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This content will become publicly available on April 16, 2026

Title: Terphenylthiolate-Ligated Lanthanide Terminal Methyl Complexes Form Crystallographically Characterizable Terminal Acyls and Trimethylcyclopropanetriolates from Carbon Monoxide
Award ID(s):
2154255
PAR ID:
10611693
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
American Chemical Society
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume:
147
Issue:
15
ISSN:
0002-7863
Page Range / eLocation ID:
12386 to 12391
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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    The performance of hierarchical Model Predictive Control (MPC) is highly dependent on the mechanisms used to coordinate the decisions made by controllers at different levels of the hierarchy. Conventionally, reference tracking serves as the primary coordination mechanism, where optimal state and input trajectories determined by upper-level controllers are communicated down the hierarchy to be tracked by lower-level controllers. As such, significant tuning is required for each controller in the hierarchy to achieve the desired closed-loop system performance. This paper presents a novel terminal cost coordination mechanism using constrained zonotopes, designed to improve system performance under hierarchical control. These terminal costs allow lower-level controllers to balance both short- and long-term control performance without the need for controller tuning. Unlike terminal costs widely used to guarantee MPC stability, the proposed terminal costs are time-varying and computed on-line based on the optimal state trajectory of the upper-level controllers. A numerical example demonstrates the provable performance benefits achieved using the proposed terminal cost coordination mechanism. 
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