Johannes Schiffer

SY
h-index1
3papers
2citations
Novelty50%
AI Score42

3 Papers

SYMar 18
Delay-Robust Primal-Dual Dynamics for Distributed Optimization

Gökçen Devlet Şen, Juan E. Machado, Gülay Öke Günel et al.

Continuous-time primal-dual gradient dynamics (PDGD) is an ubiquitous approach for dynamically solving constrained distributed optimization problems. Yet, the distributed nature of the dynamics makes it prone to communication uncertainties, especially time delays. To mitigate this effect, we propose a delay-robust continuous-time PDGD. The dynamics is obtained by augmenting the standard PDGD with an auxiliary state coupled through a gain matrix, while preserving the optimal solution. Then, we present sufficient tuning conditions for this gain matrix in the form of linear matrix inequalities, which ensure uniform asymptotic stability in the presence of bounded, time-varying delays. The criterion is derived via the Lyapunov-Krasovskii method. A numerical example illustrates the improved delay robustness of our approach compared to the standard PDGD under large, time-varying delays.

SYMar 18
Distributed Adaptive Control for DC Power Distribution in Hybrid-Electric Aircraft: Design and Experimental Validation

Wasif H. Syed, Juan E. Machado, Hans Würfel et al.

To reduce CO2 emissions and tackle increasing fuel costs, the aviation industry is swiftly moving towards the electrification of aircraft. From the viewpoint of systems and control, a key challenge brought by this transition corresponds to the management and safe operation of the propulsion system's onboard electrical power distribution network. In this work, for a series-hybrid-electric propulsion system, we propose a distributed adaptive controller for regulating the voltage of a DC bus that energizes the electricity-based propulsion system. The proposed controller -- whose design is based on principles of back-stepping, adaptive, and passivity-based control techniques -- also enables the proportional sharing of the electric load among multiple converter-interfaced sources, which reduces the likelihood of over-stressing individual sources. Compared to existing control strategies, our method ensures stable, convergent, and accurate voltage regulation and load-sharing even if the effects of power lines of unknown resistances and inductances are considered. The performance of the proposed control scheme is experimentally validated and compared to state-of-the-art controllers in a power hardware-in-the-loop (PHIL) environment.

SYSep 22, 2025
Lipschitz-Based Robustness Certification for Recurrent Neural Networks via Convex Relaxation

Paul Hamelbeck, Johannes Schiffer

Robustness certification against bounded input noise or adversarial perturbations is increasingly important for deployment recurrent neural networks (RNNs) in safety-critical control applications. To address this challenge, we present RNN-SDP, a relaxation based method that models the RNN's layer interactions as a convex problem and computes a certified upper bound on the Lipschitz constant via semidefinite programming (SDP). We also explore an extension that incorporates known input constraints to further tighten the resulting Lipschitz bounds. RNN-SDP is evaluated on a synthetic multi-tank system, with upper bounds compared to empirical estimates. While incorporating input constraints yields only modest improvements, the general method produces reasonably tight and certifiable bounds, even as sequence length increases. The results also underscore the often underestimated impact of initialization errors, an important consideration for applications where models are frequently re-initialized, such as model predictive control (MPC).