Content deleted Content added
added headings and clarified text with better definition and explanation |
m Reverted edit by 176.29.150.243 (talk) to last version by Kvng |
||
(17 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Value of a given part of a monitored or controlled process}}
{{about|the engineering indicator|the mathematical concept used in thermodynamics|process function}}
{{more citations needed|date=May 2022}}
{{cite book |author=B. Wayne Bequette | title = Process Control: Modeling, Design, and Simulation | publisher =Prentice Hall Professional | year= 2003 | page = 5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PdjHYm5e9d4C&pg=PA5 |isbn = 9780133536409 }}
</ref>
▲A '''process variable''', '''process value''' or '''process parameter''' is the current measured value of a particular part of a process which is being monitored or controlled. An example of this would be the temperature of a furnace. The current temperature is called the process variable, while the desired temperature is known as the [[setpoint (control system)|set-point]]. The set point is usually abbreviated to SP, and the process value is usually abbreviated to PV.
==Control system use==
[[File:Set-point control.png|thumb|Block diagram of a [[Negative feedback|negative feedback control system]] used to maintain PV = SP]]
Measurement of process variables
Four commonly measured variables
The SP-PV error is used to exert control on a process so that the value of PV equals the value of the SP. A classic use of this is in the
[[PID controller]].
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Process Variable}}▼
[[Category:Control theory]]▼
{{Tech-stub}}
▲{{DEFAULTSORT:Process Variable}}
▲[[Category:Control theory]]
|