Decentralized control of structural acoustic radiation
Decentralized control of structural acoustic radiation
Although the application of active control to vibrations has been investigated from many years, the extension of this technology to large-scale systems has been thwarted, in part, by an overwhelming need for computational effort, data transmission and electrical power. This need has been overwhelming in the sense that the potential applications are unable to bear the power, weight and complex communications requirement of large-scale centralized control systems. Recent developments in MEMS devices and networked embedded devices have changed the focus of such applications from
centralized control architectures to decentralized ones. A decentralized control system is one that consists of many autonomous, or semi-autonomous, localized controllers called nodes, acting on a single plant, in order to achieve a global control objective. Each of these nodes has the following capabilities and assets: 1) a relatively limited computational capability including limited memory, 2) oversight of a suite of sensors and actuators and 3) a communications link (either wired or wireless) with neighboring or regional nodes. The
objective of a decentralized controller is the same as for a centralized control system: to maintain some desirable global system behavior in the presences of disturbances. However, decentralized controllers do so with each node possessing only a limited amount of information on the global systems response. Exactly what information each node has access to, and how that information is used, is the topic of this investigation.
232-238
American Society Of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Frampton, K.D.
dac17a56-41de-4b0e-b55d-1c5828e780d1
2001
Frampton, K.D.
dac17a56-41de-4b0e-b55d-1c5828e780d1
Frampton, K.D.
(2001)
Decentralized control of structural acoustic radiation.
In Proceedings of IMECE 2000.
American Society Of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Although the application of active control to vibrations has been investigated from many years, the extension of this technology to large-scale systems has been thwarted, in part, by an overwhelming need for computational effort, data transmission and electrical power. This need has been overwhelming in the sense that the potential applications are unable to bear the power, weight and complex communications requirement of large-scale centralized control systems. Recent developments in MEMS devices and networked embedded devices have changed the focus of such applications from
centralized control architectures to decentralized ones. A decentralized control system is one that consists of many autonomous, or semi-autonomous, localized controllers called nodes, acting on a single plant, in order to achieve a global control objective. Each of these nodes has the following capabilities and assets: 1) a relatively limited computational capability including limited memory, 2) oversight of a suite of sensors and actuators and 3) a communications link (either wired or wireless) with neighboring or regional nodes. The
objective of a decentralized controller is the same as for a centralized control system: to maintain some desirable global system behavior in the presences of disturbances. However, decentralized controllers do so with each node possessing only a limited amount of information on the global systems response. Exactly what information each node has access to, and how that information is used, is the topic of this investigation.
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Published date: 2001
Venue - Dates:
IMECE 2000, Orlando, USA, 2000-11-05 - 2000-11-10
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Local EPrints ID: 42251
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42251
PURE UUID: 8659cd1a-c467-46e7-8f10-f1103bac5c8a
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2006
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 07:00
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Author:
K.D. Frampton
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