Process Dynamics Operations & Control
Process Dynamics Operations & Control
450
Lesson 1: Processes and Systems
1.0 context and direction
Process control is an application area of chemical engineering - an
identifiable specialty for the ChE. It combines chemical process
knowledge (how physics, chemistry, and biology work in operating
equipment) and an understanding of dynamic systems, a topic important to
many fields of engineering. Thus study of process control allows
chemical engineers to span their own field, as well as form a useful
acquaintance with allied fields. Practitioners of process control find their
skills useful in design, operation, and troubleshooting - major categories of
chemical engineering practice.
d
ρV = ρFi (1.2-1)
dt
The tank volume V can be expressed in terms of the liquid level h. The
inlet volumetric flow rate Fi may vary with time due to supply pressure
fluctuations and valve manipulations by the operator. The liquid density
depends on the temperature, but will usually not vary significantly with
time during the course of filling. Thus (1.2-1) becomes
dh
A = Fi ( t ) (1.2-2)
dt
1 t
A ∫0
h = h ( 0) + Fi ( t )dt (1.2-3)
A new scheme is proposed: put a timer on the valve. Calculate the time
required for filling from (1.2-3). Close the valve when time has expired.
dh
A = Fmax h (0) = known
dt (1.5-1)
F
h = h (0) + max t
A
Equation (1.5-1) can be used to calculate tnear, the time at which h reaches
hnear. For h greater than hnear,
dh hr − h
A = Fmax h(t near ) = h near
dt h r − h near
(1.5-2)
⎡ − h r (t − t near ) ⎤
h = h r − ( h r − h near ) exp ⎢ ⎥
⎢⎣ t fill ( h r − h near ) ⎥⎦
where the parameter tfill is the time required for the level to reach hr at
flow Fmax, starting from an empty tank.
Ah r
t fill = (1.5-3)
Fmax
The plot shows the filling profile from h(0) = 0.10hr with several values of
hnear/hr. Certainly the filling goes faster if the flow can go instantaneously
from Fmax to zero at hr; however this will not be practical, so that hnear will
be less than hr.
1.2
hnear/hr = 0.95
1 0.75
0.50
0.8
h/hr
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4
t/tfill
Furthermore, the inputs and outputs of a system need not be material and
energy streams, as they are for a process. System inputs are "things that
cause" or “stimuli”; outputs are "things that are affected" or “responses”.
The point of all this is to look at a single schematic and know how to view
it as a process, and as a system. View it as a process (Fo as an outlet
stream) to write the material balance and make fluid mechanics
calculations. View it as a system (Fo as an input) to analyze the dynamic
behavior implied by that material balance and make control calculations.
system
inputs outputs
1
2
system
controlled
manipulated
variable
variable
final control sensor
element
controller
set point
We will see this structure repeatedly. Inside the block called "process" is
the physical process, whatever it might be, and the block is the boundary
we would draw if we were doing an overall material or energy balance.
HOWEVER, we remember that the inputs and outputs are NOT
necessarily the same as the material and energy streams that cross the
process boundary. From among the outputs, we may select a controlled
variable (often a pressure, temperature, flow rate, liquid level, or
composition) and provide a suitable sensor to measure it. From the inputs,
we choose a manipulated variable (often a flow rate) and install an
appropriate final control element (often a valve). The measurement is fed
to the controller, which decides how to adjust the manipulated variable to
keep the controlled variable at the desired condition: the set point. The
1.9 conclusion
Think of a chemical process as a dynamic system that responds in
particular ways to its inputs. We attach other dynamic systems (sensor,
controller, etc.) to that process in a single-loop feedback structure and
arrive at a new dynamic system that responds in different ways to the
inputs. If we do our job well, it responds in better ways, so to justify all
the trouble.