Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems

There is an emerging need to develop new techniques for control system design that better address the challenges posed by modern large-scale cyber-physical systems. These systems are often massive networks of interconnected and interoperating subsystems that fuse physical processes, embedded computa...

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Main Author: Ippolito, Corey A.
Format: Others
Published: Research Showcase @ CMU 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/740
http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1779&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-cmu.edu-oai-repository.cmu.edu-dissertations-17792017-01-13T03:30:54Z Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems Ippolito, Corey A. There is an emerging need to develop new techniques for control system design that better address the challenges posed by modern large-scale cyber-physical systems. These systems are often massive networks of interconnected and interoperating subsystems that fuse physical processes, embedded computation, automation technologies, and communication. The resulting problems are dimensionally large, exhibit significant time-varying structural variations during operation, and feature complex dynamics, constraints and objectives across local and global-system scales. These properties are difficult to address using traditional control theoretic methods without substantial loss of performance and robustness. To overcome these limitations, this dissertation presents new concepts and methods for control of modern large-scale variably-structured systems through self-assembling and self-configuring control constructs that allow for fundamental restructuring of the control system’s topology in response to the current system structure. We present the System Component Graph (SCG) formulation as a mathematical framework that generalizes and extends directed graph methods from decentralized control. We present algorithms, methods, and metrics for real-time decentralization and control-structure optimization, utilizing the inclusion principle for addressing interconnected overlapping dynamics and optimal linear-quadratic (LQ) methods for local decentralized subsystem control. Global system control and performance is achieved through a centralized planner that provides continuous real-time optimized trajectories as guidance command inputs to each subsystem. We present the method of Random Subcomplement Trees (RST) for pseudo-optimal real-time trajectory planning of large-scale systems which formalizes and extends the method of rapidly-exploring random trees in a control optimization framework. The RST method defines transformations from the higher-dimension state space into an intermediate lower-dimensional search space, where optimal transitions between subspace states are defined. In the context of this approach, the resulting decentralized topology found within the SCG framework provides the RST subspace definition and requisite transformations, and optimal transitions in the search space are found through forward evaluation of the closed-loop decentralized subsystem dynamics. The methods developed in this thesis are applied to a set of real-world problems spanning various domains and demonstrate the application of these methods from first-principle modeling through control system analysis, design, implementation, and evaluation in experimental tests and simulation. 2016-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/740 http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1779&context=dissertations Dissertations Research Showcase @ CMU decentralized control graph theory Large-scale systems optimal control
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic decentralized control
graph theory
Large-scale systems
optimal control
spellingShingle decentralized control
graph theory
Large-scale systems
optimal control
Ippolito, Corey A.
Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
description There is an emerging need to develop new techniques for control system design that better address the challenges posed by modern large-scale cyber-physical systems. These systems are often massive networks of interconnected and interoperating subsystems that fuse physical processes, embedded computation, automation technologies, and communication. The resulting problems are dimensionally large, exhibit significant time-varying structural variations during operation, and feature complex dynamics, constraints and objectives across local and global-system scales. These properties are difficult to address using traditional control theoretic methods without substantial loss of performance and robustness. To overcome these limitations, this dissertation presents new concepts and methods for control of modern large-scale variably-structured systems through self-assembling and self-configuring control constructs that allow for fundamental restructuring of the control system’s topology in response to the current system structure. We present the System Component Graph (SCG) formulation as a mathematical framework that generalizes and extends directed graph methods from decentralized control. We present algorithms, methods, and metrics for real-time decentralization and control-structure optimization, utilizing the inclusion principle for addressing interconnected overlapping dynamics and optimal linear-quadratic (LQ) methods for local decentralized subsystem control. Global system control and performance is achieved through a centralized planner that provides continuous real-time optimized trajectories as guidance command inputs to each subsystem. We present the method of Random Subcomplement Trees (RST) for pseudo-optimal real-time trajectory planning of large-scale systems which formalizes and extends the method of rapidly-exploring random trees in a control optimization framework. The RST method defines transformations from the higher-dimension state space into an intermediate lower-dimensional search space, where optimal transitions between subspace states are defined. In the context of this approach, the resulting decentralized topology found within the SCG framework provides the RST subspace definition and requisite transformations, and optimal transitions in the search space are found through forward evaluation of the closed-loop decentralized subsystem dynamics. The methods developed in this thesis are applied to a set of real-world problems spanning various domains and demonstrate the application of these methods from first-principle modeling through control system analysis, design, implementation, and evaluation in experimental tests and simulation.
author Ippolito, Corey A.
author_facet Ippolito, Corey A.
author_sort Ippolito, Corey A.
title Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
title_short Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
title_full Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
title_fullStr Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
title_full_unstemmed Self-Assembling Decentralized Control Constructs for Large-Scale Variably-Interconnected Systems
title_sort self-assembling decentralized control constructs for large-scale variably-interconnected systems
publisher Research Showcase @ CMU
publishDate 2016
url http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/740
http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1779&context=dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT ippolitocoreya selfassemblingdecentralizedcontrolconstructsforlargescalevariablyinterconnectedsystems
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