International Journal of Control, Automation and Systems 2011; 9(3): 415-424
Published online June 4, 2011
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12555-011-0300-6
© The International Journal of Control, Automation, and Systems
Three decades have passed since milestone publications by several industrialists spawned a flurry of research and industrial / commercial activities on model predictive control (MPC). This article reviews major developments and achievements during the three decades and attempts to put a perspective on them. The first decade is characterized by the fast-growing industrial adoption of the technology, primarily in the refining and petrochemical sectors, which sparked much interest and also confusion among the academicians. The second decade saw a number of significant advances in understanding the MPC from a control theoretician’s viewpoint, which included state-space interpretations / for-mulations and stability proofs. These theoretical triumphs contributed to the makings of the second generation of commercial software, which was significantly enhanced in generality and rigor. The third decade’s main focus has been on the development of “fast MPC,” a term chosen to collectively de-scribe the various efforts to bring orders-of-magnitude improvement in the efficiency of the on-line computation so that the technology can be applied to systems requiring very fast sampling rates. Throughout the three decades of the development, theory and practice supported each other quite effectively, a primary reason for the fast and steady rise of the technology.
Keywords Constrained control, model predictive control, on-line optimization, review, state-space control.
International Journal of Control, Automation and Systems 2011; 9(3): 415-424
Published online June 1, 2011 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12555-011-0300-6
Copyright © The International Journal of Control, Automation, and Systems.
Jay H. Lee
KAIST, Korea
Three decades have passed since milestone publications by several industrialists spawned a flurry of research and industrial / commercial activities on model predictive control (MPC). This article reviews major developments and achievements during the three decades and attempts to put a perspective on them. The first decade is characterized by the fast-growing industrial adoption of the technology, primarily in the refining and petrochemical sectors, which sparked much interest and also confusion among the academicians. The second decade saw a number of significant advances in understanding the MPC from a control theoretician’s viewpoint, which included state-space interpretations / for-mulations and stability proofs. These theoretical triumphs contributed to the makings of the second generation of commercial software, which was significantly enhanced in generality and rigor. The third decade’s main focus has been on the development of “fast MPC,” a term chosen to collectively de-scribe the various efforts to bring orders-of-magnitude improvement in the efficiency of the on-line computation so that the technology can be applied to systems requiring very fast sampling rates. Throughout the three decades of the development, theory and practice supported each other quite effectively, a primary reason for the fast and steady rise of the technology.
Keywords: Constrained control, model predictive control, on-line optimization, review, state-space control.
Vol. 22, No. 12, pp. 3545~3811
Muhammad Abu Bakar Siddique, Dongya Zhao*, and Harun Jamil
International Journal of Control, Automation, and Systems 2024; 22(10): 3117-3132Bo Zhang, Pudong Liu, Jintao Lai, and Xiaoshan Bai*
International Journal of Control, Automation, and Systems 2024; 22(8): 2404-2418Kajetan Zielonacki and Jarosław Tarnawski*
International Journal of Control, Automation, and Systems 2024; 22(6): 1846-1855