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Distributed Group-Based Vibration Control with a Networked Embedded System
Ken Frampton

Citation
Ken Frampton. "Distributed Group-Based Vibration Control with a Networked Embedded System". Journal of Smart Materials and Structures, 14(2), April 2005.

Abstract
The purpose of this work is to demonstrate the performance of a distributed vibration control system based on a networked embedded system. The platform from which control is affected consists of a network of computational elements called nodes. Each node possesses its own computational capability, sensor, actuator and the ability to communicate with other nodes via a wired or wireless network. The primary focus of this work is to employ existing group management middleware concepts to enable vibration control with such a distributed network. Group management middleware is distributed software that provides for the establishment and maintenance of groups of distributed nodes and that provides for the network communication among such groups. This objective is met by designing distributed feedback compensators that take advantage of node groups in order to affect their control. Two types of node groups are considered: groups based on physical proximity and groups based on modal sensitivity. The global control objective is to minimize the vibrational response of a rectangular plate in specific modes while minimizing spillover to out-of-bandwidth modes. Results of this investigation demonstrate that such a distributed control system can achieve vibration attenuations comparable to that of a centralized controller. The importance of efficient use of network communications bandwidth is also discussed with regard to the control architectures considered.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Ken Frampton. <a
    href="http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/736.html"
    >Distributed Group-Based Vibration Control with a
    Networked Embedded System</a>, <i>Journal of
    Smart Materials and Structures</i>, 14(2), April 2005.
  • Plain text
    Ken Frampton. "Distributed Group-Based Vibration
    Control with a Networked Embedded System".
    <i>Journal of Smart Materials and
    Structures</i>, 14(2), April 2005.
  • BibTeX
    @article{Frampton05_DistributedGroupBasedVibrationControlWithNetworkedEmbedded,
        author = {Ken Frampton},
        title = {Distributed Group-Based Vibration Control with a
                  Networked Embedded System},
        journal = {Journal of Smart Materials and Structures},
        volume = {14},
        number = {2},
        month = {April},
        year = {2005},
        abstract = {The purpose of this work is to demonstrate the
                  performance of a distributed vibration control
                  system based on a networked embedded system. The
                  platform from which control is affected consists
                  of a network of computational elements called
                  nodes. Each node possesses its own computational
                  capability, sensor, actuator and the ability to
                  communicate with other nodes via a wired or
                  wireless network. The primary focus of this work
                  is to employ existing group management middleware
                  concepts to enable vibration control with such a
                  distributed network. Group management middleware
                  is distributed software that provides for the
                  establishment and maintenance of groups of
                  distributed nodes and that provides for the
                  network communication among such groups. This
                  objective is met by designing distributed feedback
                  compensators that take advantage of node groups in
                  order to affect their control. Two types of node
                  groups are considered: groups based on physical
                  proximity and groups based on modal sensitivity.
                  The global control objective is to minimize the
                  vibrational response of a rectangular plate in
                  specific modes while minimizing spillover to
                  out-of-bandwidth modes. Results of this
                  investigation demonstrate that such a distributed
                  control system can achieve vibration attenuations
                  comparable to that of a centralized controller.
                  The importance of efficient use of network
                  communications bandwidth is also discussed with
                  regard to the control architectures considered.},
        URL = {http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/736.html}
    }
    

Posted by Christopher Brooks on 4 Nov 2010.
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