scholarly journals A remote control room at DIII-D

2008 ◽  
Vol 83 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 480-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Abla ◽  
D.P. Schissel ◽  
B.G. Penaflor ◽  
G. Wallace
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
pp. 547-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Dong Geng ◽  
Yu Gong ◽  
Li Zhang ◽  
Jian An ◽  
Jian De Wu

Designing the three dimensional (3D) GIS software used in monitoring mineral pipeline transporting system. The software can truly show and restore the geography of project and the features of terrain .The operator can not only examine and grasp the true situation of the distribution of pipeline, but also keep watch on the secure running of the pipeline by real-time remote video in the remote control room. The practical application indicates that the pipeline can run safely, stably and efficiently with the monitoring system.


Author(s):  
Li Li ◽  
Zhang Shengtao ◽  
Xu Zhao ◽  
Du Yu

For PWR, remote shutdown station (RSS) is a redundant control mean to shut down the reactor when main control room (MCR) inhabitation is challenged (e.g. fire, smoke...). Nowadays, due to nuclear power plants control measures were improved with DCS system, a full function DCS RSS was equipped and more essential equipment could be controlled on RSS. Under operating conditions that prohibit nuclear power plant operators to stay in the main control room, the operators should move to RSS and shutdown the reactor to ensure plant safety following <Moving to remote shutdown station when main control room is un-inhabitable operating strategy> (RSS strategy for short) to fallback the plant from power operation to cold shutdown. The original operating strategy by nature circulation is no longer the best choice both for operation safety and economy efficiency, and an optimized new strategy should be raised. Based on the former reason, an optimized operation strategy was raised in this paper. In the optimized strategy, all plant normal standard operation modes were considered as initial conditions, rather than only considering power operation condition in the original one. The fallback mode and fallback strategy for each initial condition was also designed and optimized. To accelerate the depression and heat removal process, a forced circulation operation strategy is adopted when the reactor coolant pumps are available, and less local operation was included by taking advantages of the full function operating measures on RSS. To simplify the whole procedure structure, the operation modules of other general operating procedures are reused. To validate the effectiveness of the optimized operating strategy, a full scope PWR simulation tool was employed to make thermo hydraulic calculation validation of the reactor response and also the remote control station HMI supporting validation. By simulating the original strategy and the optimized one and related analysis, we found that the optimized strategy is effective, and able to be executed based on the remote control station hardware. By executing the optimized strategy, the unit can fall back to the cold shutdown condition safely and a few hours were saved compared with the original strategy. The optimized strategy had already been implemented on real PWR nuclear power plant.


2014 ◽  
Vol 551 ◽  
pp. 509-513
Author(s):  
Song Liu ◽  
Lian Zhi Jiang

This paper introduces a kind of motor frequency conversion energy-saving controller used for fan and water pump loads. Motor energy-saving controller mainly consists of two parts, controller and driver. The main functions of the controller are data collection, control algorithm and communication. The driver is mainly composed of inverter, switch and display instrument. According to the actual situation, if it needs a remote control, we can configure the remote console in the control room, in order to realize the remote control.


1959 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-36
Author(s):  
W. P. Colquhoun

Future transport systems are difficult to predict, but one can perceive three main possibilities. The first is that transport will become entirely automatic, so that where, for example, one now has an automatic pilot during flight, one will also have automatic take-off and automatic landing. Flights will be pre-programmed, and will require no supervision in the vehicle itself or even from a remote-control room. Whether or not such a system is practicable is not within the scope of this paper; but there does not appear to be any purely mechanical problem connected with it that could not be overcome. However the production of equipment of the necessary reliability raises formidable human problems. problems. Not the least among these is the difficulty of maintaining rigorous standards of inspection; another is the rationalization and speeding up of faultfinding and repair procedures. It looks as though if we were to dispense with the human element in one sphere, its importance in another would be enhanced.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehbub Alam ◽  
Nurzaman Ahmed ◽  
Rakesh Matam ◽  
Ferdous Ahmed Barbhuiya

<div>IEEE 802.11ah is considered as a promising and scalable solution for connecting a large number of drones. With the support of sub-1GHz channel bands, relay, and group-based channel access mechanism, 802.11ah can help drone stations for collecting commands, sending data, and processing response to the control room. However, achieving required throughput and latency is still challenging due to high mobility and dynamic relaying requirement. This article proposes an IEEE 802.11ahbased Internet-of-Drones (IoD) architecture for surveillance and remote control. Our scheme predicts the location of a drone and places the required association and channel access configuration to a relay node dynamically. Moreover, the current mode of a drone station is switched to relay from station as per the location. The relay nodes use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with implicit acknowledgement to increase the efficiency of the network. The performance analysis shows significant improvement in terms of throughput and latency.</div>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehbub Alam ◽  
Nurzaman Ahmed ◽  
Rakesh Matam ◽  
Ferdous Ahmed Barbhuiya

<div>IEEE 802.11ah is considered as a promising and scalable solution for connecting a large number of drones. With the support of sub-1GHz channel bands, relay, and group-based channel access mechanism, 802.11ah can help drone stations for collecting commands, sending data, and processing response to the control room. However, achieving required throughput and latency is still challenging due to high mobility and dynamic relaying requirement. This article proposes an IEEE 802.11ahbased Internet-of-Drones (IoD) architecture for surveillance and remote control. Our scheme predicts the location of a drone and places the required association and channel access configuration to a relay node dynamically. Moreover, the current mode of a drone station is switched to relay from station as per the location. The relay nodes use transmission opportunity (TXOP) with implicit acknowledgement to increase the efficiency of the network. The performance analysis shows significant improvement in terms of throughput and latency.</div>


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 736
Author(s):  
Ross Philo ◽  
Jay Hollingsworth

Cost reductions have become an essential response to lower oil and gas prices. Drilling rigs operate in distant and sometimes hostile environments, so relocating rig-based experts to remote control centres saves costs and improves health, safety and environment (HSE). Key staff can work in an improved environment and movements to-and-from the rig are fewer, lowering transport-related costs and risks. The offsite experts can apply their expertise to the operations of multiple drilling rigs from a single location. To make this a reality, data from thousands of sensors on the rig and from measurement devices such as logging while drilling must be fed to the control room instantaneously and continuously. Legacy systems that poll rig-based devices for new data consume significant bandwidth and deliver data in a discontinuous manner with delays of 15 s or more. This does not meet the criteria for safe and reliable remote control of a rig and has been the reason why many roles have remained rig-based. This paper describes a new set of protocols that establish a continuous stream of data from devices on the rig to the control room with sub-second lag time. The new protocol also uses an order of magnitude less bandwidth, thus allowing more data to be carried in less time. Associated with industry-standard well-site information transfer standard mark-up language data transfer formats, the process operates with numerous service providers and software systems transparently. This paper includes a case-study to which the new protocol is applied, resulting in fewer permanent staff on a North Sea rig and fewer visits by an intervention contractor to the rig, with clear cost savings and HSE risk mitigation.


1999 ◽  
Vol 43 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 357-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A.M. Oomens ◽  
F. Durodié ◽  
G. Kemmerling ◽  
W. Kooijman ◽  
M. Korten ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1099
Author(s):  
Peter Dankerl ◽  
Matthias Stefan May ◽  
Christian Canstein ◽  
Michael Uder ◽  
Marc Saake

This study aimed to evaluate the radiation exposure to the radiologist and the procedure time of prospectively matched CT interventions implementing three different workflows—the radiologist—(I) leaving the CT room during scanning; (II) wearing a lead apron and staying in the CT room; (III) staying in the CT room in a prototype radiation protection cabin without lead apron while utilizing a wireless remote control and a tablet. We prospectively evaluated the radiologist’s radiation exposure utilizing an electronic personal dosimeter, the intervention time, and success in CT interventions matched to the three different workflows. We compared the interventional success, the patient’s dose of the interventional scans in each workflow (total mAs and total DLP), the radiologist’s personal dose (in µSV), and interventional time. To perform workflow III, a prototype of a radiation protection cabin, with 3 mm lead equivalent walls and a foot switch to operate the doors, was built in the CT examination room. Radiation exposure during the maximum tube output at 120 kV was measured by the local admission officials inside the cabin at the same level as in the technician’s control room (below 0.5 μSv/h and 1 mSv/y). Further, to utilize the full potential of this novel workflow, a sterile packed remote control (to move the CT table and to trigger the radiation) and a sterile packed tablet anchored on the CT table (to plan and navigate during the CT intervention) were operated by the radiologist. There were 18 interventions performed in workflow I, 16 in workflow II, and 27 in workflow III. There were no significant differences in the intervention time (workflow I: 23 min ± 12, workflow II: 20 min ± 8, and workflow III: 21 min ± 10, p = 0.71) and the patient’s dose (total DLP, p = 0.14). However, the personal dosimeter registered 0.17 ± 0.22 µSv for workflow II, while I and III both documented 0 µSv, displaying significant difference (p < 0.001). All workflows were performed completely and successfully in all cases. The new workflow has the potential to reduce interventional CT radiologists’ radiation dose to zero while relieving them from working in a lead apron all day.


2012 ◽  
Vol 87 (12) ◽  
pp. 2194-2198 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.P. Schissel ◽  
G. Abla ◽  
S. Flanagan ◽  
E.N. Kim
Keyword(s):  

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