov function/ functional in the complex domain, several synchronization criteria for CVDNs with time-varying delays are derived in terms of complex-valued linear matrix inequalities (LMIs). Then, we propose a memory-based event-triggered impulsive control (ETIC) scheme with three levels of events in the complex field to investigate the synchronization problem of CVDNs with both discrete and distributed time delays, and we further consider an event-triggered pinning impulsive control (ETPIC) scheme combining the proposed ETIC and a pinning algorithm to study synchronization of time-delay CVDNs. Results show that the proposed ETIC scheme and ETPIC scheme can effectively synchronize CVDNs with the desired trajectory. Secondly, we study generalized outer synchronization of drive-response time-delayed CVDNs via hybrid control. A hybrid controller is proposed in the complex domain to construct response complex-valued networks. Some generalized outer synchronization criteria for drive-response CVDNs are established, which extend the existing generalized outer synchronization results to the complex field. Thirdly, we study the average-consensus problem of potential complex-valued multi-agent systems. A complex-variable hybrid consensus protocol is proposed, and time delays are taken into account in both the continuous-time protocol and the discrete-time protocol. Delay-dependent sufficient conditions are established to guarantee the proposed complex-variable hybrid consensus protocol can solve the average-consensus problem. Lastly, as a practical application for complex-valued networked systems, the synchronization problem of master-slave complex-valued neural networks (CVNNs) is studied via hybrid control and delayed ETPIC, respectively. We also investigate the state estimation problem of CVNNs by designing the adaptive impulsive observer in the complex field

    Decentralized identification and multimetric monitoring of civil infrastructure using smart sensors

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    Wireless Smart Sensor Networks (WSSNs) facilitates a new paradigm to structural identification and monitoring for civil infrastructure. Conventionally, wired sensors and central data acquisition systems have been used to characterize the state of the structure, which is quite challenging due to difficulties in cabling, long setup time, and high equipment and maintenance costs. WSSNs offer a unique opportunity to overcome such difficulties. Recent advances in sensor technology have realized low-cost, smart sensors with on-board computation and wireless communication capabilities, making deployment of a dense array of sensors on large civil structures both feasible and economical. However, as opposed to wired sensor networks in which centralized data acquisition and processing are common practice, WSSNs require decentralized algorithms due to the limitation associated with wireless communication; to date such algorithms are limited. This research develops new decentralized algorithms for structural identification and monitoring of civil infrastructure. To increase performance, flexibility, and versatility of the WSSN, the following issues are considered specifically: (1) decentralized modal analysis, (2) efficient decentralized system identification in the WSSN, and (3) multimetric sensing. Numerical simulation and laboratory testing are conducted to verify the efficacy of the proposed approaches. The performance of the decentralized approaches and their software implementations are validated through full-scale applications at the Irwin Indoor Practice Field in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Jindo Bridge, a 484 meter-long cable-stayed bridge located in South Korea. This research provides a strong foundation on which to further develop long-term monitoring employing a dense array of smart sensors. The software developed in this research is opensource and is available at: http://shm.cs.uiuc.edu/.NSF Grant No. CMS-060043NSF Grant No. CMMI-0724172NSF Grant No. CMMI-0928886NSF Grant No. CNS-1035573Ope

    Projective synchronization analysis for BAM neural networks with time-varying delay via novel control

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    In this paper, the projective synchronization of BAM neural networks with time-varying delays is studied. Firstly, a type of novel adaptive controller is introduced for the considered neural networks, which can achieve projective synchronization. Then, based on the adaptive controller, some novel and useful conditions are obtained to ensure the projective synchronization of considered neural networks. To our knowledge, different from other forms of synchronization, projective synchronization is more suitable to clearly represent the nonlinear systems’ fragile nature. Besides, we solve the projective synchronization problem between two different chaotic BAM neural networks, while most of the existing works only concerned with the projective synchronization chaotic systems with the same topologies. Compared with the controllers in previous papers, the designed controllers in this paper do not require any activation functions during the application process. Finally, an example is provided to show the effectiveness of the theoretical results

    Design and implementation of a modular controller for robotic machines

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    This research focused on the design and implementation of an Intelligent Modular Controller (IMC) architecture designed to be reconfigurable over a robust network. The design incorporates novel communication, hardware, and software architectures. This was motivated by current industrial needs for distributed control systems due to growing demand for less complexity, more processing power, flexibility, and greater fault tolerance. To this end, three main contributions were made. Most distributed control architectures depend on multi-tier heterogeneous communication networks requiring linking devices and/or complex middleware. In this study, first, a communication architecture was proposed and implemented with a homogenous network employing the ubiquitous Ethernet for both real-time and non real-time communication. This was achieved by a producer-consumer coordination model for real-time data communication over a segmented network, and a client-server model for point-to-point transactions. The protocols deployed use a Time-Triggered (TT) approach to schedule real-time tasks on the network. Unlike other TT approaches, the scheduling mechanism does not need to be configured explicitly when controller nodes are added or removed. An implicit clock synchronization technique was also developed to complement the architecture. Second, a reconfigurable mechanism based on an auto-configuration protocol was developed. Modules on the network use this protocol to automatically detect themselves, establish communication, and negotiate for a desired configuration. Third, the research demonstrated hardware/software co-design as a contribution to the growing discipline of mechatronics. The IMC consists of a motion controller board designed and prototyped in-house, and a Java microcontroller. An IMC is mapped to each machine/robot axis, and an additional IMC can be configured to serve as a real-time coordinator. The entire architecture was implemented in Java, thus reinforcing uniformity, simplicity, modularity, and openness. Evaluation results showed the potential of the flexible controller to meet medium to high performance machining requirements

    Resilient Learning-Based Control for Synchronization of Passive Multi-Agent Systems under Attack

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    In this paper, we show synchronization for a group of output passive agents that communicate with each other according to an underlying communication graph to achieve a common goal. We propose a distributed event-triggered control framework that will guarantee synchronization and considerably decrease the required communication load on the band-limited network. We define a general Byzantine attack on the event-triggered multi-agent network system and characterize its negative effects on synchronization. The Byzantine agents are capable of intelligently falsifying their data and manipulating the underlying communication graph by altering their respective control feedback weights. We introduce a decentralized detection framework and analyze its steady-state and transient performances. We propose a way of identifying individual Byzantine neighbors and a learning-based method of estimating the attack parameters. Lastly, we propose learning-based control approaches to mitigate the negative effects of the adversarial attack
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