학술논문

State-Aware Resource Allocation for Wireless Closed-Loop Control Systems
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Communications IEEE Trans. Commun. Communications, IEEE Transactions on. 69(10):6604-6619 Oct, 2021
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Wireless communication
Packet loss
Ultra reliable low latency communication
Resource management
5G mobile communication
Real-time systems
Optimal scheduling
Control communications co-design
age of information
wireless control
adaptive resource management
system analysis
availability
Language
ISSN
0090-6778
1558-0857
Abstract
Wireless closed-loop control is of major significance for future industrial manufacturing. However, control applications pose stringent quality of service requirements for reliable operation. Contrary to traditional ultra-reliable low-latency communications design goals such as low packet loss rates and low latency, research results in the domain of networked control systems (NCS) state that depending on the sampling period, control applications inherently tolerate a few consecutive packet losses. This translates into a better-suited metric to capture control application requirements and therefore a more conclusive design goal for wireless networks: ensuring a maximum age of information (AoI). With a Markov modeling approach, we propose to exploit the tolerance through a novel dynamic multi-connectivity scheme that we term state-aware resource allocation (SARA), which temporally negatively correlates packet losses, thus avoiding long packet loss sequences. Through statistical multiplexing, SARA enables a mean time to failure (MTTF) in the order of years while keeping the per-agent average channel usage close to one, also in a multi-agent setting with competition for resources. Compared with static dual-connectivity, the MTTF can be increased 100-fold whereas the number of required channels reduces by 40%. Our approach also statistically guarantees system-wide AoI distributions, which aid to ensure control performance.