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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

ABB analyzer controls coagulant chemical additions at water utility

May 12, 2008 - An analyzer for dissolved organic compounds now monitors raw river influent and automatically controls aluminum sulfate (alum) additions at a water plant in New Jersey. The township estimates that the system paid for itself within six months in terms of chemical savings and reduced labor.

The utility processes 16 MGD of water. Several neighboring townships rely on it for supply. Influent sources for the water utility include a river, deep and shallow wells, an ASR well, and a pumped water storage reservoir. The versatility in source water options and resulting treatment strategies provide the staff with a process train that can be tailored to maximize efficiency in chemical use, while adapting to changing river conditions.

The analyzer for DOC is an AV400 from ABB Instrumentation (Warminster, PA). A sample pump sends the raw water sample to the AV400 detection cell located within the central treatment building. This cell contains a light source that flashes every 2 seconds through the sample. The detected absorption at 254 nm is updated each time the lamp flashes, and during this brief flash duration the instrument takes over 200 readings. A second measurement at 405 nm enables the monitor to compensate automatically for fluctuations in turbidity. A dual-wiper system, housed in the cleaner module, cleans the flowcell optical windows to help ensure the sensor's functionality.

The utility supplements this cleaning system with a rigorous maintenance schedule to assure the instrument's proper operation. Maintenance technicians conduct calibration checks once every month, a process that takes about one hour. Also at this time, they use a 25% solution of HCl to clean the optics. The instrument is installed downstream of the chlorine dioxide injection, and depending on source water selection, oxidation of material in the raw water can create stains on the optics. The technicians have a weekly scheduled job that requires flushing of the lines and filter maintenance. This prevents clogging and ensures that the instrument continues to see the required flow.

The measured signal goes to the AV400 transmitter mounted nearby. The transmitter display shows inferred values most useful to the user. A typical level of dissolved organics in the river at the intake is about 0.15 to 0.2 mg/l. The signal output from the transmitter is a 4 to 20 mA current proportional to the instantaneous reading. This kind of analyzer requires no consumables, such as reagents, which is a significant economic advantage. The instrument calibration is validated by instrumentation technicians using a pure solution of known carbon content.

A closed-loop system now controls alum treatment additions. The plant SCADA sends real-time online measurements of dissolved organics in the raw water influent to the control room computer. Software processes the dissolved organic measurement, along with other variables, to develop a control signal for the pumps that automatically meters alum to the mixers, as shown in the diagram.

The water plant has experienced substantial savings in chemical use for this process segment. As conditions change, the coagulant dose immediately tracks the online UV254 result. This avoids over or under feeding during the period of time necessary for the operator to manually respond. The online instrument also precludes grab sampling and bench top analytical for UV254, freeing the operations staff to complete other tasks, and negating the need for a dedicated UV spectrophotometer in the lab.

The utility views the continued employment of advanced technology as necessary to keep improving water plant efficiencies. Such efficiencies can help compensate for the multitude of factors tending to drive up the price of water.


National Instruments offers 6,000 drivers for control

June 10, 2008 – National Instruments now offers more than 6,000 drivers through the NI Instrument Driver Network, the industry's largest source for instrument drivers. Written for the NI LabVIEW graphical system design platform, the NI LabWindows / CVI ANSI C integrated development environment and Microsoft Visual Studio, the instrument drivers make it easy for users to connect to and control stand-alone instruments from more than 275 vendors.

 

For more than 30 years, National Instruments has been a leader in developing technology for integrating and connecting computers with stand-alone instrumentation. With the NI Instrument Driver Network, users can download LabVIEW Plug and Play and Interchangeable Virtual Instrument (IVI) instrument drivers certified by NI and remotely control thousands of instruments, including the latest PXI, Ethernet, LXI, GPIB and USB instruments, from LabVIEW, LabWindows/CVI or Visual Studio. National Instruments continually works with industry-leading instrumentation vendors including Agilent Technologies, Anritsu Company and Tektronix to develop drivers for a wide variety of popular instruments such as multimeters, oscilloscopes and signal generators.

 

In addition to providing extensive support for the most popular instrumentation, the NI Instrument Driver Network now includes the LabVIEW SDI-12 API for interfacing with thousands of environmental monitoring sensors. The SDI-12 protocol is commonly used for environmental data acquisition (EDA) applications such as climate change tracking, water collection and testing, ecological research, soil monitoring, agriculture and weather analysis. By combining the SDI-12 API with the flexibility of LabVIEW, users can create SDI-12 applications ranging from simple data collection and analysis to automated communication, data recording and Web publishing.

 

Adopted by engineers and scientists worldwide, LabVIEW provides a high-level, easy-to-use programming interface that is ideal for instrument control. The software also offers tools that reduce development time such as the Instrument Driver Finder, which helps users instantly search and download drivers from the NI Instrument Driver Network within the LabVIEW environment, and the Instrument I/O Assistant, a utility that helps users perform simple instrument I/O tasks or create their own instrument drivers. Additionally, LabVIEW Plug and Play instrument drivers provide source code native to the development environment and a standard programming model, making it easy to add instruments to a test system without learning new communication protocols or programming paradigms                                     

 

About National Instruments

 

National Instruments is transforming the way engineers and scientists design, prototype and deploy systems for measurement, automation and embedded applications. NI empowers customers with off-the-shelf software such as NI LabVIEW and modular cost-effective hardware, and sells to a broad base of more than 25,000 different companies worldwide, with no one customer representing more than 3 percent of revenue and no one industry representing more than 10 percent of revenue. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, NI has more than 4,800 employees and direct operations in nearly 40 countries. For the past nine years, FORTUNE magazine has named NI one of the 100 best companies to work for in America.

 

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