05561nam 2200805 450 991082483350332120200903223051.090-04-27097-310.1163/9789004270978(CKB)2670000000558798(EBL)1730523(SSID)ssj0001261509(PQKBManifestationID)11704133(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001261509(PQKBWorkID)11321239(PQKB)10585776(MiAaPQ)EBC1730523(nllekb)BRILL9789004270978(Au-PeEL)EBL1730523(CaPaEBR)ebr10891255(CaONFJC)MIL625513(OCoLC)883570693(PPN)184919983(EXLCZ)99267000000055879820140718h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrBetween orality and literacy communication and adaptation in antiquity /edited by Ruth ScodelLeiden, Netherlands :Brill,2014.©20141 online resource (397 p.)Mnemosyne, Supplements. Monographs on Greek and Latin Language and Literature,0169-8958 ;Volume 367Orality and Literacy in the Ancient World ;Volume 10Description based upon print version of record.90-04-26912-6 Includes bibliographical references and indexes at the end of each chapters.Front Matter /Ruth Scodel -- Introduction /Ruth Scodel -- Controlling the Web: Hypertextuality, the Iliad, and the Crimes of Previous Generations /James O’Maley -- Omens and Messages in the Iliad and Odyssey: A Study in Transmission /Jonathan L. Ready -- Prophetic Hesiod /Ruth Scodel -- Λάβε τὸ βυβλίον: Orality and Literacy in Aristophanes /Carl A. Anderson and Keith T. Dix -- Boreas and Oreithyia: A Case-Study in Multichannel Transmission of Myth /Margalit Finkelberg -- The Poet and the Painter: A Hymn to Zeus on a Cup by the Brygos Painter /Jasper Gaunt -- Story Time at the Library: Palaephatus and the Emergence of Highly Literate Mythology /Greta Hawes -- Orality in Philosophical Epistles /Mathilde Cambron-Goulet -- Look and Listen: History Performed and Inscribed /Rachel Zelnick-Abramovitz -- Spoken Prayers and Written Instructions in the Central Italian Cultural Koinê and Beyond /Jay Fisher -- Oral Textuality as a Language of Exclusive Communication in Terence’s Prologues /Sophia Papaioannou -- Simile Structure in Homeric Epic and Vergil’s Aeneid /Deborah Beck -- Poet, Audience, Time, and Text: Reflections on Medium and Mode in Homer and Virgil /Elizabeth Minchin -- Speaking Verse to Power: Circulation of Oral and Written Critique in the Lives of the Caesars /Niall W. Slater -- The Book of Revelation: A Written Text Towards the Oral Performance /Lourdes García Ureña -- The End of Orality: Transmission of Gospel Tradition in the Second and Third Centuries /S.D. Charlesworth -- Transmitting Legal Knowledge: From Question-and-Answer Format to Handbook in Gaius’ Institutes /Matthijs Wibier -- Index of Ancient Texts /Ruth Scodel.The essays in Between Orality and Literacy address how oral and literature practices intersect as messages, texts, practices, and traditions move and change, because issues of orality and literacy are especially complex and significant when information is transmitted over wide expanses of time and space or adapted in new contexts. Their topics range from Homer and Hesiod to the New Testament and Gaius’ Institutes , from epic poetry and drama to vase painting, historiography, mythography, and the philosophical letter. Repeatedly they return to certain issues. Writing and orality are not mutually exclusive, and their interaction is not always in a single direction. Authors, whether they use writing or not, try to control the responses of a listening audience. A variable tradition can be fixed, not just by writing as a technology, but by such different processes as the establishment of a Panhellenic version of an Attic myth and a Hellenistic city’s creation of a single celebratory history.Orality and literacy in the ancient world ;Volume 10.Oral communicationGreeceCongressesOral communicationRomeCongressesWritten communicationGreeceCongressesWritten communicationRomeCongressesTransmission of textsGreeceCongressesTransmission of textsRomeCongressesOral tradition in literatureGreeceCongressesOral tradition in literatureRomeCongressesOral-formulaic analysisCongressesOral communicationOral communicationWritten communicationWritten communicationTransmission of textsTransmission of textsOral tradition in literatureOral tradition in literatureOral-formulaic analysis302.2/24093Scodel RuthInternational Conference on Orality and Literacy in the Ancient WorldMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910824833503321Between orality and literacy2296564UNINA07793nam 2200493 450 991083078320332120230427080911.01-394-18594-41-119-66924-3(MiAaPQ)EBC7184822(Au-PeEL)EBL7184822(CKB)26037405500041(EXLCZ)992603740550004120230427d2023 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierA real-time approach to distillation process control /Brent R. Young, Michael A. Taube, Isuru A. UdugamaHoboken, New Jersey :Wiley,[2023]©20231 online resource (258 pages)Print version: Young, Brent R. A Real-Time Approach to Distillation Process Control Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2023 9781119669210 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- About the Companion Website -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Purpose of Process Control -- 1.2 Introduction to Distillation -- 1.3 Distillation Process Control -- 1.4 A Real-Time Approach to Distillation Process Control Education -- Tutorial and Self Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Distillation Control -- 2.1 Mass and Energy Balance: The Only Means to Affect Distillation Tower's Behavior -- 2.2 Control Design Procedure -- 2.3 Degrees of Freedom -- 2.4 Pairing -- 2.5 Gain Analysis -- 2.6 Common Control Configuration -- 2.7 Screening Control Strategies via Steady-State Simulation -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 3 Control Hardware -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Control Hardware Overview -- 3.3 Sensors -- 3.3.1 Process Considerations -- 3.3.2 Flow Measurement Devices -- 3.3.3 Pressure Measurement Devices -- 3.3.4 Level Measurement Devices -- 3.3.5 Temperature Measurement Devices -- 3.3.6 Direct Composition Measurements -- 3.3.7 Maintenance -- 3.4 Final Control Elements -- 3.4.1 Linearity -- 3.4.2 Time Constant and Failure Mode -- 3.4.3 Mechanical Design Considerations -- 3.5 Controllers/CPU -- 3.5.1 Level 0 -- 3.5.2 Level 1 -- 3.5.3 Levels 2 and 3 -- 3.5.4 General Set Up and Considerations -- 3.6 Modern Trends -- 3.6.1 Wireless Communication and Smart Devices -- 3.6.2 Smart CPUs -- 3.6.3 Digital Twins -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 4 Inventory Control -- 4.1 Pressure Control -- 4.1.1 Total Condenser -- 4.1.2 Flooded Condensers -- 4.1.3 Sub-Cooled Reflux -- 4.1.4 Partial Condenser -- 4.2 Level Control -- 4.2.1 Surge Capacity Control -- 4.2.2 Open-Loop Stable versus Integrating Processes -- 4.2.3 Calculating the Process Gain for Vessel Levels.4.2.4 Relative Gain Analysis, aka Closing the Loop in Plant Design -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 5 Distillation Composition Control -- 5.1 Temperature Control -- 5.1.1 Setting Up a Single Temperature-Based Composition Controller -- 5.1.2 When Temperature Is Like an Integrating Process -- 5.1.3 Reboiler Outlet Temperature Controls -- 5.2 Actual Composition Control -- 5.3 More Complex Control Configurations -- 5.3.1 Ryskamp's Scheme -- 5.3.2 Dual Composition Control -- 5.4 Distillation Control Scheme Design Using Steady-State Models -- 5.5 Performance Analysis Using Steady-State Data for an Existing Distillation Tower -- 5.6 Distillation Control Scheme Design Using Dynamic Models -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 6 Refinery Versus Chemical Plant Distillation Operations -- 6.1 New Generation of Refinery Controls -- 6.1.1 Atmospheric and Vacuum Refining Columns -- 6.2 Improving Thermodynamic Efficiency Through Control -- 6.3 Blending and Its Implications on Control -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 7 Distillation Controller Tuning -- 7.1 Model Identification: Step Testing -- 7.2 Typical Process Responses -- 7.3 Engineering Units Versus Percent-of-Scale -- 7.4 Basics in PID Tuning -- 7.5 Tuning in Distillation Control -- 7.6 The Role of Tuning in a "Value Engineering" Era -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 8 Fine and Specialty Chemicals Distillation Control -- 8.1 Key Features -- 8.2 Measurement and Control Challenges -- 8.3 Nuances of Fine Chemicals Distillation -- 8.4 Side-Draw Distillation -- 8.5 Composition Control in High-Purity Side-Draw Distillation -- 8.6 Advanced Distillation Column Configurations -- 8.7 Petlyuk and Divided Wall Columns -- 8.8 Optimal Design Versus Optimal Operations -- 8.9 Conclusions.Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 9 Advanced Regulatory Control -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Cascade Control -- 9.2.1 Cascade Control in Distillation -- 9.2.2 Inferential Cascade Control -- 9.3 Ratio Control -- 9.3.1 Ratio Control in Distillation -- 9.4 Feedforward Control -- 9.5 Constraint/Override Control -- 9.6 Decoupling -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 10 Model Predictive Control -- 10.1 Introduction to MPC -- 10.2 To MPC or not to MPC -- 10.3 MPC Fundamentals -- 10.4 Dynamic Matrix Control -- 10.5 Setting Up a MPC in Distillation -- 10.5.1 Model Setup -- 10.5.2 Objective Function -- 10.5.3 Tuning -- 10.6 Digitalization and MPC -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Chapter 11 Plant-Wide Control in Distillation -- 11.1 Distillation Column Trains -- 11.1.1 Average Flow Control -- 11.1.2 Alternatives to Average-Level Control -- 11.2 Heat Integration (Energy Recycle) -- 11.2.1 Auxiliary Steam Boilers -- 11.2.2 Feed Preheating -- 11.2.3 High-pressure/Low-pressure Columns -- 11.2.4 Mechanical Vapor Recompression -- 11.3 Materials Recycling -- Tutorial and Self-Study Questions -- References -- Workshop 1 Hands-on Learning By Doing -- Workshop 2 Fundamental Distillation Column Control -- Workshop 3 Distillation Column Model Predictive Control -- Workshop 4 Distillation Column Control in a Plant-Wide Setting -- Appendix A P&amp -- ID Symbols -- Index -- EULA."The book is a practical text incorporating hands-on or active learning using process simulation. The topics and their treatment are relevant to today's engineer providing them with the fundamental knowledge and tools to apply to modern distillation control. Unlike other texts that take a Laplace Transform or state-space-based approach this text presents a more balanced real-time approach with a good mix of fundamentals and practical insights. The text includes numerous exercises including up to date process simulation exercises. Finally, the process simulation exercises are designed to be simulator agnostic so that they can be performed on the process simulator locally available. Topics include An Introduction to the Real-Time Approach to Distillation Control, Distillation Control Hardware, Basic Distillation Control, Distillation Composition Control, Refinery Versus Chemical Plant Distillation Control, Distillation Control Tuning, Fine Chemical Distillation Control, Advanced Regulatory Control (ARC), Model Predictive Control (MPC), and Plant-Wide Control and Distillation"--Provided by publisher.DistillationChemical process controlDistillation.Chemical process control.663.506Young Brent R.597141Taube Michael A.Udugama Isuru A.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910830783203321A real-time approach to distillation process control4067798UNINA