Title: Plant-Wide Control for Fuel Processor System with PEMFC: Control Structure Selection and Optimal Sensor Location
Abstract: The synthesis and a plant-wide control strategy based on the process knowledge for the fuel processor with fuel cell were detailed in Chaps. 9 . There, the unit dimensions and the equipment interconnections were defined to conform the flow sheet of the complete process at the more efficient operating point. The knowledge-based plant-wide control strategy was tested through the control-oriented dynamic model in Chaps. 10 . In this chapter a new systematic and generalized procedure is applied to simultaneously solve the optimal sensor placement integrated to the plant-wide control design. This methodology allows to configure the loops pairing by considering the trade-off between servo and regulator behavior. It can be done thanks to defining a proper function, named net load effect, accounting for both set point and disturbance effects. Although some concepts used in this approach are not new, the main contribution of this method is the selection of the adequate objective function. It is mathematically expressed in a new way, in terms of Frobenius norm of specific matrices related with the reduced models of the plant and very useful for evaluating the process interaction. Then, it drives the search supported by genetic algorithms (GA), which evaluates all the possible combinations of input–output variables. It allows to solve successfully and with less computational effort the combinatorial optimization problem, in spite of the high dimension usually involved in large-scale chemical plants. It must be emphasized that this approach is developed for working in cases where only steady-state plant information is available. However, if a dynamic model is also disposable, the algorithm is extended to use it. In addition, a mathematical demonstration is presented so as to understand why it is possible through the proposed sequence of calculations to find a well-conditioned control structure. This methodology has been successfully tested on several well-known benchmark cases of chemical plants. Hence, in this chapter it is applied to the challenging and novel case of the fuel processor with fuel cell. Thus, through a set of dynamic simulations for different scenarios the high capacity of this approach can be shown.
Publication Year: 2011
Publication Date: 2011-10-28
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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