General EK (Control)
General EK (Control)
Controls
In order to control a system it must be possible to adjust one of the parameters that affect it. For
example in an engine lubricating system the oil temperature can be controlled by either by-passing
the flow of oil to the cooler or by by-passing the flow of water to the cooler.
In order to control a system parameter, the parameter must first of all be measured. There are four
common system parameters that are used for control purposes, these are:
1. Temperature – use liquid in glass thermometers, bi-metallic strips, bourdon tube gauges,
thermocouples and resistance thermometers.
2. Pressure – manometers, bourdon tubes, differential pressure cells.
3. Level – sight glass, floats, electric probes.
4. Flow – using the venture tube, electro-magnetic flowmeter
Ships usually use automatic controllers but there is always a provision for controlling the system
manually in case of failure.
Desired
value
Deviation
Controller Comparator
Measured
value
The detector contains a measuring element, this senses the system output and produces a signal
related to the output, this signal is the measured value.
In the comparator the measured value is compared with a system desired value, any deviation
between the two values will result in a signal being passed to the controller, the size of this signal
depends on the difference between the measured and desired values.
The controller will generate a signal based on the deviation of measured value from desired value
and will pass this on to the regulating unit.
Terminology.
1. Closed loop control system – this is where the control action is dependant on the system
output, it can be an automatic or a manual system.
2. Desired value – this is the value of the controlled condition that the operator desires to
achieve.
3. Set value – this is the value of the controlled condition that the controller is set, this should
be the same as the desired value.
4. Deviation – this is the difference between the measured and desired values.
5. Offset – this is a sustained deviation between the measured and desired value.
6. Feedback – this increases the accuracy and sensitivity of the controller by using the output
condition of the system to adjust the control action.
7. Control action – this can be either proportional, integral or derivative.
8. Measuring element-the element which responds to the sign from the detecting element and
gives a signal representing the controlled condition.
9. Controlled condition- the physical quantity or condition of the controlled body , processes or
machine which is the purpose of the system to be controlled.
10. Correcting unit- The element which acts directly on the controlled body, process or
machine. Eg. The control valve for lub oil to bypass the cooler.
11. Proportional action – the action of a control element whose output signal is proportional to
its input signal.
12. Proportional band - the range of values of deviation corresponding to the full operating
range of output signal of the controlling unit resulting from proportional action only. The
proportional band can be expressed as a percentage of the range of values of the
controlled condition which the measuring unit of the controller is designed to measure.
13. Integral action / reset – the action of a control element whose output signal changes at a
rate which is proportional to its input signal.
14. Derivative action – the action of a control element whose output signal is proportional to the
rate at which its input signal is changing.
Controller action.
The controller must take some corrective action to match the system measured value to its desired
value, but due to the system itself there will be time lags and delays in measuring the system
output, altering the regulating unit and the system output actually changing. The control system
must be designed to take account of these various delays in order to maintain the output at the
correct value.
Controllers exist that use both ON/OFF control, proportional, integral and derivative action or
combinations of these three types.
Regulating unit.
The commonest type of regulating unit found at sea is the pneumatic control valve. Valve
operation may be direct acting where increasing pressure on a diaphragm by a control signal
causes the valve to close or reverse acting where the opposite happens.
In the diagram the control signal to the valve is pneumatic, it enters the valve at the top and acts
on a diaphragm. The diaphragm is connected to the top of the valve spindle, movement of the
spindle is opposed by a spring.
The valve disc or plug can be single or double seated and can have a variety of shapes depending
on the relationship required between valve lift and liquid flow.
a) Percentage V Port.
This designation describes both its percentage flow characteristics and ‘V’ port construction
and its particular advantages are :
1) Reduction and possible elimination of high pitched noise on steam or gas service.
2) Reduction in tendency of plug to spin
3) Improved stability at high loads ; it is well suited for applications where wide changes in
flow and or / pressure drops are encountered and when estimated flow conditions make
it necessary to approximate the valve size.
b) Parabolic
The parabolic plug is sometimes called the percentage parabolic and this description
identifies both its percentage flow characteristics and solid turned construction.
The parabolic plug is characterised by smooth contour, large free port area and an equal
percentage flow range which makes it particularly suitable for throttling service where
flowing medium may be relatively dirty.
c) Quick Opening
The quick opening plug is disc type which offers minimum restriction so that the port area
increases rapidly as the plug leaves the seat. It is normally used for on/off control
applications.
Booster Relay.
The relay in the figure above is known as a direct acting relay which means that increases in
nozzle back pressure give an increase in relay output pressure. By keeping the nozzle capacity
small, pressure changes can take place quickly.
Assuming the system is in equilibrium then the pressure in chamber A equals the pressure in
chamber B and equals the output pressure.
If the flapper moves closer to the nozzle, the nozzle back pressure will increase so that the
chamber A is greater than the pressure in chamber B and the diaphragm assembly will move
closer to the right, pushing the pilot valve plug to the right and opening the supply port. The
supply air will then flow through supply port raising the pressure in chamber B, and then the
diaphragm assembly will move to the left until in its central equilibrium position when the pressure
in chamber B equals the pressure in chamber A and the supply port is closed.
Conversely, for a decrease in nozzle back pressure, the diaphragm assembly will move to the left,
opening the exhaust port and allowing surplus pressure from the receiver and the transmission
pipeline to bleed of to atmosphere until the pressures in chamber A and B are again equal to the
and the exhaust port closed. If the diaphragms have the same cross sectional area as in the
figure above the relay is said to be a 1:1 ration volume booster. By having different areas, other
ratios can be achieved.
Feedback: is the transmission of a signal representing the controlled condition for comparison
with the pre set ( desired condition) set by the operator. This is intended to determine the value of
the controlled condition.
As a loose interpretation the feedback may be considered to be similar to the measured value.
Open Loop Control: this means that there is no feed back of information on the value of the
controlled condition for example some accommodation heating systems. Fans pump air across
steam heating elements into the ship distribution system. The quantity of steam flowing is
controlled by a valve, the setting of which is determined by the deck temperature. As long as this
temperature remains constant, so will the heat to the air and to the accommodation. However if
the air flow changes ,(or the steam pressure or temperature) then the air would become cooler or
hotter, but the steam valve would remain in the same position as it has no feed back information
from the air temperature in the accommodation.
Two step (on-off) Control a simple cheap form of control for use on a process where
considerable deviation from the desired value can be tolerated.
Such control examples fridge room, air bottles pressure. Such systems have only two positions or
conditions open/shut, running or stopped. The automatic controller switches the correcting unit
from one extreme to the other as the controlled condition passes the set point. In a system such
as temperature control of refrigerated domestic store room or steam hot water heater, there is a
time lag between the valve opening and the heat or refrigerant cooling the room. This is known as
a Transfer Lag and due to this the store room temperature or water temperature may take time to
rise or fall as in the figure below. Such systems may be given overlap by the use of differential
pressure switches or using limit switches to start and stop air compressor.
This is the basic form of modulating control in which the controller is ser up so that any change in
output is directly proportional to the deviation between the controlled condition and the desired
value.
Thus if the boiler water level in the drum falls due to increased steam demand and drops by
20mm, then the automatic controller output to the feed water inlet valve may change from 0.6 to
0.7 bar. If the level drops by 40mm, then the automatic output would change from 0.6 to 0.8 bar.
To obtain optimum performance from the control system and the plant, the former must be
capable of adjustment to suit the characteristics of the latter. In order to do this, the amount by
which the controller output changes for a given alteration in the input can be adjusted when the
system is first set up, and subsequently, should any changes take place as characteristics alter
due to age. The adjustment is made by altering the amplification of the controller, or the number of
The effect of varying the proportional band or automatic controller output for a set change in the
error signal or input signal is shown below.
Offset /Droop. When a disturbance happens to the controlled condition due to a change in plant
loading, the correcting unit will have to move to a new position (control valve) in order to restore
the process to the set or desired condition. For example if the steam demand in figure previous
increases, the boiler water level will fall and the feed water inlet valve will have to open to allow
more feed water into the boiler drum to prevent it eventually emptying.
However the only way the correcting unit (or feed water control valve) can be made to move to a
new position in a proportional control system is for the error, ie. The controlled condition (water
level) to move away from the desired value. If the feed water control valve is initially at half stroke
and has to move to three- quarter stoke, for the water to match the steam demand, then the
controller output signal must change by 25% of its range. (if the output range is 0.2 to 1.0bar, it
must change from 0.6 to 0.8 bar, for example)
If the automatic controller has a proportional band setting of 50% (a gain of 2), then input signal
must alter by 12.5% (ie 0.1 bar) to bring about this output change, and hence the boiler water
level must fall. If the boiler water measuring unit has a range of 0 – 400mm then this change in
level means a fall of 50mm. Once the system has reached equilibrium has been established, the
boiler will operate about a water level 50mm below the level existing before the increase in steam
Offset can be reduced by increasing the gain or sensitivity of the controller. This is achieved by
adjusting the proportional band setting, reducing or narrowing the band (a lower percentage
reading, higher gain reading) and requiring a smaller variation between the measured value and
desired value to give an output signal change over the full signal range.
In the previous case with a 50% proportional band setting, an input signal change of 0.1 bar
brought about an output signal change of 0.2 bar. If the proportional band setting is reduced to
25% (gain of 4 ) it means that only a quarter of the measured has to be used to cause the output
signal to change over its complete range, or an input signal change of 0.05 bar brings about an
output change of 0.2 bar and opens the valve by 25%. Thus if the proportional band is narrowed a
very small deviation between the measured value and desired value cab cause a very large
change in output signal. In the case of the boiler water control valve a very small change in level
would cause the valve to open to its full position allowing such an inrush of water that the level
would be lifted far above the desired value. As the control system tries to correct for this, the
valve shuts in and the flow virtually stops. This oscillation or surging effect with rapid opening and
closing of the valve is called hunting and should be avoided at all cost as it causes damage to the
plant and excessive wear and tear on control and plant equipment.
The effect of varying the proportional band is shown below.
The system shown is very simple and may not be good enough to keep the jacket water
temperature constant when the engine is manoeuvring, the system can either be improved or it
can be operated in the manually whilst manoeuvring and automatically when the engines are on
full away.
Comparator
F.W. cooler
in
Main
engine
F.W. out
S.W. S.W.
in out
Temperature
sensing
element
A simple level sensor is not good enough to control the water level in a modern high pressure,
high temperature water tube boiler due to the following reason.
When the boiler is operating the water level in the gauge glass reads higher than when the boiler
is shut down, this is because of the presence of steam bubbles in the water.
If there is a sudden increase in steam demand the pressure in the steam drum will fall this will
cause some of the water in the drum to flash off into steam and these steam bubbles will cause
the drum water level to rise, the reduced mass of water in the drum will also result in more steam
being produced, which will again raise the water level, this effect is known as swell.
When the boiler load returns to normal the drum pressure will rise and steam bubble formation will
reduce, causing the drum level to fall, incoming colder feed water will further reduce steam
formation and what is known as shrinkage of the drum level will occur.
If the quantity of feed water entering the boiler is controlled using only water level then the control
system will add more water when it should be adding less and vice versa. Any control system
must take account of steam demand as well as water level to control the flow of feed water.
Steam
flow
transmitter
Water level
Level
transmitte
r
Feed
water flow
transmitter
Differential
relay
Desire Controller
d
value
Complex control systems are used throughout a vessel to start and stop machinery and to ensure
correct running of machinery, in order for these systems to operate safely and without causing
damage to the machinery certain interlocks must be included into the control systems to stop
dangerous occurrences from happening.
Cascade control
Where two independent variables need to be controlled with one valve, a cascade control system
may be used.
The steam must not exceed a certain temperature or the product may be spoiled.
The product temperature must not increase faster than a certain rate or the product may be
spoiled.
If a normal, single loop control was used with the sensor in the liquid, at the start of the process
the sensor would detect a low temperature, and the controller would signal the valve to move to
the fully open position. This would result in a problem caused by an excessive steam temperature
in the jacket.
A master controller (Controller 1) and sensor monitoring the product temperature with the
controller output directed to the slave controller.
The output signal from the master controller is used to vary the set point in the slave
controller, ensuring that the steam temperature is not exceeded.
The master controller can be ramped so that the rate of increase in water temperature is not
higher than that specified.
The master controller is set in reverse acting mode, so that its output signal to the slave controller
is 20 mA at low temperature and 4 mA at high temperature.
The remote set point on the slave controller is set so that its output signal to the valve is 4 mA