Nonlinear and switched systems: Geometric motion planning, non-monotonic Lyapunov functions and input-to-state stability
Liu, Shenyu
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/107850
Description
Title
Nonlinear and switched systems: Geometric motion planning, non-monotonic Lyapunov functions and input-to-state stability
Author(s)
Liu, Shenyu
Issue Date
2020-01-31
Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
Liberzon, Daniel
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Liberzon, Daniel
Committee Member(s)
Belabbas, Mohamed-Ali
Zharnitsky, Vadim
Baryshnikov, Yuliy
Department of Study
Electrical & Computer Eng
Discipline
Electrical & Computer Engr
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Nonlinear systems
switched systems
motion planning
Lyapunov approach
input-to-state stability
Abstract
"Both synthesis of control strategy for motion planning and analysis of stability of nonlinear and switched systems have been researched in this work. In terms of control strategy, we propose a novel approach to the long-standing problem of motion planning for non-holonomic systems. The admissible motion is obtained by properly assigning ""length"" to the motion trajectories which penalizes them in the inadmissible directions, and ""deforming"" them in order to minimize the ""length"" via solving a set of parabolic partial differential equations. Several variations of the fundamental motion planning problem are also considered in this work. In terms of stability analysis, we have studied two approaches related to non-monotonic Lyapunov functions. More explicitly, the techniques of ""almost Lyapunov"" functions and higher order derivatives of Lyapunov functions -- which were used to study the stability of autonomous nonlinear systems in the literature -- are generalized to nonlinear systems with inputs. Under some mild assumptions, the nonlinear systems can be proven to be input-to-state stable using these techniques of non-monotonic Lyapunov functions. In addition, the methodology used in the derivation can also be used to show the equivalence between several stability properties of state-dependent switched systems."
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