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May 2006
In this issue
| Classes and seminars | |
| Article | |
| Trick of the month: Sampling signals, ideal and practical sampling rates | |
| To contact us |
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Coming classes and seminars
Analytical methods for troubleshooting and Control loop tuning
May 16-18, Dalhousie, NB, English course(Question period bilingual)
May 23-25, Cincinati, OH
Detailed Loop Analysis with ExperTune
June 12-14, Milwaukee, WI
ExperTune Advanced Tools
June 14-16, Milwaukee, WI
See our calendar for 2006
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Article
In Control Design, an article by Martin Emond on why we should rarely use ramps in process control;
« How to tame unruly ramp function behavior »
Click here to read the article.
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This month's tip : Sampling signals, ideal and practical sampling rates
Data analysis form archived data or from a HMI
When using signals to analyze performance and to diagnose problems, data sampling must be
fast and without signal alteration. If not, the observed signals will be different and misleading.
Example: Flow loop
A flow loop is fast and one must capture all movements in the signal. If the sampling is not fast enough,
the observed signal will be different. Also, the PID controller must execute its function every second and
sometimes each 100 ms. It would be unrealistic to manipulate the valve (or variable speed drive) every 10 s
since between two successive executions, the flow would not be under control and many events could occur
in between the moves. Hence, to analyze or observe the flow signal (and controller output), we have to sample fast enough.
If we observe such signals every 20s or 30s, the analysis will be corrupted. For example, trying to analyze oscillations,
valve stiction, process model, performance, etc. will result in the wrong diagnostics.
Very simply, we have to sample all signals faster than the phenomenon
to be observed. If not, not only we miss information but also what we
see is wrong! For example, not sampling fast enough will result in a
false oscillation into the observed signal:
The real signal is red.The blue signal is what will be displayed.
Many systems will report a change to the data acquisition system only
when it exceeds a threshold; this will also modify the signal.
| Case 1 : Noisy flow loop with oscillations. | ||
| Sampling= 1 s | Oscillation, 20s | Noise, 0.3% |
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| Case 2 : Noisy flow loop with oscillations; slow sampling. | ||
| Sampling= 15 s | Oscillation, 20s | Noise, 0.3% |
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| Case 3 : Noisy flow loop with oscillations; very slow sampling. | ||
| Sampling= 30 s | Oscillation, 20s | Noise, 0.3% |
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Conclusion :
To use sampled data :
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General recommendations :
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Rule of thumb : sampling time smaller than loop dead time.
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ts < td
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To contact us
| Lévis's office | +1 (418)834-4321 | |
| Pointe-Claire's office | +1 (514)695-3492 | |
| Hartland's office | (877)867-6473 | |
| Toll free | (877)867-6473 | |
| info@topcontrol.com |


















