Presenting a fresh look at process control, this new text demonstrates state-space approach shown in parallel with the traditional approach to explain the strategies used in industry today. Modern time-domain and traditional transform-domain methods are integrated throughout and explain the advantages and limitations of each approach; the fundamental theoretical concepts and methods of process control are applied to practical problems. To ensure understanding of the mathematical calculations involved, MATLAB® is included for numeric calculations and MAPLE for symbolic calculations, with the math behind every method carefully explained so that students develop a clear understanding of how and why the software tools work. Written for a one-semester course with optional advanced-level material, features include solved examples, cases that include a number of chemical reactor examples, chapter summaries, key terms, and concepts, as well as over 240 end-of-chapter problems, focused computational exercises and solutions for instructors.
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Product Details
Weight: 1810g
Dimensions: 195 x 252mm
Publication Date: 08 Apr 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107035584
About Costas KravarisIoannis K. Kookos
Costas Kravaris is Professor of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University USA. He has over 35 years of in teaching experience in process dynamics and control classes at both undergraduate and graduate level. He is an active researcher is nonlinear control nonlinear state estimation and nonlinear model reduction with applications to chemical processes. Ioannis K. Kookos is Professor of Process Systems Engineering in the Department Chemical Engineering at the University of Patras Greece. He received his BSc in Chemical Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens Greece and his MSc (1994) and PhD (2001) in Process Systems Engineering from Imperial College London (Centre for PSE). He then worked as a lecturer at the University of Manchester Department of Chemical Engineering.