Practical NMPC suboptimality estimates along trajectories
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1016590
DOI10.1016/j.sysconle.2008.10.012zbMath1159.93013OpenAlexW2137435374MaRDI QIDQ1016590
Publication date: 6 May 2009
Published in: Systems \& Control Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://epub.uni-bayreuth.de/5586/1/gruene_pannek_scl_2009.pdf
Related Items
Parallelized POD-based suboptimal economic model predictive control of a state-constrained Boussinesq approximation, Remarks on finite and infinite time-horizon optimal control problems, Reduced order model predictive control for parametrized parabolic partial differential equations, Performance estimates for economic model predictive control and their application in proper orthogonal decomposition-based implementations, Predictive path following control without terminal constraints, Robustness of performance and stability for multistep and updated multistep MPC schemes
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Stabilization of sampled-data nonlinear systems by receding horizon control via discrete-time approximations
- On optimality of nonlinear model predictive control
- Optimal infinite-horizon feedback laws for a general class of constrained discrete-time systems: Stability and moving-horizon approximations
- Stability margins of nonlinear receding-horizon control via inverse optimality
- Constrained model predictive control: Stability and optimality
- A receding horizon control approach to sampled-data implementation of continuous-time controllers
- Optimization Based Stabilization of Nonlinear Control Systems
- Linear nonquadratic optimal control
- Receding horizon optimal control for infinite dimensional systems
- Inverse Optimality in Robust Stabilization
- On the Infinite Horizon Performance of Receding Horizon Controllers
- A Framework for Stabilization of Nonlinear Sampled-Data Systems Based on Their Approximate Discrete-Time Models
- Relaxing Dynamic Programming
- Sufficient conditions for stabilization of sampled-data nonlinear systems via discrete-time approximations