1,591 research outputs found
Stabilization of systems with asynchronous sensors and controllers
We study the stabilization of networked control systems with asynchronous
sensors and controllers. Offsets between the sensor and controller clocks are
unknown and modeled as parametric uncertainty. First we consider multi-input
linear systems and provide a sufficient condition for the existence of linear
time-invariant controllers that are capable of stabilizing the closed-loop
system for every clock offset in a given range of admissible values. For
first-order systems, we next obtain the maximum length of the offset range for
which the system can be stabilized by a single controller. Finally, this bound
is compared with the offset bounds that would be allowed if we restricted our
attention to static output feedback controllers.Comment: 32 pages, 6 figures. This paper was partially presented at the 2015
American Control Conference, July 1-3, 2015, the US
Self-Triggered Formation Control of Nonholonomic Robots
In this paper, we report the design of an aperiodic remote formation controller applied to nonholonomic robots tracking nonlinear, trajectories using an external positioning sensor network. Our main objective is to reduce wireless communication with external sensors and robots while guaranteeing formation stability. Unlike most previous work in the field of aperiodic control, we design a self-triggered controller that only updates the control signal according to the variation of a Lyapunov function, without taking the measurement error into account. The controller is responsible for scheduling measurement requests to the sensor network and for computing and sending control signals to the robots. We design two triggering mechanisms: centralized, taking into account the formation state and decentralized, considering the individual state of each unit. We present a statistical analysis of simulation results, showing that our control solution significantly reduces the need for communication in comparison with periodic implementations, while preserving the desired tracking performance. To validate the proposal, we also perform experimental tests with robots remotely controlled by a mini PC through an IEEE 802.11g wireless network, in which robots pose is detected by a set of camera sensors connected to the same wireless network
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