Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7107737 Annual Reviews in Control 2018 17 Pages PDF
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to overview the historical development of the field of Petri nets (PNs) from a Systems Theory and Automatic Control perspective. It is intentionally not meant to be comprehensive: we limit ourselves to outline, through selected representative topics, some of the conceptual issues studied in the literature. In a first part we retrace the emergence of some basic net concepts to provide a broad view of the family of PN formalisms. Then we focus, more specifically, on the use of Petri nets within Automatic Control. Discrete net models have been considered since the middle of the 70s and starting since the late 80s have also been used for addressing classical problems, such as supervisory and deadlock control, state estimation, diagnosis, and so on. The double benefit is the ability to model a larger class of systems and to provide efficient algorithms for solving certain of those problems. We also discuss new approaches based on continuous and hybrid nets, which have been developed within the Automatic Control community.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Control and Systems Engineering
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