Split Range Control in Process Industries Automation

Split Range Control : Working Principle & 6 Key Industrial Reasons

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Split Range Control: Introduction

In many industrial processes, we need to control one important process variable (like temperature, pressure, or level) using more than one final control element. For example:

1) To control temperature, we may use a heating steam valvea cooling water valve

2) To control tank level, we may use two different outlet valves

3) To control pressure, we may use a vent valvea supply valve

But how does the controller decide which valve to open and when?

That is where Split Range Control is used.

Split range control is a technique used in process control where one controller output signal is split into two (or more) different control outputs. 

Each output operates a different valve or device over a specific portion of the signal range.

Example:
Controller output 4–12 mA → Valve A
Controller output 12–20 mA → Valve B

Easy, right? Let us learn in detail.

What is Split Range Control?

Definition:
Split range control is a control strategy where a single controller manipulates multiple control elements, each handling a part of the controller’s output span.

The output of a standard controller is usually 4–20 mA (or 0–100%). In split range:

1) The first valve gets control action from 4–12 mA

2) The second valve gets control action from 12–20 mA

This “splitting” helps the process react properly under different load or conditions.

Why Do We Use Split Range Control?

Because one control element cannot always handle the entire job.

Typical reasons:

1) Single valve cannot provide full control range
2) Need for heating + cooling
3) Need for pressure supply + venting
4) Handling two different flow sources
5) Improving energy efficiency
6) Maintaining process stability under varying conditions

It helps to keep the process variable within limits while choosing the most suitable actuator at any moment.

Example: Split Range for Temperature Control Application

Split Control

It becomes much easier to understand split-range control when we look at a real example like temperature control in a process system.

In this case, the product might sometimes need heating and at other times cooling, depending on its temperature.

The illustration below shows how the temperature transmitter, the controller, and the two control valves are arranged in a split-range temperature control setup.

Here, the controller’s output signal (0%–100%) is divided into two separate operating ranges — one for each valve:

  • When the controller output is 0% to 50%, the cooling valve is active.
  • It is fully open at 0% and closes gradually until it is fully shut at 50%.

  • When the controller output is 50% to 100%, the heating valve takes control.
  • It begins to open at 50% and becomes fully open at 100%.

So the controller decides whether heating or cooling is required, simply based on where its output falls in the split range.

There are multiple ways to configure the valves in a split-range setup so that each responds to a different part of the signal.

In this example, two I/P (current-to-pressure) converters are used to divide the output:

  • First converts 4–12 mA → Cooling valve
  • Second converts 12–20 mA → Heating valve

    The best part is that with this wiring method, we don’t need a special controller — a standard output signal works perfectly for split-range control.

    Example: Temperature Control With Heating & Cooling

    Imagine a reactor that always needs to stay at 70°C:

    1) Temperature drops → We add steam (heating)

    2) Temperature rises → We add cooling water

    One PID controller measures temperature and gives output (4–20 mA).

    How does it work?

    Output SignalActionDevice
    4–12 mASteam valve opens (heat increases)Heating
    12–20 mACooling valve opens (heat decreases)Cooling

    1) If temperature is low → controller goes toward 4 mA → steam opens

    2) If temperature is high → controller goes toward 20 mA → cooling opens

    At the middle point (~12 mA), both may remain closed — perfect temperature!

    Types of Split Range Control

    There are mainly three types:

    1) Fully Sequential Split Range

    • First valve works → then stops
    • Second valve works after first reaches full stroke

    Example:
    Valve A: 4–12 mA
    Valve B: 12–20 mA

    No overlap.


    2) Fully Overlapping Split Range

    • Both valves work in the middle range
    • Helps prevent sudden transitions

    Example:
    Valve A: 4–16 mA
    Valve B: 8–20 mA

    Overlap: 8–16 mA (smooth handover)


    3) Complementary Split Range

    • One valve closes as the other opens
    • Ideal for systems like supply vs. vent

    Example for pressure control:
    Valve A (supply): 4–20 mA open → 20–4 mA close
    Valve B (vent): 4–20 mA close → 20–4 mA open

    Used when both valves shouldn’t be open together.

    How the Output Signal is Assigned

    It depends on:
    1) Type of valves (air-to-open / air-to-close)
    2) Fail-safe requirements
    3) Process logic

    The output assignment is done using:

    • Current splitters
    • Positioners with split configuration
    • Control system logic (DCS/PLC)

    Control Valve Actions in Split Range

    Two common valve types:

    Valve ActionMeaningFail Position
    Air-to-Close (ATC)More air → closesFails open
    Air-to-Open (ATO)More air → opensFails closed

    So when designing split range:

    1) Engineers ensure safety first

    2) Heating valve may be made fail-close

    3) Cooling valve may be fail-open (safety cooling)

    Where is Split Range Control Used?

    Here are simple and real process areas:

    Controlled VariableValve Functions
    TemperatureSteam valve (heat) + Cooling water valve
    PressureSupply valve + Vent valve
    LevelTwo outlet valves to different locations
    FlowTwo different gas streams
    CompositionControl of multiple reagent inlets

    Industries using it:

    • Chemical reactors
    • Oil & Gas facilities
    • Power plants
    • Food & beverage
    • Water treatment plants

    Basically, wherever precise process control is needed

    Practical Setup and Tuning Tips

    ItemRecommendation
    TuningSlow transitions → Avoid cycling
    OverlapUse for smooth handover
    CalibrationEnsure valves respond correctly in assigned ranges
    SafetyFail-safe direction must support process safety
    HysteresisChoose valves with low friction & good actuator performance

    Also, ensure position feedback is correctly configured.

    Common Problems & How to Avoid Them

    ProblemCauseSolution
    Process swings near split pointPoor tuning / no overlapAdd small overlap, retune
    Both valves fight each otherWrong range mappingVerify DCS config
    Delayed responseSticky valves / hysteresisValve maintenance
    Wrong fail positionIncorrect designUpdate safety logic

    Testing before commissioning is very important!

    Very Simple Example

    Think of an AC room:

    • When room is very cold → heater turns ON
    • When room is very hot → AC turns ON
    • When perfect → Both OFF

    Your body (controller) senses temperature and decides action
    Two devices (heater & AC) operate in different ranges

    This is exactly like split range control in industry

    Split range control is simple yet powerful.

    ✔ One controller → Multiple controlled devices
    ✔ Output signal split into different operating ranges
    ✔ Used where one valve cannot handle full control requirements
    ✔ Very useful for heating/cooling and pressure control
    ✔ Requires careful tuning, configuration & safety planning

    In short:

    Split range control helps keep processes stable across wide conditions using multiple control elements — smart and efficient!

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