Fundamental process control
著者
書誌事項
Fundamental process control
(Butterworths series in chemical engineering)
Butterworths, c1988
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注記
Bibliography: p. 233-241
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Fundamental Process Control focuses on the fundamental nature of process control, which includes an extensive discussion on control methodologies. The first seven chapters are devoted to the development of a complete control problem formulation that contains all the elements of practical importance. Due to the novelty of these ideas, no rigorous mathematical proofs yet exist for the assertions made, although they have been verified through simulation and experience in practice. The concepts discussed in Chapters 8 and 9 contain ideas for future developments in process control that will trigger the imagination of researchers in the fields covered. This book requires a thorough grounding in both classical and modern control theory in order to grasp the material presented. This book is therefore not for casual readers, but rather is directed at those who are currently, or those who desire to develop into, control design experts. Within the academic community, this book is ideal for the graduate level and for those academics pursuing fundamental research topics in process control.
目次
PrefaceAcknowledgment1 Real Issues in Process Control: An Introduction 1.1 Control, Process Economics and Constraints 1.2 Design and Maintenance Costs 1.3 Technology Transfer2 The Fundamental Control Problem Formulation 2.1 Performance Criteria for Process Control 2.1.1 The Surge Level Control Problem 2.1.2 A Semi-Batch Reactor Control Problem 2.2 Process Representation for Process Control 2.3 Summary: Elements of the Fundamental Control Problem3 A Process Control Example Problem: Heavy Oil Fractionator 3.1 Process Representation 3.2 Control Performance Criteria4 Linear Process Representations 4.1 Discrete Linear State Space Process Representation 4.1.1 Discrete Linear State Space Model 4.1.2 Discrete Linear State Space Uncertainty Description 4.2 Discrete Linear Predictive Process Representation 4.2.1 Derivation of the Model Predictive Representation 4.2.2 Relation With Other Linear Process Representations 4.2.3 Special Cases 4.3 Model Predictive Representation for the Heavy Oil Fractionator5 Linear Unconstrained Control 5.1 The Transfer Function Form (IMC) 5.1.1 The IMC Structure 5.1.2 Design Procedure 5.1.3 SISO Design 5.2 The Optimization Form 5.2.1 The Predictive Control Problem 5.2.2 Stability Theorems and Tuning Parameters 5.2.3 Nominal Design of Unconstrained Controllers for the Heavy Oil Fractionator 5.3 Comparison with Existing Techniques 5.3.1 Proportional Integral Derivative Controller 5.3.2 The Smith Predictor 5.3.3 Dahlin's Controller 5.3.4 Model Algorithmic Control 5.3.5 The Linear Quadratic Controller 5.4 Analysis of Linear Unconstrained Controllers 5.4.1 Nominal Performance 5.4.2 Robust Stability 5.4.3 Analysis of Unconstrained Controllers for the Heavy Oil Fractionator6 Linear Model Predictive Control 6.1 The Dynamic Matrix Control Formulation 6.1.1 The DMC Constraint Equations 6.1.2 The Quadratic Programming Problem 6.1.3 Tuning of DMC 6.2 Implementation of DMC 6.2.1 Identification 6.2.2 Off-line Design 6.2.3 On-line Implementation 6.3 Comparison With Other MPC Algorithms 6.4 Nominal Design of Constrained Controllers for the Heavy Oil Fractionator 6.4.1 Tuning Parameters Used in DMC 6.4.2 Constrained DMC Algorithm 6.4.3 Comparison With Single Variable Controllers7 Linear Fundamental Control Problem 7.1 A Process Control Algorithm Based On the Fundamental Control Problem 7.1.1 The Model Predictive Process Representation 7.1.2 The Computation of Future Moves 7.1.3 A Simple Example 7.2 Comparison With Other Robust Control Approaches 7.2.1 Infinity Norm Robust Model Predictive Control 7.2.2 The Structured Singular Value Theory 7.2.3 The Fundamental Control Problem and Robust Control Theory 7.3 Solution of the Fundamental Control Problem for the Heavy Oil Fractionator 7.3.1 Robust Stability of the Heavy Oil Fractionator Controllers 7.3.2 The Two-Level Optimization Approach Applied to the Heavy Oil Fractionator Control Problem8 Design Methodologies and the Fundamental Control Problem 8.1 Standard Design Procedure 8.2 New Design Procedure 8.2.1 The Design Validation Problem 8.2.2 The Design Analysis Problem 8.3 Example of the Solution of the Design Analysis Problem 8.4 Summary and Future Directions9 Computers in Manufacturing: The Role of Emerging Technologies 9.1 Efficiency and Effectiveness in the Application of Computers to Manufacturing 9.1.1 The Nature of Technological Change 9.1.2 Manufacturing Computer Systems 9.1.3 Efficiency in Manufacturing Computer Systems 9.1.4 Effectiveness in Manufacturing Computer Systems 9.1.5 Conclusions 9.2 Symbolic and Subsymbolic Processing: Process States, Dynamics, and Causality 9.2.1 Symbolic Processing 9.2.2 Subsymbolic Processing 9.2.3 Combining Symbolic and Subsymbolic Processing 9.2.4 Process Understanding Systems 9.2.5 Conclusions 9.3 Expert Systems and Neural Networks: An Overview 9.3.1 Expert Systems 9.3.2 Neural NetworksA Zero Offset For Ramp InputsB Mathematical DefinitionsC Convexity of the Fundamental Control Problem Controller Quadratic Objective Function with Respect to Uncertain Gain ParametersIndex
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