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Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems

This thesis addresses the challenge of transporting supervisory video alongside time-critical control traffic in industrial Networked Control Systems (NCS) without violating stringent real-time constraints. A simple yet scalable network architecture is developed and evaluated for a plant-level deplo...

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Main Author: Awad, Moustafa
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Awad, Moustafa
author_browse Awad, Moustafa
author_facet Awad, Moustafa
author_sort Awad, Moustafa
collection Thesis
description This thesis addresses the challenge of transporting supervisory video alongside time-critical control traffic in industrial Networked Control Systems (NCS) without violating stringent real-time constraints. A simple yet scalable network architecture is developed and evaluated for a plant-level deployment comprising three interconnected workcells with sensors, controllers, actuators, and cameras. The design explicitly accommodates bandwidth-intensive video streams while preserving the responsiveness of watchdog/control traffic. Analytical delay modeling decomposes end-to-end latency into transmission, propagation, processing, and queuing components, and Riverbed-based simulations are used to validate the model under realistic mixed-traffic conditions. A traffic-engineering strategy - phase-shifting supervisory camera transmissions - effectively desynchronizes frame bursts across cells. This intervention achieves a pronounced reduction in congestion-induced queuing, decreasing end-to-end delays for watchdog packets by more than 95%, thereby restoring timely delivery under load. Building on this baseline, the thesis presents an enhanced fault-tolerant architecture that sustains high-quality video supervision while maintaining real-time performance. Two advances have been assessed. First, supervisory video quality is increased to the standard 50 frames per second (fps) to improve monitoring fidelity. Second, Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) resources embedded within the core network switch are leveraged to perform local controller fault recovery. By isolating control processing from high-bitrate video handling and keeping recovery within the switching fabric, the FPGA-enhanced design preserves responsiveness during controller failures. Simulation results confirm that maximum delays in faulty scenarios remain well within real-time requirements, and that the FPGA-based approach yields a 7.58% latency improvement relative to previously studied designs. Collectively, these results demonstrate that targeted traffic management and in-network fault-recovery mechanisms enable scalable integration of supervisory video in NCS without compromising control-loop deadlines. The contributions provide a practical path for modernizing industrial architectures to support richer supervision while upholding the reliability and determinism required in production environments.
format Thesis
id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3749
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:03.647Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher AUC Knowledge Fountain
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source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3749 Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems Awad, Moustafa This thesis addresses the challenge of transporting supervisory video alongside time-critical control traffic in industrial Networked Control Systems (NCS) without violating stringent real-time constraints. A simple yet scalable network architecture is developed and evaluated for a plant-level deployment comprising three interconnected workcells with sensors, controllers, actuators, and cameras. The design explicitly accommodates bandwidth-intensive video streams while preserving the responsiveness of watchdog/control traffic. Analytical delay modeling decomposes end-to-end latency into transmission, propagation, processing, and queuing components, and Riverbed-based simulations are used to validate the model under realistic mixed-traffic conditions. A traffic-engineering strategy - phase-shifting supervisory camera transmissions - effectively desynchronizes frame bursts across cells. This intervention achieves a pronounced reduction in congestion-induced queuing, decreasing end-to-end delays for watchdog packets by more than 95%, thereby restoring timely delivery under load. Building on this baseline, the thesis presents an enhanced fault-tolerant architecture that sustains high-quality video supervision while maintaining real-time performance. Two advances have been assessed. First, supervisory video quality is increased to the standard 50 frames per second (fps) to improve monitoring fidelity. Second, Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) resources embedded within the core network switch are leveraged to perform local controller fault recovery. By isolating control processing from high-bitrate video handling and keeping recovery within the switching fabric, the FPGA-enhanced design preserves responsiveness during controller failures. Simulation results confirm that maximum delays in faulty scenarios remain well within real-time requirements, and that the FPGA-based approach yields a 7.58% latency improvement relative to previously studied designs. Collectively, these results demonstrate that targeted traffic management and in-network fault-recovery mechanisms enable scalable integration of supervisory video in NCS without compromising control-loop deadlines. The contributions provide a practical path for modernizing industrial architectures to support richer supervision while upholding the reliability and determinism required in production environments. 2026-02-15T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2688 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3749/viewcontent/Moustafa_Awad_Phd_Thesis_Fall_2025___Final___Dec_2025.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Industrial Networked Control Systems Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures Real-Time Video Transmission Electrical and Computer Engineering Systems and Communications
spellingShingle Industrial Networked Control Systems
Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures
Real-Time Video Transmission
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Systems and Communications
Awad, Moustafa
Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title_full Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title_fullStr Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title_full_unstemmed Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title_short Scalable and Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures for Real-Time Video Transmission in Industrial Networked Control Systems
title_sort scalable and fault tolerant network architectures for real time video transmission in industrial networked control systems
topic Industrial Networked Control Systems
Fault-Tolerant Network Architectures
Real-Time Video Transmission
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Systems and Communications
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2688
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3749/viewcontent/Moustafa_Awad_Phd_Thesis_Fall_2025___Final___Dec_2025.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT awadmoustafa scalableandfaulttolerantnetworkarchitecturesforrealtimevideotransmissioninindustrialnetworkedcontrolsystems