Allen-Bradley 2080-LC20-20QBB User Manual page 197

Micro820 series programmable controllers
Hide thumbs Also See for 2080-LC20-20QBB:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

PID Function Blocks Appendix D
electric RC lead network. The energy storage element for these systems are heat
energy, potential energy, rotational kinetic energy and capacitive storage energy,
respectively.
This may be written in a standard form such as f(t) = τdy/dt + y(t), where τ is the
system time constant, f is the forcing function and y is the system state variable.
In the cooling of a fluid tank example, it can be modeled by the thermal
capacitance C of the fluid and thermal resistance R of the walls of the tank. The
system time constant will be RC, the forcing function will be the ambient
temperature and the system state variable will be the fluid temperature.
A second order system can be described by two independent energy storage
elements which exchange stored energy. Examples of second order systems are a
motor driving a disk flywheel with the motor coupled to the flywheel via a shaft
with torsional stiffness or an electric circuit composed of a current source driving
a series LR (inductor and resistor) with a shunt C (capacitor). The energy storage
elements for these systems are the rotational kinetic energy and torsion spring
energy for the former and the inductive and capacitive storage energy for the
latter. Motor drive systems and heating systems can be typically modeled by the
LR and C electric circuit.
PID Code Sample
The illustration above shows sample code for controlling the PID application
example shown before. Developed using Function Block Diagrams, it consists of
Rockwell Automation Publication 2080-UM005E-EN-E - March 2018
187

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents