Expander networks are highly connected sparse graphs, which play an important role in designing efficient communication networks. In this paper, we consider consensus control of discrete-time first-order agents with the communication graph being an expander network. Each agent has a real-valued state but can only exchange symbolic data with its neighbors. A distributed protocol is designed based on dynamic encoding and decoding with finite level uniform quantizers. The choice of the control parameters only depends on the number of agents, the maximum degree and the isoperimetric constant of the network. It is shown that under the protocol designed, average-consensus can be achieved with an exponential convergence rate based on a single-bit information exchange between each pair of adjacent nodes at each time step. A performance index is given to characterize the total communication energy cost to achieve average-consensus and it is shown that the minimization of the communication energy cost leads to a tradeoff between the convergence rate and the number of quantization levels.
History
Source title
Proceedings of the 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control 2009, held jointly with the 28th Chinese Control Conference 2009, CDC/CCC 2009
Name of conference
48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, 2009 held jointly with the 28th Chinese Control Conference, 2009 (CDC/CCC 2009)
Location
Shanghai, China
Start date
2009-12-15
End date
2009-12-18
Pagination
5809-5814
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Place published
Piscataway, NJ
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment
School
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science