报告题目: Stabilizing Control for Networked Systems with Quantization Errors and Fading Channels
报 告 人:Professor Xiang Chen (University of Windsor, Canada)
报告时间:2013年5月2日(周四)上午10:30
报告地点:南一楼中311 会议室
邀 请 方:“多谱信息处理技术”国家级重点实验室
摘要: The quadratic mean square (QMS) stability is defined first in this presentation. The main focus is on the stabilizing control design through output feedback that achieves QMS stability for networked systems where the feedback controller interacts with the plant through a communication channel subject to both quantization errors and multiplicative random noises. To do that, the state feedback stabilizing control result is presented with a necessary and sufficient condition in terms of Mahler measure of the plant which then motivates the design of an observer based output feedback stabilizing controller for different available signals in the controller channel. Network resource required to accomplish output feedback stabilization is characterized. It is shown that, if the channel output signal is available to the controller, the minimal network resource for output feedback is the same as that for state feedback (no surprise), while, if the quantized signal is available to the controller, the output feedback control law in general requires more network resources to accomplish stabilization, and, finally, if the controller signal itself is used, a class of output feedback stabilizing controllers can be actually characterized in this case. Moreover, it is also shown that the set of systems which can be stabilized through a quantized fading channel by output feedback is closely related to the so called worst signal-to-noise ratio (WSNR) of the channel. It is interesting to observe that, from these results, the stabilizing control conditions can be characterized using Mahler measure of the plant, which, more or less, indicates the consistency between the control theory and the information theory for the addressed problem.
个人简介:
Professor Xiang Chen received his Ph. D. degree in system and control from Louisiana State University in 1998. Since 2000, he has held cross appointed positions in Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Department of Mechanical, Automotive and Materials Engineering at the University of Windsor and is currently a Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He has made fundamental contribution to Gaussian filtering and control and to the control theory of nonlinear systems with bifurcation. He has also made significant contribution to industrial applications of control and optimization in automotive systems and in vision based sensing systems through extensive collaborative research and development activities with robotic and automotive industries. Some of the deliverables have been patented by relevant companies or became transferred technologies to relevant companies. He is currently an Associate Editor for SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization and was an Associate Editor for the Journal of Circuits, Systems and Computers from 2004 to 2008. He received Research Awards (twice) from the University of Windsor. His research has been well supported by research funds from government agencies at both federal and provincial levels in
Canada
and from industrial companies in both
Canada
and
USA
. He has published more than 100 papers in journals and conference proceedings. His current research interests include optimization and control (robust and optimal) of systems with complexities, graph-/game-theoretic approaches for complex networked systems, as well as applications to automotive control systems and robotic vision sensor networks. He is a registered Professional Engineer in Ontario,
Canada
.