WebCAST seminar entitled "When does controllability equal profitability?" by Professor Thomas F. Edgar George T. and Gladys Abell Chair in Engineering Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas 1 University Station C0400 Austin, TX 78712, USA Date: March 17, 2008, 2 am-4 pm (EST) Dial-in from the comfort of your office to hear the presentation Deadline to Register: March 15, 2008 (details at http://www.castdiv.org/WebCAST.htm) Abstract The justification of process control in the context of business decision-making may include the following economic or operating considerations: increased product throughput, increased yield of higher valued products, decreased energy consumption, decreased pollution, decreased off-specification product, improved safety, extended life of equipment, improved operability, and decreased production labor. However, identifying a direct relationship between each type of economic benefit (profitability) and how controllers are designed or operated (controllability) is an elusive target. Perspectives of how process control has influenced business decision-making have changed radically over the brief history of process control (1950 to the present). Thus it is valuable to have an historical view of the changing role of process control in operations and profit/loss measures. Today the influence of process control on business decision-making is at its highest level ever, but there are still many challenges that must be met for process control to maximize its economic impact on an enterprise-wide scale. The opportunity to connect controllability to profitability appears greater for batch processing than for continuous processing. Biosketch Dr. Thomas F. Edgar Thomas F. Edgar is Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin and holds the George T. and Gladys Abell Chair in Engineering. Dr. Edgar received his B.S. in chemical engineering from the University of Kansas and a Ph.D. from Princeton University. For the past 35 years, he has concentrated his academic work in process modeling, control, and optimization, with over 200 articles and book chapters. Edgar has co-authored leading textbooks: Optimization of Chemical Processes (McGraw-Hill, 2001) and Process Dynamics and Control (Wiley, 2004). He has received major awards from AIChE (Colburn, Computing in Chemical Engineering, Lewis) and ASEE (Chemical Engineering Division, Westinghouse, and Meriam-Wiley). Recently he has carried out modeling and control research projects jointly with a variety of companies in the process industries under the auspices of the Texas-Wisconsin-California Control Consortium (www.che.utexas.edu/twmcc). -- Mayuresh V. Kothare (CAST WebCAST chair) R. L. McCann Associate Professor Chemical Process Modeling and Control Research Center Department of Chemical Engineering Lehigh University, 111 Research Drive Bethlehem, PA 18015, U.S.A. Office: D322 Iacocca Hall Tel: (610) 758 6654, Fax: (610) 758 5057 e-mail: [log in to unmask] URL: http://www.lehigh.edu/~mvk2