SYSYJul 20, 2017

Optimal actuator placement for minimizing the worst-case control energy

arXiv:1610.0888511 citations
AI Analysis

This work provides a theoretical solution for a specific class of systems, highlighting fundamental challenges in the general problem, which is of interest to control theorists.

The paper addresses the optimal actuator placement problem for linear systems to minimize worst-case control energy. For systems with a positive definite system matrix, a complete solution is provided, revealing that stability properties beyond controllability influence the optimal placement.

We consider the actuator placement problem for linear systems. Specifically, we aim to identify an actuator which requires the least amount of control energy to drive the system from an arbitrary initial condition to the origin in the worst case. Said otherwise, we investigate the minimax problem of minimizing the control energy over the worst possible initial conditions. Recall that the least amount of control energy needed to drive a linear controllable system from any initial condition on the unit sphere to the origin is upper-bounded by the inverse of the smallest eigenvalue of the associated controllability Gramian, and moreover, the upper-bound is sharp. The minimax problem can be thus viewed as the optimization problem of minimizing the upper-bound via the placement of an actuator. In spite of its simple and natural formulation, this problem is difficult to solve. In fact, properties such as the stability of the system matrix, which are not related to controllability, now play important roles. We focus in this paper on the special case where the system matrix is positive definite. Under this assumption, we are able to provide a complete solution to the optimal actuator placement problem and highlight the difficulty in solving the general problem.

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