Chemical Industry Must Adopt Higher Automation Levels
Chemical Industry Must Adopt Higher Automation Levels
Aspen Technology Inc. ( AspenTech, www.aspentech.com ), a Burlington, Mass.-based automation supplier, developed an adaptive-modeling technology for APC systems. It uses automation to detect mismatches between plant control models and actual plant behavior, explains Robert Golightly, an AspenTech product marketing manager. “One primary benefit is focusing scarce engineering resources on the most pressing problems.” Once those have been identified, he notes, the technology isolates the areas within the control models that are at the root of the mismatch. Then, “the technology automates the plant, step-testing to generate accurate data, and automatically generates a new control model.”
Besides prediction and optimization, good simulation technology also can improve operator training, comments Louis Meyer, IPS director of global industry solutions, chemicals. He stresses how simulation will soften the shortage of experienced operators: It will “make sure the shrinking workforce does not hamper the ability to operate a plant safely and profitably.”
But, as Fiske also notes, “There are advances in software for monitoring the performance of regulatory [control] loops and identifying the ones that are not functioning properly.” Even so, he emphasizes that “there is still no substitute for knowledgeable, well-trained, experienced technical personnel.” The loss of their knowledge and skill can represent an enormous risk, suggests ARC Vice President Sid Snitkin. Both men are right.
However, there is also no substitute for better asset management. And the asset-lifecycle-management model holds “a lot of potential” for the chemical process industry, Fiske says. Assets must be cared for throughout the operating lifetime to ensure that expectations envisioned for the investment are fulfilled, Snitkin counsels.
Caring for physical assets necessarily means enhanced maintenance. Calling unscheduled downtime a “crippler,” Fiske suggests that companies consider using advanced tools to identify maintenance criticalities, and then characterize failure modes based on such criticalities. That allows end-users to “focus on the important things,” he says. Caring for those will improve profitability, won’t it?
C. Kenna Amos , ckamosjr@earthlink.net, is an Automation World Contributing Editor.
ARC Advisory Group Inc.
www.arcweb.com
Invensys Process Systems, IPS
www.ips.invensys.com
Emerson Process Management
www.emerson.com
Aspen Technology Inc., AspenTech
www.aspentech.com
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