A Concept of a Knowledge-Based Assistance System for Servohydraulic Drive Design

Author(s):  
Kristof Schlemmer ◽  
Hubertus Murrenhoff

Outsourcing of drive engineering is a tendency to be observed in many industrial enterprises today. As in-house expertise diminishes, competitiveness of hydraulic drive systems compared to electrical drives gains importance. Servohydraulic control systems, however, require very specific and complex approaches to circuit and control design. They are thus demanding on the designer’s knowledge and experience, which often leads to hydraulic solutions being implemented unsatisfactorily or not at all. The concept developed in this paper therefore aims at providing support in drive system design to inexperienced customers or sales people. In order to make the diversity of existing expertise accessible and utilizable, a knowledge-based approach is proposed. The objective is seen in an interactive software tool that guides the user through the iterative process of analyzing the problem, planning and designing the most appropriate drive solution. Requirements and selection criteria for a development environment are specified, and an expert system shell is selected as a means of implementation. A taxonomy of linear hydraulic servo drives is created that provides a frame for an object-oriented knowledge base. Knowledge extracted from text books and expert interviews is integrated into the system as a collection of rules and facts. Special attention is paid to the selection of a control strategy that delivers optimum performance beyond the capability of standard PID controllers. A comprehensive survey of hydraulic control technology is to ascertain that the developed expert system employs both approved and novel techniques to the benefit of overall system performance.

2000 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. 129-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Baeza ◽  
E. C. Ferreira ◽  
J. Lafuente

The hardware architecture and the software development of a real-time knowledge-based distributed control system for the supervision of a wastewater treatment pilot plant are presented. The operation scheme is based on an A2/O system (anaerobic, anoxic, oxic) and includes organic matter removal, nitrification/denitrification, and Enhanced Biological Phosphorous Removal (EBPR). The hardware architecture involves different supervision levels, including two autonomous process computers (plant control and analysers control) and a PLC. The software architecture includes a Knowledge-Based Expert System (KBES) as the top control system. The KBES has been developed in G2, an expert system development environment based on object-oriented structural design. This system is fed with data obtained from the plant monitoring (in-line, on-line and off-line data) and with actuation data of the lower control levels. Using this information, the KBES supervises the pilot plant in order to help with fault detection and plant maintenance, but also modifies setpoints and other variables of the local control level to adapt the system to the different influent conditions. The overall system has been implemented and validated at pilot scale.


2020 ◽  
pp. 77-78

The use of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMW PE) for the manufacture of various parts, in particular cuffs for hydraulic drives, is proposed. The properties and advantages of UHMW PE in comparison with other polyethylene materials are considered. Keywords ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene, hydraulic pump, hydraulic motor, hydraulic control valve, hydraulic oil, low temperature. [email protected]


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