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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan LovePublisher: Springer London Ltd Imprint: Springer London Ltd Dimensions: Width: 19.30cm , Height: 4.50cm , Length: 26.00cm Weight: 2.841kg ISBN: 9781846282812ISBN 10: 1846282810 Pages: 1093 Publication Date: 23 August 2007 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsTechnology and Practice.- Summary.- P&I Diagrams.- Block Diagrams.- Signals.- Pneumatics.- Electronics.- Data Typing.- Structured Text.- Microprocessors.- Characteristics.- DP Cells.- Flow: Orifices.- Flow Measurement.- Level Measurement.- Weight Measurement.- Temperature Measurement.- pH Measurement.- Chromatography.- Valves and Actuators.- Valve Sizing.- Valve Positioners.- Feedback Control.- PID Control.- Controller Tuning.- Cascade Control.- Ratio Control.- Feedforward Control.- On-Off Control.- Sequence Control.- Determining Strategy.- Evaporator Control.- Control of Heat Exchangers.- Boiler Control.- Neutralisation Control.- Distillation Control.- Reactor Control.- Batch Process Control.- Systems Architecture.- Systems Hardware.- Communications.- Software Overview.- Operator Interface.- Integrated Alarm Environment.- Analogue Control Loop.- Database Operations and Structure.- Discrete I/O Devices.- Programmable Logic Controllers.- Configuration.- Open Systems.- Fieldbus.- System Layout.- Intrinsic Safety.- Reliability Principles.- Hazard Analysis.- Layers of Safety.- Protection Systems.- Safety Equipment.- Human Factors.- Costs and Benefits Analysis.- User Requirements.- Tendering and Vendor Selection.- Functional Specifications.- Design, Development, Testing and Acceptance.- Installation and Commissioning.- System Management.- Quality Assurance.- Contracts.- Theory and Technique.- Series and Complex Numbers.- First Order Systems.- Laplace Transforms.- Transfer Functions.- Second and Higher Order Systems.- Frequency Response.- Root Locus.- Z Transforms.- Sampled Data Systems.- Z Plane Analysis.- Impulse Compensation.- Matrices and Vectors.- State Space Analysis.- Multivariable Control.- Stochastics.- Linear Regression Analysis.- Linearisation.- Lumped Parameter Systems.- Zero Capacity Systems.- Compressible Flow Systems.- Hydrodynamics.- Multivariable Systems.- Multistage Systems.- Reacting Systems.- Distributed Parameter Systems.- Anti-Surge Systems.- Psychrometric Systems.- Electro-Mechanical Systems.- Numerical Integration.- Procedural Simulation.- Block Orientated Simulation.- Relational Databases.- Management Information Systems.- Principal Components Analysis.- Statistical Process Control.- Linear Programming.- Unconstrained Optimisation.- Constrained Optimisation.- Real Time Optimisers.- Knowledge Based Systems.- Fuzzy Logic Control.- Artificial Neural Networks.- Genetic Algorithms.- Multiloop Systems.- State Feedback Regulators.- Kalman Filtering.- Least Squares Identification.- Recursive Estimation.- Self Tuning Control.- Model Predictive Control.- Non-Linear Control.ReviewsFrom the reviews: Jonathan Love's tour-de-force single volume Process Automation Handbook is a necessary reference, right beside Liptak's Instrument Engineer's Handbook, and if I can be pardoned, my own Instrumentation Reference Book, that should be on every process automation professional's desk or bookshelf. In the other two works, Liptak and I concentrate on the automation components, systems and devices that make automation work, while Love concentrates on the processes and systems that those devices make up. This book cannot be rated too highly. Dr. Love is a remarkably good writer, too, and his book is anything but dry and scholarly. Scholarship is there, yes, and exceptionally good, too, but the book is written in an extremely accessible voice. Since we are seeing people entering the profession who haven't any experience and don't have a clue how to make these systems work, it is essential for books like this to be written simply, yet deeply, because it is books like the Process Automation Handbook that will be the substitute for the experience and expertise that is retiring and walking away from the process industries daily as our work force ages. If you are in the field of process automation, suck it up and buy this book! It is one of the best investments in your career you can make. (Walt Boyes, Editor, ControlGlobal.com, April 2010) The objective of Process Automation Handbook has been to distill into a single coherent handbook all the essentials of process automation at a depth sufficient for most practical purposes. ! will be of value to any engineer actively concerned with process control and automation in the chemical and process industries and final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students studying process control. Written for: Control engineers in bulk chemicals, speciality chemicals, biochemicals, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, oil and gas, power water treatment, minerals processing, food and drink ! . (Automatisierungstechnische Praxis, Vol. 50 (2), 2008) The book opens with basic process control ! . A practical, sound basis is given for each topic, making the material accessible to the practitioner. ! An excellent handbook and a rich sourcebook for the practicing engineer, it includes most topics pertinent to modern process control. The book is well referenced and indexed and includes an excellent acronym table. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals. (K. I. Mumme, CHOICE, Vol. 45 (9), 2008) ! the Handbook of process automation deserves a 'must-buy' place on the bookshelves of anyone involved in applying process automation for profit in the process industries. (Paul Sawyer, secretary of IChemE's Process Management and Control Subject Group, TCE Today, July 2008) From the reviews: ""Jonathan Love's tour-de-force single volume Process Automation Handbook is a necessary reference, right beside Liptak's Instrument Engineer's Handbook, and if I can be pardoned, my own Instrumentation Reference Book, that should be on every process automation professional's desk or bookshelf. ""In the other two works, Liptak and I concentrate on the automation components, systems and devices that make automation work, while Love concentrates on the processes and systems that those devices make up. ""This book cannot be rated too highly. Dr. Love is a remarkably good writer, too, and his book is anything but dry and scholarly. Scholarship is there, yes, and exceptionally good, too, but the book is written in an extremely accessible voice. ""Since we are seeing people entering the profession who haven't any experience and don't have a clue how to make these systems work, it is essential for books like this to be written simply, yet deeply, because it is books like the Process Automation Handbook that will be the substitute for the experience and expertise that is retiring and walking away from the process industries daily as our work force ages. ""If you are in the field of process automation, suck it up and buy this book! It is one of the best investments in your career you can make."" (Walt Boyes, Editor, ControlGlobal.com, April 2010) ""The objective of Process Automation Handbook has been to distill into a single coherent handbook all the essentials of process automation at a depth sufficient for most practical purposes. … will be of value to any engineer actively concerned with process control and automation in the chemical and process industries and final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students studying process control. Written for: Control engineers in bulk chemicals, speciality chemicals, biochemicals, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, oil and gas, power water treatment, mineralsprocessing, food and drink … ."" (Automatisierungstechnische Praxis, Vol. 50 (2), 2008) ""The book opens with basic process control … . A practical, sound basis is given for each topic, making the material accessible to the practitioner. … An excellent handbook and a rich sourcebook for the practicing engineer, it includes most topics pertinent to modern process control. The book is well referenced and indexed and includes an excellent acronym table. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals."" (K. I. Mumme, CHOICE, Vol. 45 (9), 2008) ""… the Handbook of process automation deserves a 'must-buy' place on the bookshelves of anyone involved in applying process automation for profit in the process industries."" (Paul Sawyer, secretary of IChemE's Process Management and Control Subject Group, TCE Today, July 2008) From the reviews: <p> The objective of Process Automation Handbook has been to distill into a single coherent handbook all the essentials of process automation at a depth sufficient for most practical purposes. a ] will be of value to any engineer actively concerned with process control and automation in the chemical and process industries and final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students studying process control. Written for: Control engineers in bulk chemicals, speciality chemicals, biochemicals, pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, oil and gas, power water treatment, minerals processing, food and drink a ] . (Automatisierungstechnische Praxis, Vol. 50 (2), 2008) <p> The book opens with basic process control a ] . A practical, sound basis is given for each topic, making the material accessible to the practitioner. a ] An excellent handbook and a rich sourcebook for the practicing engineer, it includes most topics pertinent to modern process control. The book is well referenced and indexed and includes an excellent acronym table. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals. (K. I. Mumme, CHOICE, Vol. 45 (9), 2008) <p> a ] the Handbook of process automation deserves a 'must-buy' place on the bookshelves of anyone involved in applying process automation for profit in the process industries. (Paul Sawyer, secretary of IChemE's Process Management and Control Subject Group, TCE Today, July 2008) Author InformationJonathan Love has a variety of experience and expertise in the analysis, design, development and operation of instrumentation and control systems as used for the automation of plant in the chemical, process and oil industries. His early academic career involved lectureships at Huddersfield, Leeds and Sheffield Universities. He is currently in the School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials at Newcastle University where he is Director of the Integrated Graduate Development Scheme (IGDS) in Process Automation. His industrial experience consists of periods working as a commissioning engineer for Akzo Nobel (formerly Courtaulds Ltd) and as a control engineer for Honeywell Process Solutions (formerly KBC Process Automation). He is currently Principal Automation Consultant for BP Exploration and Production. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |