## Abstract A receding horizon observer and control scheme is introduced for nonβlinear systems described by polynomial maps. This control scheme has a natural interpretation as a twoβstage adaptive or selfβtuning control algorithm. The nonβlinear feedback that results is defined only on the basis
Move blocking strategies in receding horizon control
β Scribed by R. Cagienard; P. Grieder; E.C. Kerrigan; M. Morari
- Book ID
- 104026961
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 224 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0959-1524
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β¦ Synopsis
In order to deal with the computational burden of optimal control, it is common practice to reduce the degrees of freedom by fixing the input or its derivatives to be constant over several time-steps. This policy is referred to as 'move blocking'. This paper will address two issues. First, a survey of various move blocking strategies is presented and the shortcomings of these blocking policies, such as the lack of stability and constraint satisfaction guarantees, will be illustrated. Second, a novel move blocking scheme, 'Moving Window Blocking' (MWB), will be presented. In MWB, the blocking strategy is time-dependent such that the scheme yields stability and feasibility guarantees for the closed-loop system. Finally, the results of a large case study that illustrate the advantages and drawbacks of the various control strategies discussed in this paper and the implementation of the MWB scheme on a mechanical system are presented.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The results of a multivariable generalized state-space receding horizon control, applied to a turbo-generator pilot plant, are reported in this paper. The control algorithm consists of a state-space receding horizon tracking system, a compensator for piecewise constant random disturbances, and a sta