Proactive Real-time Control of Multiple Interdependent Water Quality Variables in Buildings Water Networks

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Description
Efforts to enhance the quality of life and promote better health have led to improved water quality standards. Adequate daily fluid intake, primarily from tap water, is crucial for human health. By improving drinking water quality, negative health effects associated

Efforts to enhance the quality of life and promote better health have led to improved water quality standards. Adequate daily fluid intake, primarily from tap water, is crucial for human health. By improving drinking water quality, negative health effects associated with consuming inadequate water can be mitigated. Although the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sets and enforces federal water quality limits at water treatment plants, water quality reaching end users degrades during the water delivery process, emphasizing the need for proactive control systems in buildings to ensure safe drinking water.Future commercial and institutional buildings are anticipated to feature real-time water quality sensors, automated flushing and filtration systems, temperature control devices, and chemical boosters. Integrating these technologies with a reliable water quality control system that optimizes the use of chemical additives, filtration, flushing, and temperature adjustments ensures users consistently have access to water of adequate quality. Additionally, existing buildings can be retrofitted with these technologies at a reasonable cost, guaranteeing user safety. In the absence of smart buildings with the required technology, Chapter 2 describes developing an EPANET-MSX (a multi-species extension of EPA’s water simulation tool) model for a typical 5-story building. Chapter 3 involves creating accurate nonlinear approximation models of EPANET-MSX’s complex fluid dynamics and chemical reactions and developing an open-loop water quality control system that can regulate the water quality based on the approximated state of water quality. To address potential sudden changes in water quality, improve predictions, and reduce the gap between approximated and true state of water quality, a feedback control loop is developed in Chapter 4. Lastly, this dissertation includes the development of a reinforcement learning (RL) based water quality control system for cases where the approximation models prove inadequate and cause instability during implementation with a real building water network. The RL-based control system can be implemented in various buildings without the need to develop new hydraulic models and can handle the stochastic nature of water demand, ensuring the proactive control system’s effectiveness in maintaining water quality within safe limits for consumption.
Date Created
2023
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Developing a Cyber-Physical System for Real-Time Proactive Traffic Control and Management of Mixed Fleet of Vehicles with Various Levels of Autonomy

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Description
In this dissertation, a cyber-physical system called MIDAS (Managing Interacting Demand And Supply) has been developed, where the “supply” refers to the transportation infrastructure including traffic controls while the “demand” refers to its dynamic traffic loads. The strength of MIDAS

In this dissertation, a cyber-physical system called MIDAS (Managing Interacting Demand And Supply) has been developed, where the “supply” refers to the transportation infrastructure including traffic controls while the “demand” refers to its dynamic traffic loads. The strength of MIDAS lies in its ability to proactively control and manage mixed vehicular traffic, having various levels of autonomy, through traffic intersections. Using real-time traffic control algorithms MIDAS minimizes wait times, congestion, and travel times on existing roadways. For traffic engineers, efficient control of complicated traffic movements used at diamond interchanges (DI), which interface streets with freeways, is challenging for normal human driven vehicular traffic, let alone for communicationally-connected vehicles (CVs) due to stochastic demand and uncertainties. This dissertation first develops a proactive traffic control algorithm, MIDAS, using forward-recursion dynamic programming (DP), for scheduling large set of traffic movements of non-connected vehicles and CVs at the DIs, over a finite-time horizon. MIDAS captures measurements from fixed detectors and captures Lagrangian measurements from CVs, to estimate link travel times, arrival times and turning movements. Simulation study shows MIDAS’ outperforms (a) a current optimal state-of-art optimal fixed-cycle time control scheme, and (b) a state-of-art traffic adaptive cycle-free scheme. Subsequently, this dissertation addresses the challenges of improving the road capacity by platooning fully autonomous vehicles (AVs), resulting in smaller headways and greater road utilization. With the MIDAS AI (Autonomous Intersection) control, an effective platooning strategy is developed, and optimal release sequence of AVs is determined using a new forward-recursive DP that minimizes the time-loss delays of AVs. MIDAS AI evaluates the DP decisions every second and communicates optimal actions to the AVs. Although MIDAS AI’s exact DP achieves optimal solution in almost real-time compared to other exact algorithms, it suffers from scalability. To address this challenge, the dissertation then develops MIDAS RAIC (Reinforced Autonomous Intersection Control), a deep reinforcement learning based real-time dynamic traffic control system for AVs at an intersection. Simulation results show the proposed deep Q-learning architecture trains MIDAS RAIC to learn a near-optimal policy that minimizes the total cumulative time loss delay and performs nearly as well as the MIDAS AI.
Date Created
2023
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Exact Optimization Models and Algorithms for Large-scale Location and Interdiction Problems with Underlying Network Structure

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Description
Networks are a versatile modeling tool for the cyber and physical infrastructure that characterize society. They can be used to describe system spatiotemporal dynamics, including distribution of commodities, movement of agents, and data transmission. This flexibility has resulted in the

Networks are a versatile modeling tool for the cyber and physical infrastructure that characterize society. They can be used to describe system spatiotemporal dynamics, including distribution of commodities, movement of agents, and data transmission. This flexibility has resulted in the widespread use of network optimization techniques for decision-making in telecommunications, transportation, commerce, among other systems. However, realistic network problems are typically large-scale and require the use of integer variables to incorporate design or logical system constraints. This makes such problems hard to solve and precludes their wide applicability in the solution of applied problems. This dissertation studies four large-scale optimization problems with underlying network structure in different domain applications, including wireless sensor networks, wastewater monitoring, and scheduling. The problems of interest are formulated using mixed-integer optimization formulations. The proposed solution approaches in this dissertation include branch-and-cut and heuristic algorithms, which are enhanced with network-based valid inequalities and network reduction techniques. The first chapter studies a relay node placement problem in wireless sensor networks, with and without the presence of transmission obstacles in the deployment region. The proposed integer linear programming approach leverages the underlying network structure to produce valid inequalities and network reduction heuristics, which are incorporated in the branch-and-bound exploration. The solution approach outperforms the equivalent nonlinear model and solves instances with up to 1000 sensors within reasonable time. The second chapter studies the continuous version of the maximum capacity (widest) path interdiction problem and introduces the first known polynomial time algorithm to solve the problem using a combination of binary search and the discrete version of the Newton’s method. The third chapter explores the service agent transport interdiction problem in autonomous vehicle systems, where an agent schedules service tasks in the presence of an adversary. This chapter proposes a single stage branch-and-cut algorithm to solve the problem, along with several enhancement techniques to improve scalability. The last chapter studies the optimal placement of sensors in a wastewater network to minimize the maximum coverage (load) of placed sensors. This chapter proposes a branch-and-cut algorithm enhanced with network reduction techniques and strengthening constraints.
Date Created
2023
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Power System Planning for Adverse Climate and Weather Events: Theoretical and Computational Insights for Incorporating Flexible Transmission Technologies

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Description
The stable and efficient operation of the transmission network is fundamental to the power system’s ability to deliver electricity reliably and cheaply. As average temperatures continue to rise, the ability of the transmission network to meet demand is diminished.

The stable and efficient operation of the transmission network is fundamental to the power system’s ability to deliver electricity reliably and cheaply. As average temperatures continue to rise, the ability of the transmission network to meet demand is diminished. Higher temperatures lead to congestion by reducing thermal limits of lines while simultaneously reducing generation potential. Furthermore, they contribute to the growing frequency and ferocity of devasting weather events. Due to prohibitive costs and limited real estate for building new lines, it is necessary to consider flexible investment options (e.g., transmission switching, capacity expansion, etc.) to improve the functionality and efficiency of the grid. Increased flexibility, however, requires many discrete choices, rendering fully accurate models intractable. This dissertation derives several classes of structural valid inequalities and employs them to accelerate the solution process for each of the proposed expansion planning problems. The valid inequalities leverage the variability of the cumulative capacity-reactance products of parallel simple paths in networks with flexible topology, such as those found in transmission expansion planning problems. Ongoing changes to the climate and weather will have vastly differing impacts a regional and local scale, yet these effects are difficult to predict. This dissertation models the long-term and short-term uncertainty of rising temperatures and severe weather events on transmission network components in both stochastic and robust mixed-integer linear programming frameworks. It develops a novel test case constructed from publicly available data on the Arizona transmission network. The models and test case are used to test the impacts of climate and weather on regional expansion decisions.
Date Created
2022
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Heuristics for Arc Routing Problems and Their Applications

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Description
Arc Routing Problems (ARPs) are a type of routing problem that finds routes of minimum total cost covering the edges or arcs in a graph representing street or road networks. They find application in many essential services such as residential

Arc Routing Problems (ARPs) are a type of routing problem that finds routes of minimum total cost covering the edges or arcs in a graph representing street or road networks. They find application in many essential services such as residential waste collection, winter gritting, and others. Being NP-hard, solutions are usually found using heuristic methods. This dissertation contributes to heuristics for ARP, with a focus on the Capacitated Arc Routing Problem (CARP) with additional constraints. In operations such as residential waste collection, vehicle breakdown disruptions occur frequently. A new variant Capacitated Arc Re-routing Problem for Vehicle Break-down (CARP-VB) is introduced to address the need to re-route using only remaining vehicles to avoid missing services. A new heuristic Probe is developed to solve CARP-VB. Experiments on benchmark instances show that Probe is better in reducing the makespan and hence effective in reducing delays and avoiding missing services. In addition to total cost, operators are also interested in solutions that are attractive, that is, routes that are contiguous, compact, and non-overlapping to manage the work. Operators may not adopt a solution that is not attractive even if it is optimum. They are also interested in solutions that are balanced in workload to meet equity requirements. A new multi-objective memetic algorithm, MA-ABC is developed, that optimizes three objectives: Attractiveness, makespan, and total cost. On testing with benchmark instances, MA-ABC was found to be effective in providing attractive and balanced route solutions without affecting the total cost. Changes in the problem specification such as demand and topology occurs frequently in business operations. Machine learning be applied to learn the distribution behind these changes and generate solutions quickly at time of inference. Splice is a machine learning framework for CARP that generates closer to optimum solutions quickly using a graph neural network and deep Q-learning. Splice can solve several variants of node and arc routing problems using the same architecture without any modification. Splice was trained and tested using randomly generated instances. Splice generated solutions faster that are also better in comparison to popular metaheuristics.
Date Created
2022
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Disaster Analytics for Critical Infrastructures : Methods and Algorithms for Modeling Disasters and Proactive Recovery Preparedness

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Description
Natural disasters are occurring increasingly around the world, causing significant economiclosses. To alleviate their adverse effect, it is crucial to plan what should be done in response to them in a proactive manner. This research aims at developing proactive and real-time recovery

Natural disasters are occurring increasingly around the world, causing significant economiclosses. To alleviate their adverse effect, it is crucial to plan what should be done in response to them in a proactive manner. This research aims at developing proactive and real-time recovery algorithms for large-scale power networks exposed to weather events considering uncertainty. These algorithms support the recovery decisions to mitigate the disaster impact, resulting in faster recovery of the network. The challenges associated with developing these algorithms are summarized below: 1. Even ignoring uncertainty, when operating cost of the network is considered the problem will be a bi-level optimization which is NP-hard. 2. To meet the requirement for real-time decision making under uncertainty, the problem could be formulated a Stochastic Dynamic Program with the aim to minimize the total cost. However, considering the operating cost of the network violates the underlying assumptions of this approach. 3. Stochastic Dynamic Programming approach is also not applicable to realistic problem sizes, due to the curse of dimensionality. 4. Uncertainty-based approaches for failure modeling, rely on point-generation of failures and ignore the network structure. To deal with the first challenge, in chapter 2, a heuristic solution framework is proposed, and its performance is evaluated by conducting numerical experiments. To address the second challenge, in chapter 3, after formulating the problem as a Stochastic Dynamic Program, an approximated dynamic programming heuristic is proposed to solve the problem. Numerical experiments on synthetic and realistic test-beds, show the satisfactory performance of the proposed approach. To address the third challenge, in chapter 4, an efficient base heuristic policy and an aggregation scheme in the action space is proposed. Numerical experiments on a realistic test-bed verify the ability of the proposed method to recover the network more efficiently. Finally, to address the fourth challenge, in chapter 5, a simulation-based model is proposed that using historical data and accounting for the interaction between network components, allows for analyzing the impact of adverse events on regional service level. A realistic case study is then conducted to showcase the applicability of the approach.
Date Created
2021
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Real-Time Control of Production Systems with Constrained Time Windows

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Description
A production system is commonly restricted by time windows. For example, perishability is a major concern in food processing and requires products, such as yogurt, beer and meat, not to stay in buffer for long. Semiconductor manufacturing is faced with

A production system is commonly restricted by time windows. For example, perishability is a major concern in food processing and requires products, such as yogurt, beer and meat, not to stay in buffer for long. Semiconductor manufacturing is faced with oxidation and moisture absorption issues, if a product in buffer is exposed to air for long. Machine reliability is a major source of uncertainty in production systems that causes residence time constraints to be unsatisfied, leading to potential product quality issues. Rapid advances in sensor technology and automation provide potentials to manage production in real time, but the system complexity, brought by residence time constraints, makes it difficult to optimize system performance while providing a guaranteed product quality. To contribute to this end, this dissertation is dedicated to modeling, analysis and control of production systems with constrained time windows. This study starts with a small-scale serial production line with two machines and one buffer. Even the simplest serial lines could have too large state space due to the consideration of residence time constraints. A Markov chain model is developed to approximately analyze its transient behavior with a high accuracy. An iterative learning algorithm is proposed to perform real-time control. The analysis of two-machine serial line contributes to the further analysis of more general and complex serial lines with multiple machines. Residence time constraints can be required in multiple stages. To deal with it, a two-machine-one-buffer subsystem isolated from a multi-stage serial production line is firstly analyzed and then acts as a building block to support the aggregation method for overall system performance. The proposed aggregation method substantially reduces the complexity of the problem while maintaining a high accuracy. A decomposition-based control approach is proposed to control a multi-stage serial production line. A production system is decomposed into small-scale subsystems, and an iterative aggregation procedure is then used to generate a production control policy. The decomposition-based control approach outperforms general-purpose reinforcement learning method by delivering significant system performance improvement and substantial reduction on computation overhead. Semiconductor assembly line is a typical production system, where products are restricted by time windows and production can be disrupted by machine failures. A production control problem of semiconductor assembly line is presented and studied, and thus total lot delay time and residence time constraint violation are minimized.
Date Created
2021
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Optimization Models and Algorithms for Wildlife Corridor and Reserve Design in Conservation Planning

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Description
Biodiversity has been declining during the last decades due to habitat loss, landscape deterioration, environmental change, and human-related activities. In addition to its economic and cultural value, biodiversity plays an important role in keeping an environment’s ecosystem in balance. Disrupting

Biodiversity has been declining during the last decades due to habitat loss, landscape deterioration, environmental change, and human-related activities. In addition to its economic and cultural value, biodiversity plays an important role in keeping an environment’s ecosystem in balance. Disrupting such processes can reduce the provision of natural resources such as food and water, which in turn yields a direct threat to human health. Protecting and restoring natural areas is fundamental to preserve biodiversity and to mitigate the effects of ongoing environmental change. Unfortunately, it is impossible to protect every critical area due to resource limitations, requiring the use of advanced decision tools for the design of conservation plans. This dissertation studies three problems on the design of wildlife corridors and reserves that include patch-specific conservation decisions under spatial, operational, ecological, and biological requirements. In addition to the ecological impact of each problem’s solution, this dissertation contributes a set of formulations, valid inequalities, and pre-processing and solution algorithms for optimization problems with spatial requirements. The first problem is a utility-based corridor design problem to connect fragmented habitats, where each patch has a utility value reflecting its quality. The corridor must satisfy geometry requirements such as a connectivity and minimum width. We propose a mix-integer programming (MIP) model to maximize the total utility of the corridor under the given geometry requirements as well as a budget constraint to reflect the acquisition (or restoration) cost of the selected patches. To overcome the computational difficulty when solving large-scale instances, we develop multiple acceleration techniques, including a brand-and-cut algorithm enhanced with problem-specific valid inequalities and a bound-improving heuristic triggered at each integer node in the branch-and-bound exploration. We test the proposed model and solution algorithm using large-scale fabricated instances and a real case study for the design of an ecological corridor for the Florida Panther. Our modeling framework is able to solve instances of up to 1500 patches within 2 hours to optimality or with a small optimality gap. The second problem introduces the species movement across the fragmented landscape into the corridor design problem. The premise is that dispersal dynamics, if available, must inform the design to account for the corridor’s usage by the species. To this end, we propose a spatial discrete-time absorbing Markov chain (DTMC) approach to represent species dispersal and develop short- and long-term landscape usage metrics. We explore two different types of design problems: open and closed corridors. An open corridor is a sequence of landscape patches used by the species to disperse out of a habitat. For this case, we devise a dynamic programming algorithm that implicitly enumerates possible corridors and finds that of maximum probability. The second problem is to find a closed corridor of maximum probability that connects two fragmented habitats. To solve this problem variant, we extended the framework from the utility-based corridor design problem by blending the recursive Markov chain equations with a network flow nonlinear formulation. The third problem leverages on the DTMC approach to explore a reserve design problem with spatial requirements like connectivity and compactness. We approximate the compactness using the concept of maximum reserve diameter, i.e., the largest distance allowed between two patch in the reserve. To solve this problem, we devise a two-stage approach that balances the trade-off between reserve usage probability and compactness. The first stage's problem is to detect a subset of patches of maximum usage probability, while the second stage's problem imposes the geometry requirements on the optimal solution obtained from the first stage. To overcome the computational difficulty of large-scale landscapes, we develop tailored solution algorithms, including a warm-up heuristic to initialize the branch-and-bound exploration, problem-specific valid inequalities, and a decomposition strategy that sequentially solves smaller problems on landscape partitions.
Date Created
2021
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Proactive and Real-Time Optimal Control of Water Quality in Water Distribution Networks

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Description
Drinking water quality violations are widespread in the United States and elsewhere in the world. More than half of Americans are not confident in the safety of their tap water, especially after the 2014 Flint, Michigan water crisis. Other than

Drinking water quality violations are widespread in the United States and elsewhere in the world. More than half of Americans are not confident in the safety of their tap water, especially after the 2014 Flint, Michigan water crisis. Other than accidental contamination events, stagnation is a major cause of water quality degradation. Thus, there is a pressing need to build a real-time control system that can make control decisions quickly and proactively so that the quality of water can be maintained at all times. However, towards this end, modeling the dynamics of water distribution systems are very challenging due to the complex fluid dynamics and chemical reactions in the system. This challenge needs to be addressed before moving on to modeling the optimal control problem. The research in this dissertation leverages statistical machine learning approaches in approximating the complex water system dynamics and then develops different optimization models for proactive and real-time water quality control. This research focuses on two effective ways to maintain water quality, flushing of taps and injection of chlorine or other disinfectants; both of these actions decrease the equivalent “water age”, a useful proxy for water quality related to bacteria growth. This research first develops linear predictive models for water quality and subsequently linear programming optimization models for proactive water age control via flushing. The second part of the research considers both flushing and disinfectant injections in the control problem and develops mixed integer quadratically constrained optimization models for controlling water age. Different control strategies for disinfectant injections are also evaluated: binary on-off injections and continuous injections. In the third part of the research, water demand is assumed to be uncertain and stochastic. The developed approach to control the system relates to learning the optimal real-time flushing decisions by combing reinforced temporal-difference learning approaches with linear value function approximation for solving approximately the underlying Markov decision processes. Computational results on widely used simulation models demonstrates the developed control systems were indeed effective for water quality control with known demands as well as when demands are uncertain and stochastic.
Date Created
2021
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Economic Analysis of Expenditure for Covid-19

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This thesis was conducted to study and analyze the fund allocation process adopted by different states in the United States to reduce the impact of the Covid-19 virus. Seven different states and their funding methodologies were compared against the case

This thesis was conducted to study and analyze the fund allocation process adopted by different states in the United States to reduce the impact of the Covid-19 virus. Seven different states and their funding methodologies were compared against the case count within the state. The study also focused on development of a physical distancing index based on three significant attributes. This index was then compared to the expenditure and case counts to support decision making.
A regression model was developed to analyze and compare how different states case counts played out against the regression model and the risk index.

Date Created
2021-05
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