Tomas B. Co
Associate Professor
Chemical Engineering
Michigan Technological University
United States of America
Biography
I am interested in advanced control strategies and algorithms including the application of artificial intelligence to process control Process Integrity As systems undergo operational changes due to equipment degradation, market demands, and other external disturbances, some processes approach failure conditions. To provide appropriate actions to prevent failure, predictive monitoring and control are needed. To this end, we are currently developing a mathematical theory of process integrity Our study focuses on three major parts: (1) process integrity measure, (2) process integrity control, and (3) plant-wide system integrity. We incorporate existing tools from reliability theory and control theory to assess integrity based on how rapidly recovery can be achieved Process Modeling Process models are needed to better analyze and design controllers for chemical processes. We are currently investigating methods for parameter estimation of nonlinear continuous-time systems as well as unstable systems. In particular, we are developing transformatio techniques such as modulating functions to model nonlinear systems and relay schemes to model unstable processes. The development of recursive techniques are being explored for use in on-line for process control and failure diagnosis
Research Interest
Process Integrity, Process Modeling, Plant-Wide Control
Publications
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T.Co, "Relay-Stabilization and Bifurications of Unstable SISO Processes with Time Delay", IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. 55, No.5, pp 1131 - 1141, 2010
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S. Ungarala and T. Co, "Model parameter tracking in microbial growthprocesses", AIChE J, 44, 2129-2134 (2000)
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Ungarala, S., Z.-Z. Chen and T. B. Co, "The theory of process integrity and global analysis for process monitoring and diagnosis," Proceedings of the 4th IFAC Workshop on On-Line Fault Detection and Supervision in theChemical Process Industries (CHEMFAS-4), 2001.