Chemical Process Dynamics and Controls Peter Woolf
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- TA145
- QD31.3
Part I Process Control Introduction -- Chapter 1: Overview -- Chapter 2: Modeling Basics -- Chapter 3: Sensors and Actuators -- Chapter 4: Piping and Instrumentation Diagrams -- Chapter 5: Logical Modeling -- Chapter 6: Modeling Case Studies -- Part II Chemical Process Controls -- Chapter 7: Mathematics for Control Systems -- Chapter 8: Optimization -- Chapter 9: PID Control -- Chapter 10: Dynamical Systems Analysis -- Chapter 11: Control Architectures -- Chapter 12: MIMO Control -- Part III Statistical Analysis for Chemical Process Control -- Chapter 13: Statistics and Probability Background -- Chapter 14: Design of Experiments
Process controls is a mixture between the statistics and engineering discipline that deals with the mechanism, architectures, and algorithms for controlling a process. Some examples of controlled processes are: •Controlling the temperature of a water stream by controlling the amount of steam added to the shell of a heat exchanger. •Operating a jacketed reactor isothermally by controlling the mixture of cold water and steam that flows through the jacket of a jacketed reactor. •Maintaining a set ratio of reactants to be added to a reactor by controlling their flow rates. •Controlling the height of fluid in a tank to ensure that it does not overflow.
Attribution
In English.
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