TY - JOUR
T1 - Unified approach to H∞-optimal control of singularly perturbed systems
T2 - Proceedings of the 1999 American Control Conference (99ACC)
AU - Singh, H.
AU - Brown, R. H.
AU - Naidu, D. S.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - The key contribution of the current paper is to present continuous-time and discrete-time singularly perturbed cases simultaneously under general imperfect state measurements using infinite-horizon formulations from the game theoretic approach, thereby highlighting the similarities and differences. We first show that as the small parameter ε approaches zero, the optimal disturbance attenuation levels for a full order system under a quadratic performance index converges to the maximum of the optimal disturbance attenuation levels for the slow and fast subsystems under appropriate slow and fast quadratic cost functions. Then, we construct a controller based on the slow subsystem only, and obtain conditions under which it delivers a desired performance level even though the fast dynamics have been completely neglected. The ultimate performance level achieved by this `slow' controller can be uniformly improved upon, however, by a composite controller that uses some feedback from the output of the fast subsystem. We construct one such controller via a two step sequential procedure that uses static feedback from the fast system output and dynamic feedback from an appropriate slow system output, each one obtained by solving appropriate ε-independent lower dimensional H∞-optimal control problems under some informational constraints.
AB - The key contribution of the current paper is to present continuous-time and discrete-time singularly perturbed cases simultaneously under general imperfect state measurements using infinite-horizon formulations from the game theoretic approach, thereby highlighting the similarities and differences. We first show that as the small parameter ε approaches zero, the optimal disturbance attenuation levels for a full order system under a quadratic performance index converges to the maximum of the optimal disturbance attenuation levels for the slow and fast subsystems under appropriate slow and fast quadratic cost functions. Then, we construct a controller based on the slow subsystem only, and obtain conditions under which it delivers a desired performance level even though the fast dynamics have been completely neglected. The ultimate performance level achieved by this `slow' controller can be uniformly improved upon, however, by a composite controller that uses some feedback from the output of the fast subsystem. We construct one such controller via a two step sequential procedure that uses static feedback from the fast system output and dynamic feedback from an appropriate slow system output, each one obtained by solving appropriate ε-independent lower dimensional H∞-optimal control problems under some informational constraints.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0033283974&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=0033283974&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:0033283974
SN - 0743-1619
VL - 4
SP - 2909
EP - 2913
JO - Proceedings of the American Control Conference
JF - Proceedings of the American Control Conference
Y2 - 2 June 1999 through 4 June 1999
ER -