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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jie Bao , Peter L. LeePublisher: Springer London Ltd Imprint: Springer London Ltd Edition: Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2007 Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781849966696ISBN 10: 1849966699 Pages: 253 Publication Date: 21 October 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback 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 ContentsReviewsFrom the reviews: Process Control: The Passive Systems Approach provides material that is potentially valuable to students and researchers interested in learning the fundamentals of passivity-based methods and their application to chemical process control and thermodynamics. The main strength of the book is that it shows that passivity can provide a formalism for studying process control. Relevant results are reviewed, and interesting research questions are posed. Overall, the book is useful as a reference and as a source of new research ideas. (B. Erik Ydstie, IEEE Control Systems Magazine, Vol. 30, February, 2010) From the reviews: Process Control: The Passive Systems Approach provides material that is potentially valuable to students and researchers interested in learning the fundamentals of passivity-based methods and their application to chemical process control and thermodynamics. ... The main strength of the book is that it shows that passivity can provide a formalism for studying process control. Relevant results are reviewed, and interesting research questions are posed. ... Overall, the book is useful as a reference and as a source of new research ideas. (B. Erik Ydstie, IEEE Control Systems Magazine, Vol. 30, February, 2010) From the reviews: “Process Control: The Passive Systems Approach provides material that is potentially valuable to students and researchers interested in learning the fundamentals of passivity-based methods and their application to chemical process control and thermodynamics. … The main strength of the book is that it shows that passivity can provide a formalism for studying process control. Relevant results are reviewed, and interesting research questions are posed. … Overall, the book is useful as a reference and as a source of new research ideas.” (B. Erik Ydstie, IEEE Control Systems Magazine, Vol. 30, February, 2010) From the reviews: Process Control: The Passive Systems Approach provides material that is potentially valuable to students and researchers interested in learning the fundamentals of passivity-based methods and their application to chemical process control and thermodynamics. ... The main strength of the book is that it shows that passivity can provide a formalism for studying process control. Relevant results are reviewed, and interesting research questions are posed. ... Overall, the book is useful as a reference and as a source of new research ideas. (B. Erik Ydstie, IEEE Control Systems Magazine, Vol. 30, February, 2010) Author InformationJie Bao holds the position of Senior Lecturer; he has industrial experience in China with the Control and Measurement Division of ZUSTD Corp. He is a reviewer for several journals including: Journal of Process Control, Journal of Membrane Science, IEEE Automatic Control and ASME Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement and Control. In the last seven years, he has published 16 papers in archival journals. Peter Lee is currently the Executive Dean of Engineering, Science and Computing at Curtin University of Technology. Previously he held senior positions at Murdoch University and the University of Queensland. He also worked with ICI Australia for a number of years. He has worked in Process Control for the last 25 years, both in academe and industry. An author of 3 books and over 220 papers, he also has an active consultancy practice in the feasibility, development and application of process control methods. He is also a consultant to the United Nations Industry Development Organisation. He was awarded the Shedden Pacific Medal for Excellence for contributions to Chemical Engineering in 1993, The Institution of Engineers Australia Excellence Award in 1998 for the design of laboratory facilities at Rockingham and the Centenary Medal for services to Australian society in 2003. Peter was educated in Melbourne and has degrees from RMIT (BE) and Monash University (PhD). He is a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers Australia and a Fellow of the Institution of Chemical Engineers, London. Peter Lee is the editor of the 1993 Springer title: Lee (ed.), Nonlinear Process Control (3-540-19856-3, 1993, 264 pp HC) Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |