DocumentCode :
312665
Title :
Decision fusion and supervisor synthesis in decentralized discrete-event systems
Author :
Prosser, Joseph H. ; Kam, Moshe ; Kwatny, Harry G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Drexel Univ., Philadelphia, PA, USA
Volume :
4
fYear :
1997
fDate :
4-6 Jun 1997
Firstpage :
2251
Abstract :
We study a problem in decentralized supervisory control coined the global problem (GP) by Rudie and Wonham (1992). The objective is to find local supervisors that generate languages that lie in a specified range of closed languages. We present results for a version of this problem called the special global problem, (SGP) where the lower end of the range is empty and the higher end of the range is a closed and regular “legal” language. To this end, online local supervisors are synthesized that generate a language that contains the supremal closed controllable and strongly decomposable (supCCSD) sublanguage of the legal language. We accomplish this task through a new, more general decentralized supervisory control architecture involving decision fusion. We formulate two problems that extend GP and SGP. These are GP with fusion (GPF) and SGP with fusion (SGPF). Our main result is a set of local supervisors that solve SGPF for any k-out-of-n type event fusion rule. This result is of particular interest when more than one supervisor has control over the same event. Furthermore, the local supervisor designs are decoupled, thus the (online) computation of local supervisors can be performed in a distributed manner
Keywords :
controllability; decentralised control; discrete event systems; formal languages; GP; GPF; SGP; SGPF; closed languages; decentralized discrete-event systems; decision fusion; k-out-of-n type event fusion rule; language generation; online local supervisor synthesis; special global problem; supCCSD sublanguage; supervisor synthesis; supremal closed-controllable strongly-decomposable sublanguage; Centralized control; Computer architecture; Contracts; Control systems; Discrete event systems; Distributed computing; Law; Legal factors; Mechanical engineering; Supervisory control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference, 1997. Proceedings of the 1997
Conference_Location :
Albuquerque, NM
ISSN :
0743-1619
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3832-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.1997.608978
Filename :
608978
Link To Document :
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