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Diagnosis of Process Nonlinearities and Valve Stiction : Data Driven Approaches /

By: Choudhury, Shoukat M. A. A [author.].
Contributor(s): Shah, Sirish L [author.] | Thornhill, Nina F [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Advances in Industrial Control: Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008.Description: XX, 286 p. 313 illus., 115 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540792246.Subject(s): Engineering | Control engineering | Quality control | Reliability | Industrial safety | Engineering | Control | Quality Control, Reliability, Safety and RiskDDC classification: 629.8 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Higher-Order Statistics -- Higher-Order Statistics: Preliminaries -- Bispectrum and Bicoherence -- Data Quality – Compression and Quantization -- Impact of Data Compression and Quantization on Data-Driven Process Analyses -- Nonlinearity and Control Performance -- Measures of Nonlinearity – A Review -- Linear or Nonlinear? A Bicoherence-Based Measure of Nonlinearity -- A Nonlinearity Measure Based on Surrogate Data Analysis -- Nonlinearities in Control Loops -- Diagnosis of Poor Control Performance -- Control Valve Stiction~– Definition, Modelling, Detection and Quantification -- Different Types of Faults in Control Valves -- Stiction: Definition and Discussions -- Physics-Based Model of Control Valve Stiction -- Data-Driven Model of Valve Stiction -- Describing Function Analysis -- Automatic Detection and Quantification of Valve Stiction -- Industrial Applications of the Stiction Quantification Algorithm -- Confirming Valve Stiction -- Plant-wide Oscillations – Detection and Diagnosis -- Detection of Plantwide Oscillations -- Diagnosis of Plant-wide Oscillations.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: In this book, Higher Order Statistical (HOS) theory is used to develop indices for detecting and quantifying signal non-Gaussianity and nonlinearity. These indices, together with specific patterns in the mapping of process output and controller output are used to diagnose the causes of poor control loop performance. Often valve stiction is the main cause of poor control performance. A generalized definition of valve stiction based on the investigation of real plant data is proposed. A simple data-driven model of valve stiction is developed. The model is simple, yet powerful enough to properly simulate the complex valve stiction phenomena. Both open and closed loop results have been presented and validated to show the capability of the model. Conventional invasive methods such as the valve travel test can detect stiction easily. However, they are expensive, time consuming and tedious to use for examining thousands of valves in a typical process industry. A non-invasive method that can simultaneously detect and quantify control valve stiction is presented. The method requires only routine operating data from the process. Over a dozen industrial case studies have demonstrated the wide applicability and practicality of this method. In chemical industrial practice, data are often compressed for archival purposes, using various techniques. Compression degrades data quality and induces nonlinearity in the data. The issues of data quality degradation and nonlinearity induction due to compression are investigated in this book. An automatic method for detection and quantification of the compression present in the archived data is discussed. Compelling and quantitative analyses have been recommended to end the practice of process data compression.
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Higher-Order Statistics -- Higher-Order Statistics: Preliminaries -- Bispectrum and Bicoherence -- Data Quality – Compression and Quantization -- Impact of Data Compression and Quantization on Data-Driven Process Analyses -- Nonlinearity and Control Performance -- Measures of Nonlinearity – A Review -- Linear or Nonlinear? A Bicoherence-Based Measure of Nonlinearity -- A Nonlinearity Measure Based on Surrogate Data Analysis -- Nonlinearities in Control Loops -- Diagnosis of Poor Control Performance -- Control Valve Stiction~– Definition, Modelling, Detection and Quantification -- Different Types of Faults in Control Valves -- Stiction: Definition and Discussions -- Physics-Based Model of Control Valve Stiction -- Data-Driven Model of Valve Stiction -- Describing Function Analysis -- Automatic Detection and Quantification of Valve Stiction -- Industrial Applications of the Stiction Quantification Algorithm -- Confirming Valve Stiction -- Plant-wide Oscillations – Detection and Diagnosis -- Detection of Plantwide Oscillations -- Diagnosis of Plant-wide Oscillations.

In this book, Higher Order Statistical (HOS) theory is used to develop indices for detecting and quantifying signal non-Gaussianity and nonlinearity. These indices, together with specific patterns in the mapping of process output and controller output are used to diagnose the causes of poor control loop performance. Often valve stiction is the main cause of poor control performance. A generalized definition of valve stiction based on the investigation of real plant data is proposed. A simple data-driven model of valve stiction is developed. The model is simple, yet powerful enough to properly simulate the complex valve stiction phenomena. Both open and closed loop results have been presented and validated to show the capability of the model. Conventional invasive methods such as the valve travel test can detect stiction easily. However, they are expensive, time consuming and tedious to use for examining thousands of valves in a typical process industry. A non-invasive method that can simultaneously detect and quantify control valve stiction is presented. The method requires only routine operating data from the process. Over a dozen industrial case studies have demonstrated the wide applicability and practicality of this method. In chemical industrial practice, data are often compressed for archival purposes, using various techniques. Compression degrades data quality and induces nonlinearity in the data. The issues of data quality degradation and nonlinearity induction due to compression are investigated in this book. An automatic method for detection and quantification of the compression present in the archived data is discussed. Compelling and quantitative analyses have been recommended to end the practice of process data compression.

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