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In the context of event-triggered control, the timing of the triggering events carries information about the state of the system that can be used for stabilization. At each triggering event, not only can information be transmitted by the message content (data payload) but also by its timing. We demonstrate this in the context of stabilization of a laboratory-scale inverted pendulum around its equilibrium point over a digital communication channel with bounded unknown delay. Our event-triggering control strategy encodes timing information by transmitting in a state-dependent fashion and can achieve stabilization using a data payload transmission rate lower than what the data-rate theorem prescribes for classical periodic control policies that do not exploit timing information. Through experimental results, we show that as the delay in the communication channel increases, a higher data payload transmission rate is required to fulfill the proposed event-triggering policy requirements. This confirms the theoretical intuition that a larger delay brings a larger uncertainty about the value of the state at the controller, as less timing information is carried in the communication. In addition, our results also provide a novel encoding-decoding scheme to achieve input-to-state practically stability (ISpS) for nonlinear continuous-time systems under appropriate assumptions.
We present an event-triggered control strategy for stabilizing a scalar, continuous-time, time-invariant, linear system over a digital communication channel having bounded delay, and in the presence of bounded system disturbance. We propose an encodi
In the same way that subsequent pauses in spoken language are used to convey information, it is also possible to transmit information in communication networks not only by message content, but also with its timing. This paper presents an event-trigge
Uncertain wiretap channels are introduced. Their zero-error secrecy capacity is defined. If the sensor-estimator channel is perfect, it is also calculated. Further properties are discussed. The problem of estimating a dynamical system with nonstochas
This paper studies the optimal output-feedback control of a linear time-invariant system where a stochastic event-based scheduler triggers the communication between the sensor and the controller. The primary goal of the use of this type of scheduling
In this paper, we consider multiple channels and wireless nodes with multiple transceivers. Each node assigns one transmitter at each available channel. For each assigned transmitter the node decides the power level and data rate of transmission in a