2022 Annual Meeting
(484d) Optimization-Based Estimation and Control of Renewable Energy-Powered Greenhouse Systems
Authors
The optimal control and decision-making strategies are often implemented in practice by model predictive control (MPC) due to its relative conceptual simplicity, flexibility, performance, robustness, and ability to efficiently handle complex multivariable systems with terminal and path constraints [5, 6]. However, the perfect state information and parameters values cannot always be assumed when employing MPC. Therefore, an estimation method must be utilized to deal with the uncertainties that arise from imperfect measuring and unknown system parameters. Among the several state and parameter estimation methods, moving horizon estimation (MHE) has proven to be an efficient approach with a similar dynamic optimization architecture as MPC [7-9]. Applications of MPC to greenhouse climate control have been growing in recent years, allowing for improved quality and efficiency [10]. A mixture of control strategies has also been applied to greenhouse systems, mainly MPC, fuzzy logic control, and adaptive control [11, 12].
This work is focused on developing an optimization-based nonlinear output feedback control framework for semi-closed renewable energy-powered greenhouse systems. The proposed control architecture integrates MHE and MPC to regulate greenhouse environment temperature and humidity at desired values and optimize crop growth subject to minimum energy use and operating costs. MHE is employed to estimate the unmeasurable states and unknown parameters required by MPC using the feedback from the available measurement sensors. A predictive multiscale model is developed to describe the integrated dynamics of the renewable energy generation system, the greenhouse climate, and crop growth. The model consists of two components; (1) renewable energy generation (wind and solar energy) component describing the power generation dynamics and (2) greenhouse environment component predicting the temperature of the greenhouse cover, plant canopy, soil, and inside air, the concentration of CO2, the air humidity inside the greenhouse, the canopy cover, soil moisture, soil nitrogen concentration, and biomass growth. The resulting model is then employed as the basis for the nonlinear integrated MHE and MPC design. The closed-loop performance of the proposed control architecture is compared to a traditional MPC with a Kalman filter in the presence of varying environmental conditions and disturbances in the manipulated inputs and measured outputs.
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