Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7108383 | Automatica | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In event-triggered control, the control task consisting of sampling the plant's output and updating the control input is executed whenever a certain event function exceeds a given threshold. The event function typically needs to be monitored continuously, which is difficult to realize in digital implementations. This has led to the development of periodic event-triggered control (PETC), in which the event function is only evaluated periodically. In this paper, we consider general nonlinear continuous event-triggered control (CETC) systems, and present a method to transform the CETC system into a PETC system. In particular, we provide an explicit sampling period at which the event function is evaluated and we present a constructive procedure to redesign the triggering condition. The latter is obtained by upper-bounding the evolution of the event function of the CETC system between two successive sampling instants by a linear time-invariant system and then by using convex overapproximation techniques. Using this approach, we are able to preserve the control performance guarantees (e.g., asymptotic stability with a certain decay rate) of the original CETC system.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Control and Systems Engineering
Authors
D.P. Borgers, R. Postoyan, A. Anta, P. Tabuada, D. NeÅ¡iÄ, W.P.M.H. Heemels,