
Lab
rig: Air Heater
Description of the system
Figure 1 shows an air tube with heater and
temperature sensor(s). University College of South-Eastern Norway
(campus Porsgrunn), has 24 copies of this lab station, being used
in several control courses in both bachelor and master programmes
in technology.

Figure 1
Video presenting the air heater
air_heater.mp4
In the video, the home page of
the air heater is erroneously presented as
home.hit.no/~finnh/air_heater. The correct address is
https://techteach.no/lab/air_heater.
Mathematical
model
A mathematical model that has proven to describe
quite well the dynamic behaviour of the outlet air temperature is
given by the following differential equation representing
"time-constant with time-delay" dynamics from control
signal u to outlet temperature T:
dT/dt = [(Tamb - T) + Kh
* u(t - td)]/tc (Eq. 1)
where:
·
T [C]
is the tube outlet temperature (C is Celcius). (On the real
air heater T is measured with a Pt100 sensor.)
·
Tamb
[C] is the ambient (room)
temperature.
·
u [V] is the control signal to the heater.
·
Kh
[C/V] is the heater gain.
·
tc
[s] is the time-constant.
·
td
[s] is the time-delay representing air
transportation and “sluggishness” of the heater.
The above model may be derived from mechanistic
(first-principles) modeling principles, i.e. a simple energy
balance of the air, if we make the idealized assumption that the
tube is a so-called CSTR (continuous stirred tank reactor) with
air inflow and outflow and heat transfer with the environment
through the “reactor” (tube) walls, and - in addition
- we include the time-delay as described above. In reality, the
idealized CSTR conditions are not satisfied, but they lead to a
useful model structure with parameter values that may be estimated
from experimental data. (Many other stable physical processes show
“time-constant with time-delay” dynamics, and such
processes may be reasonably well represented with models like Eq.
1.)
In a simulator based on this model a proper
initial value, Tinit, of the state variable T must
defined. If you assume that the heater has been turned off for a
while, you can set Tinit = Tamb.
The parameter values vary somewhat among the lab
stations. However, the following values are typical and can be
used (e.g. in a simulator) unless you have found other values from
experiments:
·
Kh = 3.5 C/V
·
tc = 23 s
·
td = 3 s
·
Tamb = 20 deg C
Experimental data
airheater_logfile.txt contains
data from an experiment on the air heater. (The fan speed was kept
constant during the experiment.) The
file containes three colums of data:
Time,
t [s]
Control
signal to the heater, u [V]
Outlet
temperature, T [deg C].
Block diagram of temperature control
system with LabVIEW

(Click on the picture for showing
picture as PDF file.)
Technical information
Each air heater consists of the following items:
1.
One plywood plate on which the devices are mounted
2.
Plastic box containing all electrical devices
3. One
plastic tube
4.
One air fan (originally a PC fan)
5.
One potensiomter (variable resistance) for
manual adjustment of the voltage controlling the fan speed.
6.
One electric power cable (for connection to
mains outlet, e.g. 220 V)
7.
Two temperature sensors, type Pt100, with a
measurement signal converter from resistance to current (INOR
miniPack-L)
8.
Precision resistors for converting temperature
measurement current to voltage
9. One
heating element (coil) for electric heating of air. The coil is
originally used in a shoe dryer. Power (assuming 220 VAC)
is 250 W.
10. One
electrical AC-DC converter from 220 VAC to 24 VDC.
Datasheet_power_supply.pdf
11. One
Pulse-width modulator (PWM): Carlo Gavazzi RN F23V30.
Datasheet_ssr_pwm.pdf
Updated
27 September 2024 by Finn Aakre
Haugen. E-mail Finn.Haugen@usn.no.
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