Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications

International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 28-30, 1976 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California === Distributed digital control systems have appeared structurally desirable for many years. The concepts of hierarchial control and distributed risk were advanced as necessary stru...

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Main Author: Keyes, M. A.
Other Authors: Bailey Meter Company
Language:en_US
Published: International Foundation for Telemetering 1976
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609661
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609661
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6096612016-05-20T03:01:35Z Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications Keyes, M. A. Bailey Meter Company International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 28-30, 1976 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California Distributed digital control systems have appeared structurally desirable for many years. The concepts of hierarchial control and distributed risk were advanced as necessary structural considerations in the control of large scale systems almost coincidentally with the advent of modern electronic instrumentation and digital process control computers. The logarithmic growth patterns of semiconductor technology over the last two decades and the availability of microprocessors and other manifestations of large scale integrated circuitry have finally converted the distributed digital control system from a structurally desirable nicety to an economic inevitability. This paper examines the relevance of distributed digital control systems in the rigorous industrial environment of energy, utility, and process control applications. Design considerations leading to minimization of total installed system costs while retaining the necessary system flexibility to allow user reconfiguration to meet changing process or product needs are delineated. The twin problems of reliability and maintainability are examined in the context of allowable structural degradation concepts which must be inherent in the design of any distributed system. 1976-09 text Proceedings 0884-5123 0074-9079 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609661 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609661 International Telemetering Conference Proceedings en_US http://www.telemetry.org/ Copyright © International Foundation for Telemetering International Foundation for Telemetering
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 28-30, 1976 / Hyatt House Hotel, Los Angeles, California === Distributed digital control systems have appeared structurally desirable for many years. The concepts of hierarchial control and distributed risk were advanced as necessary structural considerations in the control of large scale systems almost coincidentally with the advent of modern electronic instrumentation and digital process control computers. The logarithmic growth patterns of semiconductor technology over the last two decades and the availability of microprocessors and other manifestations of large scale integrated circuitry have finally converted the distributed digital control system from a structurally desirable nicety to an economic inevitability. This paper examines the relevance of distributed digital control systems in the rigorous industrial environment of energy, utility, and process control applications. Design considerations leading to minimization of total installed system costs while retaining the necessary system flexibility to allow user reconfiguration to meet changing process or product needs are delineated. The twin problems of reliability and maintainability are examined in the context of allowable structural degradation concepts which must be inherent in the design of any distributed system.
author2 Bailey Meter Company
author_facet Bailey Meter Company
Keyes, M. A.
author Keyes, M. A.
spellingShingle Keyes, M. A.
Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
author_sort Keyes, M. A.
title Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
title_short Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
title_full Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
title_fullStr Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
title_full_unstemmed Distributed Control ... Relevance & Ramification for Utility and Process Applications
title_sort distributed control ... relevance & ramification for utility and process applications
publisher International Foundation for Telemetering
publishDate 1976
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/609661
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/609661
work_keys_str_mv AT keyesma distributedcontrolrelevanceramificationforutilityandprocessapplications
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