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Cyber-Physical Systems Virtual Organization
Read-only archive of site from September 29, 2023.
CPS-VO
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Projects
CPS: Synergy: Resilient Wireless Sensor-Actuator Networks
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Submitted by Michael Lemmon on Fri, 12/18/2015 - 4:16pm
Project Details
Lead PI:
Michael Lemmon
Co-PI(s):
J .Nicholas Laneman
Hai Lin
Performance Period:
10/01/12
-
09/30/16
Institution(s):
University of Notre Dame
Sponsor(s):
National Science Foundation
Award Number:
1239222
1062 Reads. Placed 348 out of 804 NSF CPS Projects based on total reads on all related artifacts.
Abstract:
Wireless sensor-actuator networks (WSAN) are systems consisting of numerous sensing and actuation devices that interact with the environment and coordinate their activities over a wireless communication network. This project studies "resilience" in WSANs. A resilient system is one that maintains an active awareness of surrounding threats and reacts to those threats in a manner that returns the system to operational normalcy in finite time. This project's approach to resilient WSANs rests on two fundamental trends. One trend uses machine-to-machine (M2M) communication networks that promise wireless networking with greater peak bit-rates and reliability than previously possible. The other trend comes from recent ideas that use quantization and event-triggered feedback in a unified manner to reduce bit rates required by real-time control systems. This project will evaluate and demonstrate this integrated control/communication approach to resilience on a multi-robotic testbed consisting of unmanned ground vehicles. The testbed will integrate M2M communication hardware/software with a multi-robot control architecture addressing task coordination and platform stabilization. This project broadens its impact through organizations and programs on and around the Notre Dame campus that facilitate industrial engagement and technology transfer. The project will engage undergraduate and graduate students to support the project's testbed and algorithm development. The project will augment and re-organize Notre Dame's Cyber-Physical System (CPS) curriculum by integrating the results of this project into courses.
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CPS Domains
Transportation Systems Sector
Control
Critical Infrastructure
Wireless Sensing and Actuation
Transportation
CPS Technologies
Foundations