PID Controllers, 2nd Edition

Chapter 3.1 - PID Control: Introduction

The PID controller is by far the most common control algorithm. Most feedback loops are controlled by this algorithm or minor variations of it. It is implemented in many different forms, as a stand-alone controller or as a part of a DDC (Direct Digital Control) package or a hierarchical distributed process control system. Many thousands of instrument and control engineers worldwide are using such controllers in their daily work. The PID algorithm can be approached from many different directions. It can be viewed as a device that can be operated with a few rules of thumb, but it can also be approached analytically.

This chapter gives an introduction to PID control. The basic algorithm and various representations are presented in detail. A description of the properties of the controller in a closed loop based on intuitive arguments is given. The phenomenon of reset windup, which occurs when a controller with integral action is connected to a process with a saturating actuator, is discussed, including several methods to avoid it.

Some important aspects of digital computer implementation of PID controllers are given: issues such as prefiltering, different digital approximations, noise filtering, and computer code for good implementation. Operational aspects, such as bumpless transfer between manual and automatic mode and between different parameter sets, are also presented. The chapter ends with some aspects on the use and misuse of PID control with examples of systems where PID control works well and where it does not.

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