Lecture1 PDF
Lecture1 PDF
Module- 9
Lec- 9
Objectives of control
• Process control is an integral part of modern processing industries; and the food
processing industry is no exception.
• Process control is to improve the economics of the process by achieving the following
objectives
• To reduce variation in the product
• To quality, achieve more consistent production and maximize yield,
• To ensure process and product safety,
• To reduce manpower and enhance operator productivity,
• To reduce waste and
• To optimize energy efficiency
Mode of operation
The latter occurs in most real situations and requires control action in order to keep the
product within specifications.
Classification of sensors
• Three main classes of sensors used for the measurement of key processing parameters
such as temperature, pressure, mass, material level in containers, flow rate , density,
viscosity, moisture, fat content, protein content, pH, size, color, turbidity etc.
• Penetrating sensors: these sensors penetrate inside the processing equipment and
come into contact with the material being processed.
• Sampling sensors: these sensors operate on samples which are continuously
withdrawn from the processing equipment.
• No penetrating sensors: these sensors do not penetrate into the processing equipment
and, as a consequence, do not come into contact with the materials being processed.
• Inline sensors: these form an integral part of the processing equipment, and the values
measured by them are used directly for process control.
• Online sensors: these too form an integral part of the processing equipment, but the
measured values can only be used for process control after an operator has entered
these values into the control system.
• Offline sensors: these sensors are not part of the processing equipment, nor can the
measured values be used directly for process control. An operator has to measure the
variable and enter the values into a control system to achieve process control.
Manual Control
Automatic Control
• the simplest automatic controller for which the final control element, e.g. valve, is
either completely open or at maximum, or completely closed or at minimum.
• There are no intermediate values or positions for the final control element.
• FCE,s often experience significant wear, as they are continually and rapidly switched
from open to closed positions and back again.
• on/off controllers are provided with a dead band.
• dead band is a zone bounded by an upper and a lower set point.
• On/off controllers with a dead band are found in many instances in our daily lives:
home heating system, oven, refrigerator and air conditioner.
• It is not suitable for controlling any process parameter likely to suffer large sudden
deviations from the set point and
• The quality of control is inferior to the continuous controller.
Proportional (P) Controller
Output signal to the final control element can be mathematically expressed as:
KC
Where COS ( t ) COS ( NE ) K C Et
I E dt
t
τ is a tuning parameter called the reset time; and the remaining notations are same as in P
I
controller equation
Advantage
• The consequence of this is that integral action enables the PI controller to eliminate
the offset, which is the key advantage of the PI controller over a P controller.
Disadvantage
• Two tuning parameters interact and it is difficult to find the ‘best’ tuning values once
the controller is placed in automatic mode.
• A PI controller increases the oscillatory behavior.
• Output signal to the final control element can be mathematically expressed as:
KC dE
COS(t ) COS( NE ) K C Et
I Et dt K C D t
dt
• Where τ is a new tuning parameter called the derivative time; and the remaining
D
• The introduction of the derivative term, is that it modifies the drawback of the PI
controller
• it works to decrease the oscillating behavior of the measured process parameter.
• A properly tuned PID controller action can achieve a rapid response to error
(proportional term), offset elimination (integral term) and minimize oscillations
(derivative term).
Disadvantage
• The key disadvantage of the PID controller is that it has three tuning parameters,
which interact and must be balanced to achieve the desired controller performance as
it is often hard to determine which of the three tuning parameters is dominantly
responsible for an undesirable performance.
• The supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) system is not a full control
system, but is a software package that is positioned at a supervisory level on top of
hardware to which it is interfaced, generally via PLCs, or other hardware modules.
These are software packages which have been used for a number of years in process
industries to support key operations and management functions ranging from data
acquisition to maintenance management, quality control and performance analysis.
References
http://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&v
ed=0CCkQFjAA&url=https%3A%2F%2Fround-lake.dustinice.workers.dev%3A443%2Fhttp%2Fwww.pbf.unizg.hr%2Fhr%2Fcontent%2Fdo
wnload%2F9507%2F46413%2Fversion%2F1%2Ffile%2Fcontrol%2Bstrategy%2Bin
%2Bfood%2Bindustry.pdf&ei=IhnzUtKPFYvMkAXkl4HwAg&usg=AFQjCNHA60f
icLRg8LfIgjoO0nVZOlzziQ&sig2=72PtBNrZ1f1QN-X3bQg4uQ
http://practicalaction.org/quality-control-in-food-processing
http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/foodsci/ext/pubs/scheduledprocesses.PDF
http://www.fda.gov/iceci/inspections/inspectionguides/ucm074955.htm
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9783527634361.ch18/summary