Abstract
We investigate the stabilization of perturbed nonlinear systems using output-based periodic event-triggered controllers. Thus, the communication between the plant and the controller is triggered by a mechanism, which evaluates an output- and input-dependent rule at given sampling instants. We address the problem by emulation. Hence, we assume the knowledge of a continuous-time output feedback controller, which robustly stabilizes the system in the absence of network. We then implement the controller over the network and model the overall system as a hybrid system. We design the event-triggered mechanism to ensure an input-to-state stability property. An explicit bound on the maximum allowable sampling period at which the triggering rule is evaluated is provided. The analysis relies on the construction of a novel hybrid Lyapunov function. The results are applied to a class of Lipschitz nonlinear systems, for which we formulate the required conditions as linear matrix inequalities. The effectiveness of the scheme is illustrated via simulations of a nonlinear example.
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