I. Introduction I N this paper, a new approach is proposed for the decentralized receding horizon control (DRHC) of multiple cooperative vehicles with the possibility of communication failures leading to large intervehicle communication delay. Such large communication delays can lead to poor performance and even instability. The neighboring vehicles exchange their predicted trajectories at each sample time to maintain the cooperation objectives. It is assumed that the communication failure is partial in nature, which in turn leads to large communication delays of the exchanged trajectories. The proposed fault-tolerant DRHC is based on two extensions of existing work for the case of large communication delays. The first contribution is the development of a new DRHC approach that estimates the trajectory of the neighboring vehicles for the tail of the prediction horizon, which would otherwise not be available due to the communication delay. In this approach, the tail of the cost function is estimated by adding extra decision variables in the cost function. A relatively small amount of existing work has investigated the implementation issues associated with exchange of trajectory information, but so far no work has proposed a tail estimation process to compensate for large delays. For instance, in [1-3], no prediction or estimation for the trajectory of neighboring vehicles is performed, and it is assumed that the neighboring vehicles remain at the last delayed states broadcasted by them. Such assumptions may yield poor performance for large communication delays because the constant state vector is not a good estimation of a trajectory of states in general. Similar issues are also investigated in [4,5]. The second contribution of this paper is an extension of the tubebased model predictive control (MPC) approach [6,7] for the case of the large communication delays in order to guarantee the safety of the fleet against possible collisions during formation control problems. The concept of the tube MPC [or tube receding horizon control (RHC)] in existing work [6,7] is normally used to calculate a robust bound on the states due to system uncertainty, whereas in this paper, the approach is used to calculate bounds that arise from large communication delays of the exchanged neighbor trajectories. The proposed algorithms in this paper are presented in the context of fault-tolerant control, as the communication delay/break may occur due to any failure and malfunction in the communication devices. Some examples of communication failures for the team of cooperative vehicles can be found in [8-10]. In [8], the wireless communication packet loss/delay is considered; once the packet loss/ delay occurs, the previous available trajectory of the faulty unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is extrapolated to predict the future reference trajectory. Also, in [9], the communication failure in formation flight of multiple UAVs leads to a break in the communicated messages that forces the fleet to redefine the communication graph. This paper is...
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