6 minute read
REMOTE CONTROL
Unit Operations Lab Goes Remote
BY ALANA NORRIS
Advertisement
Over the summer, chemical and biological engineering faculty were able to bring a longplanned idea to fruition for their students.
For the first time at The University of Alabama, the CHE 323 Operations Laboratory course became a remote lab dependent on teaching assistants and instructors to manage the experiments on campus using directions given by students from a distance.
“We have worked very hard to make the experience as close to in-person as possible, with as much control in the hands of the students as we can,” Dr. Stephen Ritchie said.
Ritchie, an associate professor of chemical and biological engineering, has led the remote lab project
that puts students on teams that work together to operate large-scale unit operations experiments through their teaching assistants.
“The TA is serving as their hands, and operating instructions supplied by the team to the TA must be clear and explicit,” Ritchie said. “Diagnostics are critical to ensure equipment is connected as displayed in the supplied process flow diagram.”
The students guide the TAs from a distance through audio and video interaction and written step-by-step procedures. The class stays connected through Zoom channels, a video communications and chat platform. Using this program allows people to enter and leave their meetings as needed, he said.
“Experimental data of interest includes temperatures, pressures, flows and concentrations. Each of these can be measured remotely, or with the help of a TA in the lab. All data is recorded on the console computer that is controlled by the team,” Ritchie said.
In this new format, data acquisition is now automated through LabVIEW. The program records most of the data in an electronic logbook while some is still recorded manually in a notebook.
The class also shares files through Box, a cloud content management system, and the students take exams on Blackboard, a learning management system.
The goal is for the students to control and collect data from their experiments.
“Students take remote desktop control of a computer that is interfaced with the experiment,” Ritchie said. “Experiments in Summer 2020 have included heat exchange, control valve, continuously stirred tank reactor, distillation and sorption. Student groups monitor instrument readings, and to varying degrees, control the experiment.”
The lab was offered to students during both summer sessions. Summer I had 14 students, and there were 17 students in Summer II. Students from as far as Kuwait registered for the course.
“Three of the students who took the class in Summer I served in TA roles in Summer II,” Ritchie said.
One of those students who had the unique opportunity to be involved in both roles is Elise Kaminski, a chemical engineering senior. She had never taken a remote lab before this summer and said it was unlike any course she’d ever taken.
She said students work to design procedures that produce quality experimental data, and TAs execute those plans with attention to lab and equipment safety. TAs only intervene
if the instructions they’re given can potentially generate hazardous conditions in the lab.
“As a student in unit ops, you are responsible for experimental design and for explicitly conveying to the TAs how they should conduct the experiment for you,” Kaminski said. “As a general TA, your role is to follow the instructions given by the teams, much as an operator in a plant would.”
Along with the two other TAs, Kaminski worked over the summer to adjust the lab for new sensors and equipment being used in the fall term. In addition to practicing technical skills and writing, she has learned a lot about teamwork throughout the experience.
“This class also demonstrated for me the importance of focusing on team unity and validating your teammates. If teams allow themselves to focus on issues and don't address concerns in a healthy way, it really sets the team up for challenges,” Kaminski said.
Each session had two instructors and a lab manager. The lab manager was Dr. Jair LizarazoAdarme, a research engineer in the engineering dean’s office who earned his doctorate in chemical engineering at UA. He had been designing and implementing upgrades to bring a remote lab operation to undergraduate students for a few years, but the coronavirus pandemic sped up the implementation.
“COVID gave us the impetus to implement remote operation,” Lizarazo-Adarme said.
“My role with the class has been upgrading the lab to bring trending technologies currently used in industry. I have been working on a control room operation concept that includes hardware upgrades that would allow us to capture ‘industrial style big data.’ These remote systems also allow us to add lab aspects to traditional lecture courses.”
Roscoe Wallace Sr, a 1989 chemical engineering graduate, said this form of delivery for the lab will help students be on the forefront of evolving processes. He sees this lab as a kind of realworld application that not everyone gets to experience.
“With advances in technology and the mechanization of production processes, engineers must be able to work remotely with data to solve problems and improve efficiencies,” Wallace said.
In July, Ritchie spoke about UA’s efforts during an American Institute of Chemical Engineers webinar where about 150 attendees nationwide heard from him and three other faculty representing Iowa State University, Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Tulsa.
“We are at the forefront of this type of work, since we are one of the few programs in the country with a large chemical engineering lab over the summer,” said Dr. Heath Turner, chemical and biological engineering department head.
The unit operations lab was Paul Lammers’ favorite class. A 1985 chemical engineering graduate, he agrees that this remote lab reflects the format of current chemical plants and will give students a heads up for what to expect in the workforce.
“The changes that were forced by COVID-19 to this class adds a dimension that takes it a step closer to an operating chemical plant,” Lammers said. “I hope that when ‘normal’ returns the department will keep this remote activity as part of the course.”
The department plans to continue offering hybrid labs to students for CHE 321 and CHE 322. In the hybrid course, the four-person teams will have two students in the lab as operators while two students work from a distance.
“Chemical plants are run from control rooms with remote operation. So, we will continue to operate like this for the foreseeable future,” Ritchie said.
JOBS. PROMOTIONS. AWARDS. RECOGNITION.
1979
JOHN F. "BUDDY" BLACK
BSCE, has joined Neel-Schaffer Inc. in Birmingham as a senior structural engineer after a 40-year career with the Alabama Department of Transportation, including 37 years in the bridge department where he served as state bridge engineer his last eight years.
1981
JOE D. BATTLE
BSCET, has been named interim network director for VISN 7, the Veterans Affairs Southeast Network in Duluth, Georgia.
1986
CHARLES A. VICE
BSME, is retiring as vice chairman of Intercontinental Exchange Inc. He will remain an adviser to the firm through February 2022. (Photo courtesy of Intercontinental Exchange)
2000
DR. BRADLEY P. RYAN
BSChE, has been hired as the first chief product officer with the National Committee for Quality Assurance in Washington, D.C.
2004
L. JUSTIN BURNEY
BSChE and MSChE ’05, has joined the Huntsville office of the law firm Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP as a partner in the corporate and securities practice group.
2007
DAVID HOLT
BSChE and MSChE ’09, is a founding partner of Loftin Holt LLP, a boutique business litigation law firm located in Huntsville.
1991
GARY W. WOLF
BSChE, has joined PBI-Gordon as senior director of operations in Kansas City, Missouri.
(Photo courtesy of PBI-Gordon)
1993
CHRIS HUMPHRES
BSEE and MSEE ’95, has been named vice president of enterprise data for the American Red Cross.
2008
JOAN REICHWEIN SMITH
BSMtE, has been named vice president of PeopleTec, Inc. in Huntsville.
(Photo courtesy of PeopleTec)
(Image credit: USAF)
2011
U.S. AIR FORCE CAPT. KRISTIN “BEO” WOLFE
BSChE, has been named the new F-35A Demo Team Pilot for the 2020 and 2021 air demonstration season. Capt. Wolfe became the first female F-35A Demo Team pilot and only the second USAF F-35A Demo Team Pilot in history.