2004
DOI: 10.1109/tac.2004.834132
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A Moving Horizon Approach to Networked Control System Design

Abstract: This paper presents a control system design strategy for multivariable plants where the controller, sensors and actuators are connected via a digital, data-rate limited, communications channel. In order to minimize bandwidth utilization, a communication constraint is imposed which restricts all transmitted data to belong to a finite set and only permits one plant to be addressed at a time. We emphasize implementation issues and employ moving horizon techniques to deal with both control and measurement quantiza… Show more

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Cited by 241 publications
(129 citation statements)
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“…Hence, it is random and possibly difficult to accurately predict. There are also other works on MPC design over different network buses such as Ethernet [12,14], but CAN is very different due to the timing characteristic (deterministic arbitration in CAN vs. random backoff mechanism in Ethernet), and the approach is not transferable.…”
Section: Review Of Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, it is random and possibly difficult to accurately predict. There are also other works on MPC design over different network buses such as Ethernet [12,14], but CAN is very different due to the timing characteristic (deterministic arbitration in CAN vs. random backoff mechanism in Ethernet), and the approach is not transferable.…”
Section: Review Of Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, performance can be measured via the frequency weighted error signal ǫ H (t), see (7) and also (35). Details on how to apply principles of Moving Horizon to NCS's can be found, for example, in [84]. It is interesting to note that the framework can also be enriched to incorporate dynamic scheduling into NCS's.…”
Section: Sampling and Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is interesting to note that the framework can also be enriched to incorporate dynamic scheduling into NCS's. The resultant methodology can be regarded as incorporating sampling and quantization on demand and is, thus, highly efficient from a data representation perspective, see [84]. …”
Section: Sampling and Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are several network-induced effects that arise when dealing with the NCS, such as time-delays (Niculescu, 2001;Nilsson et al, 1998;Pan et al, 2006;Schöllig et al, 2007;Yi et al, 2007;Zhang et al, 2005), packet losses (Xiong and Lam, 2007;Sahebsara et al, 2007;Yu et al, 2004;Georges et al, 2011) and quantization problems (Goodwin et al, 2004;Montestruque and Antsaklis, 2007;Fang et al, 2007). Because of the inherent complexity of such systems, the control issues of NCSs have attracted attention of many researchers, particularly taking into account network-induced effects.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%