SYSYOct 22, 2020

Event-triggered controllers based on the supremum norm of sampling-induced error

arXiv:1806.05464h-index: 83
AI Analysis

For control theorists, this provides a new method to design event-triggered controllers that guarantee stability and avoid Zeno behavior in nonlinear systems.

The paper proposes a novel event-triggered control scheme for nonlinear systems using an input-delay method, achieving stabilization with a Zeno-free condition. The approach is applied to interconnected and lower-triangular systems with dynamic uncertainties.

The paper proposes a novel event-triggered control scheme for nonlinear systems based on the input-delay method. Specifically, the closed-loop system is associated with a pair of auxiliary input and output. The auxiliary output is defined as the derivative of the continuous-time input function, while the auxiliary input is defined as the input disturbance caused by the sampling or equivalently the integral of the auxiliary output over the sampling period. As a result, a cyclic mapping forms from the input to the output via the system dynamics and back from the output to the input via the integral. The event-triggering law is constructed to make the mapping contractive such that the stabilization is achieved and an easy-to-check Zeno-free condition is provided. With this idea, we develop a theorem for the event-triggered control of interconnected nonlinear systems which is employed to solve the event-triggered control for lower-triangular systems with dynamic uncertainties.

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