Title :
Scheduling and feedback co-design for networked control systems
Author :
Branicky, Michael S. ; Phillips, Stephen M. ; Zhang, Wei
Author_Institution :
Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci. Dept., Case Western Reserve Univ., Cleveland, OH, USA
Abstract :
Feedback control systems wherein the control loops are closed through a real-time network are called networked control systems (NCSs). The insertion of the communication network in the feedback control loop makes the analysis and design of an NCS complex. Driving our research effort into NCSs is the point of view that the design of both the communication protocols and the interacting controlled system should not be treated as separate. In the co-design approach we propose, network issues such as bandwidth, quantization, survivability, reliability and message delay will be considered simultaneously with controlled system issues such as stability, performance, fault tolerance and adaptability. Thus, we study network scheduling when a set of NCSs are connected to the network and arbitrating for network bandwidth. We first define the basic concepts of network scheduling in NCSs. Then, we apply the rate monotonic scheduling algorithm to schedule a set of NCSs. We also formulate the optimal scheduling problem under both rate-monotonic-schedulability constraints and NCS-stability constraints, and give an example of how such optimization is carried out. Next, the assumptions of ideal transmission are relaxed: we study the above network scheduling problem with network-induced delay, packet dropouts, and multiple-packet transmissions taken into account.
Keywords :
bandwidth allocation; closed loop systems; control system synthesis; delays; fault tolerant computing; feedback; optimisation; quantisation (signal); reliability; scheduling; stability; telecommunication networks; telecontrol; NCS; NCS-stability constraints; adaptability; bandwidth; communication network; communication protocols; fault tolerance; feedback control loop; feedback design; ideal transmission; interacting controlled system; message delay; multiple-packet transmissions; network-induced delay; networked control system analysis; networked control system design; optimal scheduling problem; packet dropouts; performance; quantization; rate monotonic scheduling algorithm; rate-monotonic-schedulability constraints; real-time network; reliability; scheduling design; stability; survivability; Bandwidth; Communication networks; Communication system control; Control systems; Feedback control; Networked control systems; Optimal scheduling; Protocols; Quantization; Real time systems;
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 2002, Proceedings of the 41st IEEE Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7516-5
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.2002.1184679