Title :
Reduced-order modal-domain structural control for seismic vibration control over wireless sensor networks
Author :
Swartz, R. Andrew
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Civil & Environ. Eng., Michigan Technol. Univ., Houghton, MI, USA
fDate :
June 29 2011-July 1 2011
Abstract :
Semi-active control devices are promising technologies to provide economical and reliable protection for the safety of civil infrastructure assets as well as preserving the comfort of their occupants due to their low costs and power requirements. However, these devices can be limited in their capacity to provide large control forces necessitating installations in large numbers, creating additional expense and vulnerabilities to the system in the form of extensive lengths of signal cables. Wireless sensor networks are gaining popularity as a means of collecting, coordinating, and processing data from spatially distributed locations in civil structures. Their inherent computational abilities can also be harnessed to command networks of structural control actuators, however significant issues exist with regard to communication delays and computational power that must be addressed. This study demonstrates the successful application of a modal-domain state-space control algorithm for use in wireless structural control of a six-story shear building with magneto-rheological actuators. Control laws and state estimators are derived in modal coordinates for models of increasing size. Increasing the complexity of the underlying model yields a more optimal control law; however due to the limitations of the wireless actuator nodes in computational power, this increase in complexity comes at the expense of significantly increased latency which degrades performance. The trade-off between speed and model order is explored in terms of control performance. Both simulation and experimental results are presented.
Keywords :
earthquake engineering; electromagnetic actuators; magnetorheology; modal analysis; optimal control; reduced order systems; seismology; state estimation; state-space methods; structural engineering; vibration control; wireless sensor networks; civil infrastructure assets; civil structures; command networks; communication delays; computational ability; computational power; control forces; control laws; control performance; economical protection; magneto-rheological actuators; modal coordinates; modal-domain state-space control algorithm; model order; optimal control law; power requirements; reduced-order modal-domain structural control; reliable protection; seismic vibration control; semiactive control devices; signal cables; six-story shear building; spatially distributed locations; state estimators; structural control actuators; system vulnerability; wireless actuator nodes; wireless sensor networks; wireless structural control; Computational modeling; Floors; Mathematical model; Sensors; Shock absorbers; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2011
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0080-4
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2011.5990961