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Active Fault Isolation for Discrete Event Systems

In practice, we can not only disable some events, but also enforce the occurrence of some events prior to the occurrence of other events by external control. In this paper, we combine these two control mechanisms to synthesize a more powerful supervisor. Here our control goal is to design an isolation supervisor which ensures in the closed-loop system, faults are isolatable in the sense that after a fault occurs, we can determine which type the fault belongs to by observing the output of the closed-loop system. The isolation supervisor starts to work when the occurrence of faults is detected. We then solve the isolation supervisor synthesis problem as follows. For a given discrete event system, we firstly construct a bipartite transition system which includes all feasible isolation supervisors. An isolation supervisor is feasible if it enforces only events that are physically possible. We then develop an algorithm to check whether the synthesis problem is solvable or not. The algorithm can also be used to find a valid isolation supervisor if the synthesis problem is solvable. The method of combining two control mechanisms can be used to synthesize more powerful supervisors for other supervisory control problems of discrete event systems as well.

preprint2023arXivOpen access
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