marshalls
Chemical
- Aug 29, 2020
- 5
Hi all, first time posting here. Not sure if this is the correct forum for this question, but there's no controls engineering forum. I work in EPC, and am working on a functional description for a desuperheater control loop. The way the system works is as follows:
Superheated steam passes through a letdown station (PCVs) and is dropped to 120 psig. It then passes through a desuperheater, where superheat is removed by condensate. Pressure is measured at the outlet of the DS. The condensate flow is controlled by a cascaded temperature and flow loop, with the temperature measured at the outlet of the DS and the flow measured upstream of the condensate flow valve.
Currently we show the FIC as being a feedforward controller. I don't have much experience with feedforward control, but to me this just looks like a cascaded loop. So my question is, does there appear to be any feedforward control in the system I described?
Thanks in advance!
Superheated steam passes through a letdown station (PCVs) and is dropped to 120 psig. It then passes through a desuperheater, where superheat is removed by condensate. Pressure is measured at the outlet of the DS. The condensate flow is controlled by a cascaded temperature and flow loop, with the temperature measured at the outlet of the DS and the flow measured upstream of the condensate flow valve.
Currently we show the FIC as being a feedforward controller. I don't have much experience with feedforward control, but to me this just looks like a cascaded loop. So my question is, does there appear to be any feedforward control in the system I described?
Thanks in advance!