Abstract

In this article, we investigate the event-triggered consensus problem for general linear multiagent systems with bounded communication network delay. To reduce the communication frequency, we propose some dynamic periodic event-triggering strategies, under which an auxiliary dynamic variable and a weighting parameter are introduced for each agent to build its event-triggering condition. Then, a distributed adaptive consensus protocol, which includes a time-varying coupling weight for each edge, is designed based on the proposed event-triggering strategies. With the well-designed updating laws of dynamic variables, coupling weights and weighting parameters, we can theoretically guarantee the consensus of the concerned multiagent systems. Our event-triggering strategies do not require agents to continuously verify the event-triggering conditions or read their neighbors’ real-time state information. Moreover, Zeno behavior is inherently excluded as the interevent intervals are bounded from below by one period in the periodic event-triggering framework. Two numerical examples are provided to verify the effectiveness of the proposed event-triggered consensus protocols.

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