scholarly journals Mathematical modeling of first order process with dead time using various tuning methods for industrial applications

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sathish Kumar Shanmugam ◽  
Yuvaraj Duraisamy ◽  
Meenakumari Ramachandran ◽  
Senthilkumar Arumugam

IMC tuned PID controller’s present excellent set point tracking but sluggish disturbance elimination, because of introduction of slow process pole introduced by the conventional filter. In many industrial applications setpoint is seldom changed thus elimination of disturbance is important. The paper presents an improved IMC filter cascaded with Controller PID tuned by internal model principle (IMC-PID) for effective elimination of disturbance and healthy operation of non-regular first order process such as processes with no delay. The suggested filter eliminates the slow dominant pole. The present study shows that the recommended IMC filter produces excellent elimination of disturbance irrespective of where the disturbance enters the process and provides acceptable robust performance to model disparity in provisions of maximum sensitivity in comparison with other methods cited in the literature. The advantages of the suggested technique is shown through the simulation study on process by designing the IMC tuned PID controllers to maintain identical robustness in provisions of maximum sensitivity. The integral error criterion is used to estimate the performance. The recommended filter produces excellent response irrespective of nature of the process.


Author(s):  
Belinda Sharon Bright ◽  
R. Swarnalatha

The Proportional Integral Derivative Controller is a typical controller implemented frequently in many services and integrating the Smith predictor is an extremely useful control system structure for processes with dead time. This paper has evaluated two control schemes with the modified structures of the Smith predictor incorporating dead time compensators and conventional controllers for first order process with dead time. The disturbance response and the set point response for both the control schemes were decoupled from each other. Therefore two degrees of freedom control design was formulated, and hence the responses could be designed separately. The two control schemes have mainly two variables to be adjusted that decide the robustness and closed-loop behaviour. This paper also contains the calculation of various parameters that were used in each scheme. A comparison of the two control schemes along with the general Smith predictor control scheme was made using Simulink/Matlab. The conclusion is the second control scheme gave better response overall for the processes with dead time having dead time uncertainty and for the processes with dead time without dead time uncertainty.


Author(s):  
Kaveh Paridari ◽  
Mohammad Saleh Tavazoei

In this paper, an algebraic tuning rule is presented for fractional PI controllers to control first order plus dead-time processes. By using the performance map (PM) method, this tuning rule is derived in order to set the gain margin of the control system close to 3 and the phase margin close to 60 degrees. The robustness and performance of this tuning rule are compared with some well-known PI tuning rules. Simulation results are brought to demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of this tuning formula against process dynamic uncertainties in comparison with the other tuning methods.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2070 (1) ◽  
pp. 012114
Author(s):  
P K Juneja ◽  
S K Sunori ◽  
A Sharma ◽  
A Sharma ◽  
P Kumar ◽  
...  

Abstract In present analysis, response of a selected delayed first order process model is compared for various orders of approximation of dead time present in the transfer function model. Effect of different orders of approximation of dead time is analysed on the open loop step response of the system in terms of percentage change in original and dead time approximated system models. For this purpose, consistency parameter in a headbox of a paper machine is selected as a process model as it closely approximates to a first order delayed process model.


2016 ◽  
Vol 136 (5) ◽  
pp. 676-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiro Ishimura ◽  
Masayoshi Nakamoto ◽  
Takuya Kinoshita ◽  
Toru Yamamoto

Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (13) ◽  
pp. 1519
Author(s):  
Mikulas Huba ◽  
Pavol Bistak ◽  
Damir Vrancic ◽  
Katarina Zakova

The article reviews the results of a number of recent papers dealing with the revision of the simplest approaches to the control of first-order time-delayed systems. The concise introductory review is extended by an analysis of two discrete-time approaches to dead-time compensation control of stable, integrating, and unstable first-order dead-time processes including simple diagnostics of the model used and focusing on the possibility of simplified but reliable plant modelling. The first approach, based on the first historically known dead-time compensator (DTC) with possible dead-beat performance, is based on the reconstruction of the actual process variables and the compensation of input disturbances by an extended state observer (ESO). Such solutions play an important role both in a disturbance observer (DOB) based control and in an active disturbance rejection control (ADRC). The second approach considered comes from the Smith predictor with two degrees of freedom, which combines feedforward control with output disturbance reconstruction and compensation by the parallel plant model. It is shown that these two approaches offer advantageous properties in the case of actuator limitations, in contrast to the commonly used PID controllers. However, when applied to integrating and unstable first-order systems, the unconstrained and possibly unobservable output disturbance signal of the second solution must be eliminated from the control loop, due to the hidden structural instability of the Smith predictor-like solutions. The modified solutions, usually referred to as filtered Smith predictor (FSP), then no longer provide a disturbance signal and thus no longer fully fit into the concept of Industry 4.0, which is focused on further optimization, predictive maintenance in dynamic systems, diagnosis, fault detection and fault identification of dynamic processes and forms the basis for the digitalization of smart production. Nevertheless, the detailed analysis of the elimination of the unstable disturbance response mode is also worth mentioning in terms of other possible solutions. The application of both approaches to the control of a thermal process shows almost equivalent quality, but with different dependencies on the tuning parameters used. It is confirmed that a more detailed identification of the controlled process and the resulting higher complexity of the control algorithms does not necessarily lead to an increase in the resulting quality of the transients, which underlines the importance of the simplified plant modelling for practice.


1939 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurin M. Chase ◽  
Emil L. Smith

1. Measurements of visual purple regeneration in solution have been made by a procedure which minimized distortion of the results by other color changes so that density changes caused by the regenerating substance alone are obtained. 2. Bleaching a visual purple solution with blue and violet light causes a greater subsequent regeneration than does an equivalent bleaching with light which lacks blue and violet. This is due to a photosensitive substance which has a gradually increasing effective absorption toward the shorter wavelengths. It is uncertain whether this substance is a product of visual purple bleaching or is present in the solution before illumination. 3. The regeneration of visual purple measured at 560 mµ is maximal at about pH 6.7 and decreases markedly at more acid and more alkaline pH's. 4. The absorption spectrum of the regenerating material shows only a concentration change during the course of regeneration, but has a higher absorption at the shorter wavelengths than has visual purple before illumination. 5. Visual purple extractions made at various temperatures show no significant difference in per cent of regeneration. 6. The kinetics of regeneration is usually that of a first order process. Successive regenerations in the same solution have the same velocity constant but form smaller total amounts of regenerated substance. 7. In vivo, the frog retina shows no additional oxygen consumption while visual purple is regenerating.


1996 ◽  
Vol 50 (11) ◽  
pp. 1352-1359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping Chiang ◽  
Kuang-Pang Li ◽  
Tong-Ming Hseu

An idealized model for the kinetics of benzo[ a]pyrene (BaP) metabolism is established. As observed from experimental results, the BaP transfer from microcrystals to the cell membrane is definitely a first-order process. The rate constant of this process is signified as k1. We describe the surface–midplane exchange as reversible and use rate constants k2 and k3 to describe the inward and outward diffusions, respectively. The metabolism is identified as an irreversible reaction with a rate constant k4. If k2 and k3 are assumed to be fast and not rate determining, the effect of the metabolism rate, k4, on the number density of BaP in the midplane of the microsomal membrane, m3, can be estimated. If the metabolism rate is faster than or comparable to the distribution rates, k2 and k3, the BaP concentration in the membrane midplane, m3, will quickly be dissipated. But if k4 is extremely small, m3 will reach a plateau. Under conditions when k2 and k3 also play significant roles in determining the overall rate, more complicated patterns of m3 are expected.


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