Academic Editor: Blas M. Vinagre
Copyright © 2011 Miguel Díaz-Cacho Medina et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Network and control relationship is an essential
aspect in the design of networked control systems (NCSs). The
design parameters are mainly centered in the transmission rate
and in the packet structure, and some studies have been made
to determine how transmission rate affects the network delay
and consequently the stability of the control. In Internet, these
analysis are mathematically complex due to the large number of
different potential scenarios. Using empirical methods, this work
deduces that the transmission scheduling problem of an NCS can
be solved by designing an appropriate transport protocol, taken
into account high and periodic sampling rates. The transport
protocol features are determined by simulation, using a new
test platform based on the NS2 network simulation suite, to
develop control/network codesign solutions. Conclusions of this
paper are that the transport features are packet-loss-based
flow control, best effort, and fairness, supplemented by a packet
priority scheme.