American Society of Civil Engineers


Strategic Network Utilization in a Wireless Structural Control System for Seismically Excited Structures


by R. Andrew Swartz, M.ASCE, (Ph.D. Candidate, Dept. of Civ. and Envir. Engrg., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2125) and Jerome P. Lynch, (corresponding author), M.ASCE, (Asst. Prof., Dept. of Civ. and Envir. Engrg., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2125 E-mail: jerlynch@umich.edu)

Journal of Structural Engineering
, Vol. 135, No. 5, May 2009, pp. 597-608, (doi:  http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)ST.1943-541X.0000002)

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Document type: Journal Paper
Special Issue: Structural Identification and Control
Abstract: The benefits associated with structural control include the mitigation of undesired structural responses and reduction in the probability of damage to structural components during seismic events. Structural control systems in current use depend on extensive wired communication systems to connect sensors and actuators with a centralized controller. While wired architectures are appropriate when control systems are small, the cost and installation complexity of tethered systems increases as the control system grows large (i.e., defined by hundreds of nodes). Alternatively, wireless sensors are proposed for use in large-scale structural control systems to keep costs low and to improve system scalability. Wireless sensors are capable of collecting state data from sensors, communicating data between themselves, calculating control actions, and commanding actuators in a control system. However, bandwidth and range limitations of the wireless communication channel render traditional centralized control solutions impractical for the wireless setting. While computational abilities embedded with each wireless sensor permit fully decentralized control architectures to be implemented, strategic utilization of the wireless channel can improve the performance of the wireless control system. Toward this end, this paper presents a partially decentralized linear quadratic regulation control scheme that employs redundant state estimation as a means of minimizing the need for the communication of state data between sensors. The method is validated using numerical simulations of a seismically excited six-story building model with ideal actuators. Additional experimental validation is conducted using a full-scale physical realization of the six-story building. A wireless sensor network commanding magnetorheological dampers is shown to be effective in controlling a multistory structure using the partially decentralized control architecture proposed.


ASCE Subject Headings:
Estimation
Networks
Probe instruments
Seismic effects
Structural control
Control systems