Abstract

This paper is concerned with the problem of delay-dependent finite-time filtering for Markovian jump systems with different system modes. By using the new augmented multiple mode-dependent Lyapunov-Krasovskii functional and employing the proposed integrals inequalities in the derivation of our results, a novel sufficient condition for finite-time boundness with an performance index is derived. Particularly, two different Markov processes have been considered for modeling the randomness of system matrix and the state delay. Based on the derived condition, the filtering problem is solved, and an explicit expression of the desired filter is also given; the system trajectory stays within a prescribed bound during a specified time interval. Finally, a numerical example is given to illustrate the effectiveness and the potential of the proposed techniques.

1. Introduction

Markovian jump systems were introduced by Krasovskiĭ and Lidskiĭ [1], which can be described by a set of systems with the transitions in a finite mode set. In the past few decades, there has been increasing interest in Markovian jump systems because this class of systems is appropriate to many physical systems which always go with random failures, repairs, and sudden environment disturbance [25]. Such class of systems is a special class of stochastic hybrid systems with finite operation modes, which may switch from one to another at different time, such as component failures, sudden environmental disturbance, and abrupt variations of the operating points of a nonlinear system. As a crucial factor, it is shown that such jumping can be determined by a Markovian chain [6]. For linear Markovian jumping systems, many important issues have been studied extensively such as stability, stabilization, control synthesis, and filter design [612]. In finite operation modes, Markovian jump systems are a special class of stochastic systems that can switch from one to another at different time.

It is worth pointing out that time delay is of interest to many researchers because of the fact that time delay is often encountered in various systems such as networked control systems, chemical processes, and communication systems. It is worth pointing out that time delay is one of the instability sources for dynamical systems and is a common phenomenon in many industrial and engineering systems. Hence, it is not surprising that much effort has been made to investigate Markovian jump systems with time delay during the last two decades [1315]. The exponential stabilization of Markovian jump systems with time delay was firstly studied in [16] where the decay rate was estimated by solving linear matrix inequalities [17]. However, in the aforementioned works, the network-induced delays have been commonly assumed to be deterministic, which is fairly unrealistic since delays resulting from network transmissions are typically time varying [1824].

Generally speaking, the delay-dependent criterions are less conservative than delay-independent ones, especially when the time delay is small enough in Markovian jump systems. Thus, recent efforts were devoted to the delay-dependent Markovian jump systems stability analysis by employing Lyapunov-Krasovskii functionals [2533]. However, in most thesis, the time delay to be arbitrarily large are allowed in criterion, it always tends to be conservative. Furthermore, though the decay rate can be computed, it is a fixed value that one cannot adjust to deduce if a larger decay rate is possible. Therefore, how to obtain the improved results without increasing the computational burden has greatly improved the current study. On the other hand, the practical problems which system described does not exceed a certain threshold over some finite time interval are considered. In finite-time interval, finite-time stability is investigated to address these transient performances of control systems. Recently, the concept of finite-time stability has been revisited in the light of linear matrix inequalities (LMIs) and Lyapunov function theory, and some results are obtained to ensure that systems are finite-time stability or finite-time boundness [3450]. To the best of our knowledge, in most of the works about Markovian jump systems with mode-dependent delay, the delay mode is always assumed to be the same as the system matrices mode. However, in real systems, the delay mode may not be the same as that for jump in other system parameters. In other words, variations of delay usually depend on phenomena which may not cause abrupt changes in other systems parameters. Therefore, the work of Markovian jump systems with different system modes is not only theoretically interesting and challenging, but also very important in practical applications.

Motivated by the previous above discussions, in this paper, we present a new augmented Lyapunov functional for a class of Markovian jump systems with different system modes; in order to reduce the possible conservativeness and computational burden, some slack matrices are introduced [32]. Several sufficient conditions are derived to guarantee the finite-time stability and boundedness of the resulting closed-loop system. We find that finite-time stability is an independent concept from Lyapunov stability and always can be affected by switching behavior significantly, and the finite-time boundness criteria can be tackled in the form of LMIs. Finally, a numerical example is presented to illustrate the effectiveness of the developed techniques.

Notations. Throughout this paper, we let (, , and ) denote a symmetric positive definite matrix (positive semidefinite, negative definite, and negative semidefinite). For any symmetric matrix , and denote the maximum and minimum eigenvalues of matrix , respectively. denotes the -dimensional Euclidean space, and refers to the set of all real matrices and . The identity matrix of order is denoted as . represents the elements below the main diagonal of a symmetric matrix. The superscripts and stand for matrix transposition and matrix inverse, respectively.

2. Preliminaries

In this paper, we consider the following Markov jump system described by where is the state vector of the system, is the measured output, is the controlled output, , are initial conditions of continuous state, and, are initial conditions of mode. is the disturbance input, satisfying the following condition:

Let the random form processes , be the Markov stochastic processes taking values on finite sets and with probability transition rate matrices , , and , . The transition probabilities from mode to mode for Markov process and from mode to mode for the Markov process in time are described as where and , , for , is the transition rate from mode at time to mode at time and for each mode , . for is the transition rate from mode to mode at time and for each mode , . For convenience, we denote the Markov process and by and indices, respectively. denotes the mode-dependent time-varying state delay in the system and satisfies the following condition: where is prescribed integer representing the upper bounds of time-varying delay . Similarly, is prescribed integer representing the upper bounds of time-varying delay . , , , , , , , , and are known mode-dependent matrices with appropriate dimensions functions of the random jumping process and represent the nominal systems for each . For notation simplicity, when the system operates in the -th mode , , , , , , , , , and are denoted as , , , , , , , , and , respectively.

Here we are interested in designing a full-order filter described by where is the filter state, , and the matrices , , and are unknown filter parameters to be designed.

Augmenting the model of (1) to include the filter (8), we obtain the following filtering error system: where

In order to more precisely describe the main objective, we introduce the following definitions and Lemmas for the underlying system.

Definition 1. System (1) is said to be finite-time bounded with respect to , if condition (2) and the following inequality hold: where and .

Definition 2. Consider as the stochastic positive Lyapunov function; its weak infinitesimal operator is defined as

Definition 3. Given a constant , for all admissible subject to condition (2), under zero initial conditions, if the closed-loop Markovian jump system (1) is finite-time bounded and the control outputs satisfy condition (8) with attenuation ,
Then, the controller system (1) finite-time bounded with disturbance attenuation .

Remark 4. It should be pointed out that the assumption of zero initial condition in system (1) is only for the purpose of technical simplification in the derivation, and it does not cause loss of generality. In fact, if this assumption is lost, the same control result can be obtained along the same line, except for adding extra manipulations in the derivation and extra terms in the control presentation. However, in real-world applications, the initial condition of the underlying system is generally not zero.

Lemma 5 (see [32]). Let have positive values in an open subset of . Then, the reciprocally convex combination of over satisfies

Lemma 6 (Schur Complement [17]). Given constant matrices , , , where and , then if and only if

3. Finite-Time Performance Analysis

Theorem 7. System (9) is finite-time bounded with respect to , if there exist matrices , , , , , , , , , scalars , , , , and , such that for all and , the following inequalities hold: where

Proof. First, in order to cast our model into the framework of the Markov processes, we define a new process by
Now, we consider the following Lyapunov-Krasovskii functional: where
Then, for each , , we have
Since we define
Then,
Similar to the previous process, we can obtain
By using Lemma 5, it yields that where
From the Newton-Leibniz formula, the following equation is true for any matrices , , and with appropriate dimensions:
From Lemma 5, it yields that
From (25)–(37), we can eventually obtain where
The LMIs (20) and (21) lead to and , respectively. It is easy to see that results from and . Thus, we obtain
Multiplying the aforementioned inequality by , we can get
By integrating the aforementioned inequality between and , it follows that
Denote that , , , , , , and ; it yields that
For given and , we have
On the other hand, it follows from (25) that
It can be derived from (43)–(45) that
From (22) and (46), we have
Then, the system is finite-time bounded with respect to .

Remark 8. In this paper, and may have different upper bounds in various delay intervals satisfying (7), respectively. However, in previous work such as [20, 21], and are enlarged to and , respectively, which may lead to conservativeness inevitably. However, the previouse case can be taken fully into account by employing the Lyapunov-Krasovskii functional (25).

Remark 9. When dealing with term , the convex combination is not employed, Lemma 5 is used in this paper, and then the free-weighting matrices-dependent null add items are necessary to be introduced in our proof, which lead to the decrease of the number of LMIs and LMIs scalar decision variables.

Remark 10. The feature of this paper is the way to deal with the integral term. Many researchers have enlarged the derivative of the Lyapunov functional in order to deal with the integral term in mathematical operations. In this paper, we propose a novel delay-dependent sufficient criterion, which ensures that the Markovian jump system with different mode systems is finite-time stable.

Remark 11. It should be pointed out that the novelty of the Lyapunov functional (25) lies in distinct Lyapunov matrices which is chosen for different system modes and .

Theorem 12. System (9) is finite-time bounded with respect to , if there exist matrices , , , , , , , , scalars , , , , , and , such that for all and and (16)–(19), the following inequalities hold:

Proof. We now consider the performance of system (9). Select the same Lyapunov-Krasovskii functional as Theorem 7; it yields that
It follows from (49)-(50) that
Multiplying the aforementioned inequality by , one has
In zero initial condition and , by integrating the aforementioned inequality between and , we can get
Using Dynkins formula, it results that
Then, it yields that
Thus, it is concluded by Definition 3 that system (9) is finite-time bounded with an performance . This completes the proof.

Remark 13. From the proof process of Theorems 7 and 12, it is easy to see that neither bounding technique for cross-terms nor model transformation is involved. In other words, the obtained result is expected to be less conservative.

Remark 14. The Lyapunov asymptotic stability and finite-time stability of a class of system are independent concepts. A Lyapunov asymptotic stability system may not be finite-time stability. Moreover, finite-time stability system may also not be Lyapunov asymptotic stability. There exist some results on Lyapunov stability, while finite-time stability also needs our full investigation, which was neglected by most previous work.

4. Finite-Time Filtering

Theorem 15. System (9) is finite-time bounded with respect to , if there exist matrices , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , scalars , , , , , and , such that for all and , the following inequalities hold: where
Then, a desired filter can be chosen with parameters as

Proof. We denote that
The term can be rewritten as
Similarly, we have
Define , , , , , , , , and . Therefore, if (59) and (60) hold, system (9) is finite-time bounded with a prescribed performance index . The proof is completed.

Remark 16. In many actual applications, the minimum value of is of interest. In Theorem 12, with a fixed , can be obtained through the following optimization procedure:

In Theorem 15, as for finite-time stability and boundedness, once the state bound is not ascertained, the minimum value is of interest. With a fixed , define ; then the following optimization problem can be formulated to get minimum value : where is weighted factor, and .

5. Illustrative Example

Example 17. Consider that the Markovian jump system and the delay mode switching are governed by a Markov process with the following transition rates:
as well as with the following parameters:
Then, we choose , , , and ; through Theorem 15, it yields that the mode-dependent filters are as follows:
This paper deals with the finite-time filter design problem for a class of Markovian jump systems; particularly, two different Markov processes are considered for modeling the randomness of system matrix and the state delay. Then, through the numerical example, we can see that results in this paper are feasible, which further verified the correctness of our theory. Therefore, the paper shorten this gap.

6. Conclusions

In this paper, we have examined the problems of finite-time filtering for a class of Markovian jump systems with different system modes. Based on a novel approach, a sufficient condition is derived such that the closed-loop Markovian jump system is finite-time bounded and satisfies a prescribed level of disturbance attenuation in a finite time interval. Finally, a numerical example is also given to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed design approach. It should be noted that one of future research topics would be to investigate the problems of fault detection and fault tolerant control for time-varying Markovian jump systems with incomplete information over a finite-time horizon.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the associate editor and the anonymous reviewers for their detailed comments and suggestions. This work was supported by the Fund of Sichuan Provincial Key Laboratory of Signal and Information Processing, Xihua University (SZJJ2009-002 and SGXZD0101-10-1), and National Basic Research Program of China (2010CB732501).