Showing posts with label actuator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label actuator. Show all posts

Current to Pneumatic Converter

current to pneumatic converter
Current to pneumatic converter
Courtesy Yokogawa
A straight forward device, a current to pneumatic converter produces a pneumatic output signal that is proportional to a control level input signal of 4 to 20 mA or 10 to 50 mA. This provides a useful interface between electronic controllers and pneumatically operated valves, air cylinders, or other air operated control elements.

Pneumatic signals are regularly used throughout many installations as matter of safety, legacy, or because a pneumatic signal can provide motive power to an operating device such as a valve positioner. Electrical control signals can be transmitted long distances across wires to deliver control signals to operating elements. The current to pneumatic converter provides a bridge between the two systems and allows the most beneficial aspects of each to be brought to bear on process operation.

Converters are available in standard variants that accommodate a number of hazardous location designations, as well as several output pressure ranges and calibrations. Share your process control connectivity challenges with application specialists, combining your own process knowledge and experience with their product application expertise to develop effective solutions.


Valve Control Monitor Adapts to Wide Range of Actuators

valve control monitor mounted with NAMUR mounting bracket
Valve monitor control mounted using cast NAMUR bracket
Courtesy Westlock Controls
Combining control components from various manufacturers can sometimes facilitate the most effective or desirable solution to a process control challenge. This can certainly be true when configuring a control valve installation. Getting the feature set and packaging that best fit the application requirements can yield benefits throughout the useful life of the equipment.

Westlock Controls, manufacturer of valve control monitors, provides a convenient mounting bracket that adapts the installation of their valve control monitors to actuators employing NAMUR mounting patterns. The cast stainless steel bracket is provided in one of three available mounting kits, each complete with all necessary hardware.

More detail about the adapter bracket is found in the datasheet included below. For more information, share your control valve project requirements and challenges with process control valve experts, combining your own process knowledge and experience with their product application expertise to develop effective solutions.


Electro-Hydraulic Valve Acutators and Damper Drives

electro-hydraulic linear valve actuator
X2 Linear Acuator
Courtesy Rexa
Many valves employed in industrial processes are controlled from remote control stations. They may have a manual override mechanism in the form of a lever or handwheel, but the primary operating mechanism, or actuator, is a powered unit that responds to a control signal and provides necessary torque or linear force to position the valve appropriately.

There are several power sources used to drive valve positioning mechanisms, one of which is electro-hydraulic. This self-contained system provides the operating characteristics of a hydraulic drive system by incorporating an electrically powered fluid system into the actuator package.

The video below provides some additional detail. Consider the electro-hydraulic actuator as a candidate for your valve control applications, then share your requirements and challenges with product application experts. The combination of your process knowledge and their application expertise will yield an effective solution.


Limit Switches in Valve Actuators

valve position sensor with limit switches
Valve Position Sensor
Courtesy Westlock Controls
Limit switches are devices which respond to the occurrence of a process condition by changing their contact state. In the industrial control field, their applications and product variations are almost countless. Essentially, the purpose of a limit switch is to serve as a trigger, indicating that some design condition has been achieved. The device provides only an indication of the transition from one condition to another, with no additional information. For example, a limit switch triggered by the opening of a window can only deliver an indication that the window is open, not the degree to which it is open. Most often, the device will have an actuator that is positively activated only by the design condition and mechanically linked to a set of electrical contacts. It is uncommon, but not unknown, for limit switches to be electronic. Some are magnetically actuated, though most are electromechanical. This article will focus on limit switch designs and variants used in the control and actuation of industrial process valves.

Valves, devices used for controlling flow, are motion based. The movable portions of valve trim create some degree of obstruction to media flow, providing regulation of the passage of the media through the valve. It is the movement of critical valve trim elements that limit switches are used to indicate or control. The movable valve trim elements commonly connect to a shaft or other linkage extending to the exterior of the valve body. Mounting electric, hydraulic, or pneumatic actuators to the shaft or linkage provides the operator a means to drive the mechanical connection, changing the orientation or position of the valve trim and regulating the media flow. Because of its positive connection to the valve trim, the position of the shaft or linkage is analogous to the trim position and can be used to indicate what is commonly referred to as “valve position”. Limit switches are easily applied to the valve shaft or linkage in a manner that can provide information or direct functional response to certain changes in valve position.

In industrial valve terms, a limit switch is a device containing one or more magnetic or electrical switches, operated by the rotational or linear movement of the valve.
What are basic informational elements that can be relayed to the control system by limit switches? Operators of an industrial process, for reasons of efficiency, safety, or coordination with other process steps, may need answers to the following basic questions about a process control valve:
  • Is the valve open? 
  • Is the valve closed? 
  • Is the valve opening position greater than “X”? 
  • Has the valve actuator properly positioned the valve at or beyond a certain position? 
  • Has the valve actuator driven the valve mechanism beyond its normal travel limits? 
  • Is the actuator functioning or failing? 
Partial or complete answers to these and other questions, in the form of electrical signals relayed by the limit switch, can serve as confirmation that a control system command has been executed. Such a confirmation signal can be used to trigger the start of the next action in a sequence of process steps or any of countless other useful monitoring and control operations.

Applying limit switches to industrial valve applications should include consideration of:
  • Information Points – Determine what indications are necessary or useful for the effective control and monitoring of valve operation. What, as an actual or virtual operator, do you want to know about the real time operational status of a valve that is remotely located. Schedule the information points in operational terms, not electrical switch terms. 
  • Contacts – Plan and layout a schedule of logical switches that will provide the information the operator needs. You may not need a separate switch for each information point. In some cases, it may be possible to derive needed information by using logical combinations of switches utilized for other discrete functions. 
  • Environment – Accommodate the local conditions and hazards where the switch is installed with a properly rated enclosure. 
  • Signal – The switch rating for current and voltage must meet or exceed those of the signal being transmitted. 
  • Duty Cycle – The cycling frequency must be considered when specifying the type of switch employed. Every switch design has a limited cycle life. Make sure your selection matches the intended operating frequency for the process. 
  • Auxiliary Outputs – These are additional contact sets that share the actuation of the primary switch. They are used to transmit additional signals with specifications differing from the primary signal. 
  • Other Actuator Accessories – Limit switches are often integrated into an accessory unit with other actuator accessories, most of which are related to valve position. A visual local indication of valve position is a common example. 
Switches and indicators of valve position can usually be provided as part of a complete valve actuation package, provided by the valve manufacturer or a third party. It is recommended that spare contacts be put in place for future use, as incorporating additional contacts as part of the original actuation package incurs comparatively little additional cost.

Employing a properly configured valve automation package, with limit switches delivering valve status or position information to your control system, can yield operational and safety benefits for the life of the unit. Good advice is to consult with a valve automation specialist for effective recommendations on configuring your valve automation accessories to maximize the level of information and control.