Modern control is implemented with digital microcontrollers, embedded within a dynamical plant that represents physical components. We present a new algorithm based on counterexample guided inductive synthesis that automates the design of digital controllers that are correct by construction. The synthesis result is sound with respect to the complete range of approximations, including time discretization, quantization effects, and finite-precision arithmetic and its rounding errors. We have implemented our new algorithm in a tool called DSSynth, and are able to automatically generate stable controllers for a set of intricate plant models taken from the literature within minutes.
CITATION STYLE
Abate, A., Bessa, I., Cattaruzza, D., Cordeiro, L., David, C., Kesseli, P., & Kroening, D. (2017). Sound and automated synthesis of digital stabilizing controllers for continuous plants. In HSCC 2017 - Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Hybrid Systems: Computation and Control (part of CPS Week) (pp. 197–206). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3049797.3049802
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