Distributed command governor strategies for multi-agent dynamical systems
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Francesco Tedesco, Francesco Tedesco
Palopoli, Luigi
Casavola, Alessandro
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Ingegneria dei Sistemi e Informatica XXIV Ciclo, a.a. 2011; This dissertation presents a class of novel distributed supervision strategies
for multi-agent linear systems connected via data networks and subject to coordination
constraints. Such a coordination-by-constraint paradigm is characterized
by a set of spatially distributed dynamic systems, connected via communication
channels, with possibly dynamical coupling amongst them which
need to be supervised and coordinated in order to accomplish their overall objective.
The basic design philosophy of the Command Governor (CG) set-point
management is used here in order to maintain a pre-stabilized system within
prescribed constraints.
While in traditional CG schemes the set-point manipulation is undertaken
on the basis of the actual measure of the state, in this dissertation it is shown
that the CG design problem can be solved also in the case that such an explicit
measure is not available by forcing the state evolutions to stay ”not too
far” from the manifold of feasible steady-states. This approach, referred to as
Feed-Forward CG (FF-CG), is a convenient solution to be used in distributed
applications where the cost of measuring the overall state and distributing it
amongst the agents may be a severe limitation.
Several distributed strategies, based both on CG and FF-CG ideas, will be
fully described and analyzed. First, we propose some “non-iterative” schemes
in which the agents acting as supervisors communicate once during the decision
process. In this respect, a “sequential” distributed strategy in which only
one agent at the time is allowed to manipulate its own reference signal is proposed. Such a strategy, although interesting by itself in some applications,
will be instrumental to introduce a more effective “parallel” distributed strategy,
in which all agents are allowed, under certain conditions, to modify their
own reference signals simultaneously. Then an “iterative” procedure, borrowed
from the literature, has been here adapted in order to build more efficient distributed
schemes which however require larger amount of data exchanges for
their implementation. With the aim of evaluating the distributed methods here
proposed, several cases of study involving the coordination autonomous vehicles,
power networks and water networks management are illustrated.; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Automazione; Algoritmi
Relazione
ING-INF/04;