Class 1 - Need For Process Control & Process Terminology
Class 1 - Need For Process Control & Process Terminology
Class 1 - Need For Process Control & Process Terminology
AND CONTROL
Dr. S. Meenatchisundaram
Email: meenasundar@gmail.com
Introduction:
Process control 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.
Process Instrumentation and Control (ICE 401)
Dr. S.Meenatchisundaram, MIT, Manipal, Jan May 2015
Objectives of Control:
1. Maintain the process at the operational conditions and set
points:
Many processes should work at steady state conditions or in a
state in which it satisfies all the benefits for a company such as
budget, yield, safety, and other quality objectives.
In many real-life situations, a process may not always remain
static under these conditions and therefore can cause substantial
losses to the process.
One of the ways a process can wander away from these
conditions is by the system becoming unstable, meaning process
variables oscillate from its physical boundaries over a limited time
span.
Process Instrumentation and Control (ICE 401)
Dr. S.Meenatchisundaram, MIT, Manipal, Jan May 2015
Objectives of Control:
An example of this would be a water tank in a heating and cooling
process without any drainage and is being constantly filled with
water.
The water level in the tank will continue to rise and eventually
overflow.
This uncontrolled system can be controlled simply by adding
control valves and level sensors in the tank that can tell the
engineer or technician the level of water in the tank.
Another way a process can stray away from steady state
conditions can be due to various changes in the environmental
conditions, such as composition of a feed, temperature conditions,
or flow rate.
Process Instrumentation and Control (ICE 401)
Dr. S.Meenatchisundaram, MIT, Manipal, Jan May 2015
Objectives of Control:
2. Transition the process from one operational condition to
another:
In real-life situations, engineers may change the process
operational conditions for a variety of different reasons, such as
customer specifications or environment specifications.
Although, transitioning a process from one operational condition to
another can be detrimental to a process, it also can be beneficial
depending on the company and consumer demands.
Examples of why a process may be moved from one operational
set point to another:
1. Economics, 2. Product specifications, 3. Operational
constraints, 4. Environmental regulations, 5. Consumer /
Customer specifications, 6. Environmental regulations, 7. Safety
precautions.
Process Instrumentation and Control (ICE 401)
Dr. S.Meenatchisundaram, MIT, Manipal, Jan May 2015