Split Range Control: One Controller, Multiple Personalities

Split Range Control System – Complete Guide

Split Range Control: One Controller, Multiple Personalities

Imagine one thermostat controlling both your heater and air conditioner. Below 70°F? Heater works. Above 70°F? AC kicks in. One controller, two opposite actions, different ranges. That’s split range control—the multitasker that knows when to heat and when to cool. Let’s explore this clever control strategy.

What Is Split Range Control?

Split range control uses a single controller output to operate two or more final control elements (valves, dampers, motors), with each element active in a different range of the controller output signal. It’s like having one remote control operating different devices depending on which buttons you press.

🎯 Core Concept: One controller output split into ranges—each range controls different equipment (0-50% opens valve A, 50-100% opens valve B)

The magic: One PID controller, one process variable, but multiple actuators working in sequence or opposition to achieve control.

Basic Split Range Control Structure

CONTROLLER (PID) Output: 0-100% SPLIT VALVE A (COOLING) Active: 0-50% VALVE B (HEATING) Active: 50-100% PROCESS (Reactor) 0-100% 0-50% 50-100% Cold water Hot water Temperature Feedback Output 0-50%: Cool more | Output 50-100%: Heat more

How It Actually Works

The Control Logic:

  1. Measure Process Variable: Temperature sensor reads 72°C
  2. Compare to Setpoint: Target is 70°C, actual is 72°C → Too hot!
  3. Controller Calculates: PID determines output = 30%
  4. Signal Split:
    • 0-50% range → Cooling valve receives signal
    • 30% maps to 60% open on cooling valve
    • Heating valve stays closed (it’s inactive below 50%)
  5. Cooling Applied: Cold water flows, temperature drops
  6. Temperature Reaches 68°C: Now too cold!
  7. Controller Output: Rises to 65%
  8. Signal Split:
    • Cooling valve fully closed (output above 50%)
    • Heating valve opens 30% (65% – 50% = 15% into heating range)
If Controller Output = CO (0-100%)

Valve A Position = 2 × CO (for CO: 0-50%)
Valve B Position = 2 × (CO – 50) (for CO: 50-100%)

Scaling ensures full valve travel in each range

🌡️ The Thermostat Analogy

Your home in winter: Sometimes too cold, sometimes too hot

Single controller (thermostat) with split range:

  • Setpoint: 70°F
  • Actual temp 65°F: Error = -5°F (cold)
    • Controller output: 80%
    • Heater: ON (80% power)
    • AC: OFF
  • Actual temp 70°F: Error = 0°F (perfect)
    • Controller output: 50%
    • Heater: OFF (dead band)
    • AC: OFF (dead band)
  • Actual temp 75°F: Error = +5°F (hot)
    • Controller output: 20%
    • Heater: OFF
    • AC: ON (60% power)

Why this is brilliant: One sensor, one controller, but can both heat AND cool. Prevents the system from fighting itself (heating and cooling simultaneously).

Real-World Industrial Examples

⚗️ Example 1: Chemical Reactor Temperature Control

Challenge: Maintain exactly 150°C during exothermic reaction

Problem: Reaction sometimes generates too much heat (need cooling), sometimes too little (need heating)

Split Range Solution:

  • Controller output 0-50%: Opens cooling water valve (removes heat)
  • Controller output 50-100%: Opens steam valve (adds heat)
  • At 50%: Both valves closed (neutral point)

Operation:

  • Reaction starts cold → Output 80% → Steam heats reactor
  • Reaction becomes exothermic → Temp rises → Output drops to 30% → Cooling water removes excess heat
  • Reaction finishes → Output settles around 50% → Minimal adjustment needed

Result: Temperature variance: ±0.5°C (vs ±5°C with separate controllers)

🔧 Example 2: Pressure Control with Vent and Pressurization

Application: Fermentation vessel pressure at 2.0 bar

Challenges:

  • Fermentation generates CO₂ (pressure rises)
  • Cooling system condenses vapor (pressure drops)
  • Need both venting AND pressurization capability

Split Range Setup:

  • 0-50% output: Vent valve opens (releases pressure)
  • 50-100% output: CO₂ supply valve opens (adds pressure)

Why it works:

  • During active fermentation: Output 20% → Venting excess CO₂
  • During cooling phase: Output 70% → Adding CO₂ to maintain pressure
  • One controller handles both scenarios seamlessly

💧 Example 3: pH Control with Acid and Base

Goal: Maintain pH 7.0 (neutral)

Disturbances: Incoming wastewater pH varies from 4 (acidic) to 10 (alkaline)

Split Range Configuration:

  • 0-50% output: Acid pump operates (lowers pH)
  • 50-100% output: Base pump operates (raises pH)
  • 50% output: Both pumps off (neutral)

Control Action:

  • Incoming pH 10 (alkaline) → Controller output 15% → Acid pump at 70% speed → pH drops to 7
  • Incoming pH 4 (acidic) → Controller output 85% → Base pump at 70% speed → pH rises to 7

Safety feature: Impossible to add both acid and base simultaneously (would waste chemicals and create violent reaction)

Split Range Operation – Controller Output vs Valve Position

Controller Output (%) → Valve Position (%) 50% 100% 50% Cooling Valve (A) Opens as output decreases Heating Valve (B) Opens as output increases Dead Band Zone (Both valves closed) Full cooling Full heating 0 100 0

Types of Split Range Configurations

1. Complementary Action (Heating/Cooling)

Use: Opposite actions needed

Example: Temperature control with heating and cooling

Configuration:

  • 0-50%: Cooling increases as output decreases
  • 50-100%: Heating increases as output increases

2. Sequential Action

Use: Multiple devices activated in sequence

Example: Multi-stage compressor control

Configuration:

  • 0-33%: Compressor 1 only
  • 33-66%: Compressor 1 + 2
  • 66-100%: All three compressors

3. Overlapping Range

Use: Smooth transitions between devices

Example: Fuel blending

Configuration:

  • 0-60%: Valve A active
  • 40-100%: Valve B active
  • 40-60%: Both valves partially active (blend zone)

4. Dead Band (Gap)

Use: Prevent simultaneous operation

Example: Motor forward/reverse

Configuration:

  • 0-45%: Reverse operation
  • 45-55%: Dead zone (motor stopped)
  • 55-100%: Forward operation

Design Considerations

1. Valve Sizing and Characterization

Critical: Both valves must be properly sized for their range

Each valve should provide full control authority
in its assigned range (0-50% or 50-100%)

Common mistake: Oversized valves that are too sensitive in their range

2. Action Direction

Carefully consider valve actions:

  • Air-to-open (ATO): Valve opens with increasing signal
  • Air-to-close (ATC): Valve closes with increasing signal

Must match your control philosophy and safety requirements (fail-safe)

3. Dead Band Width

Purpose: Prevents both actuators from fighting each other

Typical: 2-10% gap centered at 50%

Trade-off:

  • Too wide: sluggish response near setpoint
  • Too narrow: valves may work simultaneously (waste energy, poor control)

4. Fail-Safe Position

What happens on signal/power failure?

  • Heating valve: Should fail closed (safe)
  • Cooling valve: Should fail open (safe) if process generates heat
  • Design based on consequence analysis

Setting Up Split Range Control

Step 1: Define Range Split Points

Decide where ranges transition:

  • Equal split: 0-50%, 50-100%
  • Unequal: 0-40%, 40-100% (if one actuator needs more authority)
  • With overlap: 0-55%, 45-100%

Step 2: Configure I/P Transducers or Signal Conditioners

Convert controller output (4-20 mA or 0-100%) to valve signals:

Valve A: Input 4-12 mA → Output 3-15 psi
Valve B: Input 12-20 mA → Output 3-15 psi

Step 3: Calibrate Each Valve

  • Put controller in manual
  • Test valve A travel through 0-50% range
  • Test valve B travel through 50-100% range
  • Verify no overlap or excessive dead band

Step 4: Tune Controller

Challenge: Process gain changes dramatically at split point

  • Start with conservative tuning
  • May need gain scheduling (different parameters in each range)
  • Watch for oscillation near 50% output

Step 5: Test Transitions

  • Force process through both ranges
  • Verify smooth transitions
  • Check for hunting or bumps at split point

Advantages & Challenges

✅ Advantages

  • One Controller: Simpler than two separate control loops
  • Prevents Conflicts: Heating and cooling can’t operate simultaneously
  • Cost Effective: One PID controller, one sensor
  • Coordinated Action: Smooth transitions between operating modes
  • Energy Efficient: Prevents wasted energy from fighting actions
  • Operator Friendly: One setpoint, one controller to tune

⚠️ Challenges

  • Tuning Difficulty: Process gain changes at split point
  • Dead Band Issues: Can cause sluggish response near setpoint
  • Valve Sizing Critical: Both valves must be properly matched
  • Transition Bumps: May see disturbances when switching ranges
  • Troubleshooting: Harder to diagnose which valve is causing problems
  • Calibration Complex: Must set up both valves correctly

Common Applications

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top
IndustryApplicationVariable ControlledActuator A (Low Range)