Optimal Power Management in Wireless Control Systems
Konstantinos Gatsis, Alejandro Ribeiro, George Pappas

Citation
Konstantinos Gatsis, Alejandro Ribeiro, George Pappas. "Optimal Power Management in Wireless Control Systems". IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, pp. 1495-1510, June 2014.

Abstract
This paper considers the control of a linear plant when plant state information is being transmitted from a sensor to the controller over a wireless fading channel. The power allocated to these transmissions determines the probability of successful packet reception and is allowed to adapt online to both channel conditions and plant state. The goal is to design plant input and transmit power policies that minimize an infinite horizon cost combining power expenses and the conventional linear quadratic regulator control cost. Since plant inputs and transmit powers are in general coupled, a restricted information structure is imposed allowing them to be designed separately. Under this information structure the standard LQR controller becomes the optimal plant input policy, while the optimal com- munication policy follows a Markov decision process minimizing transmit power at the sensor and state estimation error at the controller. The optimal power adaptation to channel and plant states is examined qualitatively for general forward error correcting codes. In the particular case of capacity achieving codes event-triggered policies are recovered, where the sensor decides whether to transmit or not based on plant and channel conditions. Approximate dynamic programming is employed to derive a family of tractable suboptimal communication policies exhibiting the same qualitative features as the optimal one. The performance of our suboptimal policies is shown in simulations and is contrasted to other simple transmission policies.

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  • HTML
    Konstantinos Gatsis, Alejandro Ribeiro, George Pappas. <a
    href="http://www.terraswarm.org/pubs/242.html"
    >Optimal Power Management in Wireless Control
    Systems</a>, <i>IEEE Transactions on Automatic
    Control</i>, pp. 1495-1510, June 2014.
  • Plain text
    Konstantinos Gatsis, Alejandro Ribeiro, George Pappas.
    "Optimal Power Management in Wireless Control
    Systems". <i>IEEE Transactions on Automatic
    Control</i>, pp. 1495-1510, June 2014.
  • BibTeX
    @article{GatsisRibeiroPappas14_OptimalPowerManagementInWirelessControlSystems,
        author = {Konstantinos Gatsis and Alejandro Ribeiro and
                  George Pappas},
        title = {Optimal Power Management in Wireless Control
                  Systems},
        journal = {IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control},
        pages = {1495-1510},
        month = {June},
        year = {2014},
        abstract = {This paper considers the control of a linear plant
                  when plant state information is being transmitted
                  from a sensor to the controller over a wireless
                  fading channel. The power allocated to these
                  transmissions determines the probability of
                  successful packet reception and is allowed to
                  adapt online to both channel conditions and plant
                  state. The goal is to design plant input and
                  transmit power policies that minimize an infinite
                  horizon cost combining power expenses and the
                  conventional linear quadratic regulator control
                  cost. Since plant inputs and transmit powers are
                  in general coupled, a restricted information
                  structure is imposed allowing them to be designed
                  separately. Under this information structure the
                  standard LQR controller becomes the optimal plant
                  input policy, while the optimal com- munication
                  policy follows a Markov decision process
                  minimizing transmit power at the sensor and state
                  estimation error at the controller. The optimal
                  power adaptation to channel and plant states is
                  examined qualitatively for general forward error
                  correcting codes. In the particular case of
                  capacity achieving codes event-triggered policies
                  are recovered, where the sensor decides whether to
                  transmit or not based on plant and channel
                  conditions. Approximate dynamic programming is
                  employed to derive a family of tractable
                  suboptimal communication policies exhibiting the
                  same qualitative features as the optimal one. The
                  performance of our suboptimal policies is shown in
                  simulations and is contrasted to other simple
                  transmission policies.},
        URL = {http://terraswarm.org/pubs/242.html}
    }
    

Posted by Barb Hoversten on 18 Jan 2014.

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