4.6 Article

H∞ Containment Control of Multiagent Systems Under Event-Triggered Communication Scheduling: The Finite-Horizon Case

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CYBERNETICS
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 1372-1382

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCYB.2018.2885567

Keywords

Event-triggered protocol; H-infinity containment control; multiagent systems (MASs); state observer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61573246, 61873169]
  2. Australian Research Council Discovery Project [DP160103567]
  3. Shanghai Rising-Star Program of China [16QA1403000]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [18ZR1427000]

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This paper investigates the finite-horizon H-infinity containment control issue for a general discrete time-varying linear multiagent systems with multileaders. All followers in such a system are driven into a convex hull spanned by multiple leaders, which can be transformed into a problem of tracking a virtual trajectory generated by these leaders. For this purpose, a local state observer is put forward to estimate the state of each agent itself. Then, the estimated state is transmitted to corresponding neighbors governing by an innovation-based event-triggered scheduling protocol. The purpose of the addressed problem is to design both an event-based distributed controller and a state observer such that a prescribed H-infinity containment index can be achieved over a given finite horizon. First, with the help of the completing the square method, a sufficient condition is established to ensure the desired H-infinity containment performance. Then, by resort to a novel nominal energy cost index combined with Moore-Penrose pseudoinverse method, the desired controller and observer parameters are obtained by solving two coupled backward recursive Riccati difference equations. Two positive scalars in proposed nominal energy cost index provide a tradeoff among the controlled tracking errors, the energy of transformed control inputs, and the precision of estimated states. Finally, a simulation example is given to illustrate the usefulness of the proposed theoretical results.

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