State Measurement Error-to-State Stability Results Based on Approximate Discrete-Time Models
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Publication:5228314
DOI10.1109/TAC.2018.2874669zbMATH Open1482.93530arXiv1803.08970OpenAlexW2963954075MaRDI QIDQ5228314FDOQ5228314
Authors: Alexis J. Vallarella, Hernan Haimovich
Publication date: 12 August 2019
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control (Search for Journal in Brave)
Abstract: Digital controller design for nonlinear systems may be complicated by the fact that an exact discrete-time plant model is not known. One existing approach employs approximate discrete-time models for stability analysis and control design, and ensures different types of closedloop stability properties based on the approximate model and on specific bounds on the mismatch between the exact and approximate models. Although existing conditions for practical stability exist, some of which consider the presence of process disturbances, input-to-state stability with respect to state-measurement errors and based on approximate discretetime models has not been addressed. In this paper, we thus extend existing results in two main directions: (a) we provide input-to-state stability (ISS)-related results where the input is the state measurement error and (b) our results allow for some specific varying-sampling-rate scenarios. We provide conditions to ensure semiglobal practical ISS, even under some specific forms of varying sampling rate. These conditions employ Lyapunov-like functions. We illustrate the application of our results on numerical examples, where we show that a bounded state-measurement error can cause a semiglobal practically stable system to diverge.
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.08970
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