Tag Archives: System Stability

On the effects of delays in the stability of a network controlled plant due to both clocks not being synchronized

K. Okano, M. Wakaiki, G. Yang and J. P. Hespanha, Stabilization of Networked Control Systems Under Clock Offsets and Quantization, IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, vol. 63, no. 6, pp. 1708-1723 DOI: 10.1109/TAC.2017.2753938.

This paper studies the impact of clock mismatches and quantization on networked control systems. We consider a scenario where the plant’s state is measured by a sensor that communicates with the controller through a network. Variable communication delays and clock jitter do not permit a perfect synchronization between the clocks of the sensor and controller. We investigate limitations on the clock offset tolerable for stabilization of the feedback system. For a process with a scalar-valued state, we show that there exists a tight bound on the offset above which the closed-loop system cannot be stabilized with any causal controllers. For higher dimensional plants, if the plant has two distinct poles, then the effect of clock mismatches can be canceled with a finite number of measurements, and hence there is no fundamental limitation. We also consider the case where the measurements are subject to quantization in addition to clock mismatches. For first-order plants, we present necessary conditions and sufficient conditions for stabilizability, which show that a larger clock offset requires a finer quantization.