Progress in sensor technology - Progress in process control? Part II: Results from a simulation benchmark study

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Abstract

To show the impact of sensor behaviour on the control result, four strategies for aeration control are tested using different sensor characteristics. It is demonstrated, on the one hand, how an increasing response time will limit the achievable control quality and, on the other hand, how a given sensor characteristic can be taken into account for the controller design. The presented tests show that an improvement potential by control for WWTPs is available but this potential is limited compared to proper DO control with fixed set-points. To activate this control potential, sufficient control authority must be available and a careful control design is required. It can be shown that using feedback control, sensors with a small response time have significant advantages compared to conventional sensors. Using feed forward control, the improvement potential by control is considerably higher and additionally, the sensor delay can be integrated into the controller design. The presented discussion is based on simulation studies performed on a standardised benchmark case. For these tests it was necessary to include sensor models into the simulation model. It can be stated that the usage of sensor models is necessary for the application of dynamic simulation for the design and evaluation of WWTP control and in general to achieve realistic results.

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Alex, J., Rieger, L., Winkler, S., & Siegrist, H. (2003). Progress in sensor technology - Progress in process control? Part II: Results from a simulation benchmark study. In Water Science and Technology (Vol. 47, pp. 113–120). IWA Publishing. https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2003.0098

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