Concept of Advanced Back-up Control Panel Design of Digital Main Control Room

Author(s):  
Ke Tan ◽  
Yongbin Sun ◽  
Weihua Chen
1971 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. T80-T83
Author(s):  
S. A. E. Barrow

The accent on centralised control has led to a considerable reduction in panel length by the use of high density instrumentation. Condensing the panel length introduces the problem of mounting back of panel equipment in a much reduced area. Several designs of control panels have been developed within the process industry and the paper reviews the various answers to this problem. One particularly successful integrated design is described and includes development, layout, fabrication, shop testing, transport, installation, maintenance and control house layout. The paper concludes with various improvements and innovations for the future and the impact of integrated panel design on manufacturers and users.


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grady T. Holman ◽  
Brian J. Carnahan ◽  
Robert L. Bulfin

Author(s):  
Grady T. Holman ◽  
Brian J. Carnahan ◽  
Robert L. Bulfin

Author(s):  
Naveen Kumar ◽  
Jyoti Kumar

Cyber-physical production system (CPPS) is being envisioned as the fourth major paradigm shift in the way industrial production happens. This chapter argues that though information technology-enabled automation will be used in CPPS, human intervention for production supervision would be required especially in critical scenario and human cognitive load would continue to affect the industry efficiency. The complexity of HCI-based control panel design would increase in CPPS due to task complexities and type of information presented through HCI systems. Also, the design methodologies for HCI systems have remained mostly technology centric and have not been able to include the cognitive load measurement caused by the design as a necessary consideration in the design process. Therefore, this chapter proposes user's cognitive load centric methodology for HCI based control panel design in context of CPPS. Cognitive load measurement should become a pivot for the HCI design process. In support of that, this chapter presents a case study using proposed UCLCD4 methodology.


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