Delayed Functional Observers for the Realization of Generalized Delayed Control Laws
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 07:30 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Delayed functional observers estimate generalized delayed control laws to stabilize systems with mismatched input and output time-delays.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Building on the collective advancements in the literature, this paper proposes the design of delayed functional observers to asymptotically estimate a generalized delayed control law under significant input and output delays. This framework enables designers to extend the allowable bounds for input delays while ensuring that the observer-based control scheme stabilizes the system despite simultaneous mismatched input and output time-delays.
What carries the argument
Delayed functional observers that asymptotically estimate the generalized delayed control law, allowing realization of the control despite delays.
If this is right
- The allowable bounds for input delays can be extended while maintaining stability.
- The system remains stable despite simultaneous mismatched input and output time-delays.
- Observer-based control schemes can be applied to a broader range of time-delay systems.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This approach may apply to real-time control in communication networks with variable delays.
- Future work could test the observers in experimental setups with actual hardware delays.
- Similar designs might be adapted for systems with multiple delays or nonlinear dynamics.
Load-bearing premise
The system satisfies the existence and stability conditions established in the cited prior works for the delayed functional observers and the closed-loop system.
What would settle it
A simulation or experiment where the proposed observers are applied but the closed-loop system becomes unstable when input delays exceed the newly extended bounds, or when the prior conditions are violated.
Figures
read the original abstract
Building on the collective advancements in the literature \cite{trinh1, trinh2, trinhnn26, trinhnam26, trinhnam1}, this paper proposes the design of delayed functional observers to asymptotically estimate a generalized delayed control law under significant input and output delays. This framework enables designers to extend the allowable bounds for input delays while ensuring that the observer-based control scheme stabilizes the system despite simultaneous mismatched input and output time-delays.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes the design of delayed functional observers to asymptotically estimate a generalized delayed control law for linear systems subject to simultaneous mismatched input and output time-delays. Building on prior results, the framework is claimed to enable extension of allowable input delay bounds while ensuring stability of the resulting observer-based closed-loop control scheme.
Significance. If the observers provide the claimed asymptotic estimation and the closed-loop remains stable for input delays beyond those in the cited prior works, the result would offer a practical extension for handling larger delays in observer-based control of time-delay systems. The approach generalizes existing functional observer designs, but its significance is limited by the absence of new derivations or independent verification of the mismatched-delay case.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The central claim that the design 'enables designers to extend the allowable bounds for input delays while ensuring that the observer-based control scheme stabilizes the system' rests entirely on the system satisfying unspecified existence and stability conditions from the cited prior works (trinh1, trinh2, trinhnn26, trinhnam26, trinhnam1). No re-derivation or explicit check for new coupling terms or altered delay-dependent conditions arising from the mismatched-delay generalization is provided, which is load-bearing for the extension claim.
- [Abstract] The manuscript provides no independent benchmarks, numerical examples with explicit LMI solutions, or counter-example checks to verify that the generalized observers achieve convergence and stability outside the scope of the prior theorems; this makes the extension of delay bounds unverifiable from the given text.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed report and constructive feedback. We address each major comment below, clarifying the manuscript's reliance on prior results while proposing revisions to improve clarity and verifiability.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The central claim that the design 'enables designers to extend the allowable bounds for input delays while ensuring that the observer-based control scheme stabilizes the system' rests entirely on the system satisfying unspecified existence and stability conditions from the cited prior works (trinh1, trinh2, trinhnn26, trinhnam26, trinhnam1). No re-derivation or explicit check for new coupling terms or altered delay-dependent conditions arising from the mismatched-delay generalization is provided, which is load-bearing for the extension claim.
Authors: The contribution of this work is the generalization of the delayed functional observer structure to accommodate a generalized delayed control law under mismatched input/output delays. The existence and stability conditions remain those established in the cited references, as the mismatched delays are incorporated via the choice of the control law parameters without introducing additional coupling terms that alter the delay-dependent LMIs. We will revise the abstract and add a clarifying paragraph in Section II to explicitly note that the stability criteria are inherited from the prior theorems, provided the system matrices satisfy the referenced conditions. revision: partial
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Referee: [Abstract] The manuscript provides no independent benchmarks, numerical examples with explicit LMI solutions, or counter-example checks to verify that the generalized observers achieve convergence and stability outside the scope of the prior theorems; this makes the extension of delay bounds unverifiable from the given text.
Authors: The manuscript includes a numerical example (Section IV) that solves the relevant LMIs for a system with mismatched delays and illustrates observer convergence. To directly address the verifiability concern, we will expand this example in the revision to include explicit LMI solutions, comparisons against the input delay bounds from the cited prior works, and additional simulation results confirming stability for larger delays. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Central claims inherit existence/stability conditions from self-cited prior works without re-derivation for mismatched delays
specific steps
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self citation load bearing
[Abstract]
"Building on the collective advancements in the literature \cite{trinh1, trinh2, trinhnn26, trinhnam26, trinhnam1}, this paper proposes the design of delayed functional observers to asymptotically estimate a generalized delayed control law under significant input and output delays. This framework enables designers to extend the allowable bounds for input delays while ensuring that the observer-based control scheme stabilizes the system despite simultaneous mismatched input and output time-delays."
The asymptotic estimation and stabilization claims are asserted only if the system satisfies the existence and stability conditions established in the cited prior works. Because those works are by the same lead author and no new derivation or explicit check for the mismatched-delay generalization appears, the central result is carried by the self-citation chain rather than by independent content in the present paper.
full rationale
The abstract states the design 'builds on' the cited works and that the framework 'enables' extended delay bounds while ensuring stabilization. The strongest claim (asymptotic estimation of the generalized delayed control law and closed-loop stability despite simultaneous mismatched delays) is conditioned on the system satisfying unspecified existence and stability conditions from trinh1, trinh2, trinhnn26, trinhnam26, trinhnam1. These citations share the lead author. No independent re-derivation, LMI verification, or external benchmark for the new mismatched-delay coupling is supplied, so the new result reduces to an incremental extension whose validity is carried by the self-citation chain.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
H. Trinh, “Delayed functional observers for output-del ayed linear sys- tems”, Preprint at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606 .09407 (2026)
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[2]
On Time-Delay Compensators for Delayed-Output Systems
H. Trinh, “On time-delay compensators for delayed-outp ut systems”, Preprint at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606.10308 (2026)
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv doi:10.48550/arxiv.2606.10308 2026
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[3]
Observer-Based Control of Linear Systems with Mismatched Input and Output Delays
H. Trinh, P . T. Nam and T. N. Nguyen, “Observer-based cont rol of linear systems with mismatched input and output delays”, Preprint at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606.03081 (2026)
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv doi:10.48550/arxiv.2606.03081 2026
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[4]
Time-Delay Compensators for Linear Systems with Delayed Output Measurements
H. Trinh, P . T. Nam and T. N. Nguyen, “Time-Delay compensa tors for linear systems with delayed output measurements”, Prep rint at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2604.17434 (2026)
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv doi:10.48550/arxiv.2604.17434 2026
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[5]
H. Trinh, P . T. Nam and T. Fernando, “Existence and design of functional observers for time-delay systems with delayed output measu rements”, Preprint at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2603.09395 (2026)
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[6]
Existence and design of functional observ ers
M. Darouach, “Existence and design of functional observ ers”, IEEE Trans. Autom. Contr ., vol. 45, no.5, pp. 940-943, 2000
2000
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[7]
Trinh and T
H. Trinh and T. Fernando, Functional Observers for Dynamical Systems . Springer-V erlag, Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. 5
2012
discussion (0)
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