Title :
Sensor network scheduling for identification of spatially distributed processes
Author_Institution :
Institute of Control and Computation Engineering, University of Zielona Gó
Abstract :
The work treats the problem of fault detection for processes described by partial differential equations as that of maximizing the power of a parametric hypothesis test which checks whether or not system parameters have nominal values. A simple node activation strategy is discussed for the design of a sensor network deployed in a spatial domain that is supposed to be used while detecting changes in the underlying parameters. The considered setting relates to situation where from among a finite set of potential sensor locations only a subset of them can be selected because of the cost constraints. As a suitable performance measure the Ds-optimality criterion defined on the Fisher information matrix for the estimated parameters is applied. The problem is then formulated as the determination of the density of gaged sites so as to minimize the adopted design criterion, subject to inequality constraints incorporating a maximum allowable sensor density in a given spatial domain. The search for the optimal solution is performed using a simplicial decomposition algorithm. The use of the proposed approach is illustrated by a numerical example involving sensor selection for a two-dimensional diffusion process.
Keywords :
"Fault detection","Mathematical model","Covariance matrix","Monitoring","Pollution measurement","Biological system modeling","Approximation methods"
Conference_Titel :
Control and Fault-Tolerant Systems (SysTol), 2010 Conference on
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8153-8
DOI :
10.1109/SYSTOL.2010.5675945