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Dielectrophoretic Particle OED: Difference between revisions

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| align=center | <math>\mathcal{W}</math> || align=right | [0,1] || Bounds of measurement function
| align=center | <math>\mathcal{W}</math> || align=right | [0,1] || Bounds of measurement function
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| align=center | <math>\mathcal{M}</math> || align=right | 2 || Maximum measurement time
| align=center | <math>M_1, M_2</math> || align=right | 2 || Maximum measurement time
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Revision as of 07:53, 27 January 2026

Dielectrophoretic Particle OED
State dimension: 1
Differential states: 13
Discrete control functions: 3


The Dielectrophoretic Particle OED problem is a variation of the Dielectrophoretic Particle problem. It looks for optimal time intervals to measure the two states in order to minimize the uncertainty of a follow-up parameter estimation problem for the two unknown parameters.

The mathematical equations form a small-scale ODE model. It also includes state sensitivities, the Fisher information matrix entries and integrated sampling states.

Mathematical formulation

We are interested in estimating the parameters α and c of the initial value problem

x1˙(t)=x2(t)u(t)+αu(t)2,t[0,tf],x1(0)=1,x2˙(t)=cx2(t)+u(t),t[0,tf],x2(0)=0.

The initial values and tf=10 are fixed. We are interested in how to choose the control u and when to measure, with an upper bound M on the measuring time. We can measure the states directly, h1(x(t))=x1(t) and h2(x(t))=x2(t). We use two different sampling functions, w1() and w2() in the same experimental setting. This can be seen either as a two-dimensional measurement function h(x(t)), or as a special case of a multiple experiment, in which u(),x(), and G() are identical.

Now we formulate the OED problem with θ:=(α,c):

minx,G,F,z,w,utrace(F1(tf))subject tox˙(t)=f(x(t),θ)G˙(t)=fx(x(t),θ)G(t)+fθ(x(t),θ)F˙(t)=i=1nowi(t)(hxi(x(t))G(t))T(hxi(x(t))G(t))z˙(t)=w(t),x(0)=x0G(0)=x(0)θF(0)=0,z(0)=0u(t)𝒰w(t)𝒲zi(tf)Mi

The evolution of the symmetric matrix F:[0,tf]2×2 is given by the weighted sum of observability Gramians hyi(y(t))G(t), i=1,2 for each observed function of states.

Parameters

These fixed values are used within the model:

Symbol Value Description
α -0.75 Nonlinear coefficient
c 1 Damping coefficient
tf 8 Horizon of the control problem
𝒰 [-1,1] Bounds of control function
𝒲 [0,1] Bounds of measurement function
M1,M2 2 Maximum measurement time

Reference Solutions

Here is one local solution to the above control problem.

References

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