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\section{Metrics for Success}
This research will be measured by advancement through Technology Readiness
Levels (TRL), progressing from fundamental concepts to validated prototype
demonstration. TRLs measure the gap between academic proof-of-concept and
practical deployment, which is precisely what this work aims to bridge. Academic
metrics alone cannot capture practical feasibility, and empirical metrics alone
cannot demonstrate theoretical rigor. TRLs measure both simultaneously. This
work begins at TRL 2--3 and aims to reach TRL 5, where system components operate
successfully in a relevant laboratory environment. This section explains why TRL
advancement provides the most appropriate success metric and defines the
specific criteria required to achieve TRL 5. Reaching TRL 5 provides a clear
answer to industry questions about feasibility and maturity that academic
publications alone cannot.
Moving from current state to target requires achieving three intermediate
levels, each representing a distinct validation milestone:
\paragraph{TRL 3 \textit{Critical Function and Proof of Concept}}
For this research, TRL 3 means demonstrating that each component of the
methodology works in isolation. Startup procedures must be translated into
temporal logic specifications that pass realizability analysis. A discrete
automaton must be synthesized with interpretable structure. At least one
continuous controller must be designed with reachability analysis proving
transition requirements are satisfied. Independent review must confirm that
specifications match intended procedural behavior. This proves the
fundamental approach on a simplified startup sequence.
\paragraph{TRL 4 \textit{Laboratory Testing of Integrated Components}}
For this research, TRL 4 means demonstrating a complete integrated hybrid
controller in simulation. All startup procedures must be formalized with a
synthesized automaton covering all operational modes. Continuous controllers
must exist for all discrete modes. Verification must be complete for all mode
transitions using reachability analysis, barrier certificates, and
assume-guarantee contracts. The integrated controller must execute complete
startup sequences in software simulation with zero safety violations across
multiple consecutive runs. This proves that formal correctness guarantees can
be maintained throughout system integration.
\paragraph{TRL 5 \textit{Laboratory Testing in Relevant Environment}}
For this research, TRL 5 means demonstrating the verified controller on
industrial control hardware through hardware-in-the-loop testing. The discrete
automaton must be implemented on the Emerson Ovation control system and verified
to match synthesized specifications exactly. Continuous controllers must execute
at required rates. The ARCADE interface must establish stable real-time
communication between the Emerson Ovation hardware and SmAHTR simulation.
Complete autonomous startup sequences must execute via hardware-in-the-loop
across the full operational envelope. The controller must handle off-nominal
scenarios to validate that expulsory modes function correctly. For example,
simulated sensor failures must trigger appropriate fault detection and mode
transitions, and loss-of-cooling scenarios must activate SCRAM procedures as
specified. Graded responses to minor disturbances are outside this work's scope,
as they require runtime optimization under uncertainty that extends beyond the
correct-by-construction verification framework presented here. Formal
verification results must remain valid, with discrete behavior matching
specifications and continuous trajectories remaining within verified bounds.
This proves that the methodology produces verified controllers implementable on
industrial hardware.
Progress will be assessed quarterly through collection of specific data
comparing actual results against TRL advancement criteria. Specification
development status indicates progress toward TRL 3. Synthesis results and
verification coverage indicate progress toward TRL 4. Simulation performance
metrics and hardware integration milestones indicate progress toward TRL 5.
The research plan will be revised only when new data invalidates fundamental
assumptions. This research succeeds if it achieves TRL 5 by demonstrating a
complete autonomous hybrid controller with formal correctness guarantees
operating on industrial control hardware through hardware-in-the-loop
testing in a relevant laboratory environment. This establishes both
theoretical validity and practical feasibility, proving that the methodology
produces verified controllers and that implementation is achievable with
current technology.