Manufacturing Success Story

PV-WAVE® Helps Engineers at Litwin Process Automation
Analyze Large Amounts of Manufacturing Data



"We have been very impressed with the speed and robustness of the Visual Numerics products, yet I feel we are just beginning to explore their full potential. They integrate well with many types of data and software tools and dramatically increase productivity where visual data analysis is concerned."


-Ronald A. Bray, Process Control Specialist, Litwin Process Automation

QUICK FACTS
Ronald Bray, an engineer from Litwin Process Automation uses PV-WAVE in his work in control and training simulator applications for the Petrochemical industry. After years working for a large chemical company, the engineer saw the effectiveness of PV-WAVE in the analysis and processing of data from polyethylene plants. In his different lines of work and analyzing a wide variety of data, Bray has found PV-WAVE to be his tool of choice.

THE PROBLEM
Getting engineers to agree on the best software tools for process data analysis and display is difficult enough at small firms with centralized operations. At a large company, where process control teams are dispersed widely among various plants and divisions, it is nearly impossible. And yet, when six teams of engineers from a large chemical company in Louisiana met to analyze process data from several polyethylene plants, one tool emerged as the standard: PV-WAVE from Visual Numerics.

"All of the other visual data analysis products that we tried tended to choke on the tremendous volume of data," says Ronald A. Bray, formerly a process control specialist at the company. "They lacked functionality and didn't easily line up with our varying data sources."

Bray's first use of PV-WAVE occurred in 1990 during a project that required statistical analysis and display of process data for control and optimization. He built several PV-WAVE routines to pull data from a historical archive, where process control data, descriptions, units and time stamps were stored. Time periods and tag lists were entered as parameters.

Later, as the six teams met for the massive process-control project, Bray spent some time reworking his existing PV-WAVE routines to see if they would prove useful. "During a short demonstration, the other engineers were immediately impressed with PV-WAVE's ability to organize and display results," Bray says. "A previous project of this type required two weeks of effort just to collect and organize the data. But with PV-WAVE, the entire data-analysis portion was essentially complete within that amount of time.

THE SOLUTION
"Interest in PV-WAVE grew quickly as the engineers discovered they could become productive with the application in less than an hour," Bray says. "Other data-analysis tools were quickly abandoned in favor of PV-WAVE," he adds.

PV-WAVE lets technical and business computing professionals interactively explore, manipulate and analyze complex numeric data. Tightly integrated graphics, statistics, image processing, signal processing and animation let users rapidly interpret complex data sets, quickly identify important features and trends and share their results.

The emphasis during the multi-team project was on analyzing process control data to improve manufacturing productivity throughout the company. Data on temperatures, pressures, flows and other process control information were collected and analyzed. "One of the teams collected nine hours of one-second data on 40 tags [about one million samples] and was able to get the data from the disk into PV-WAVE in just two or three minutes," Bray says. The key to PV-WAVE's speed is an array-oriented, fourth-generation programming language (4GL) designed specifically for visual data analysis. "The code is compact and efficient," Bray says. "Also, since it is an interpreted language, it is very easy to develop and debug applications. It has the speed of a compiled language, where calculations are done with large arrays."

Bray's custom VDA routines were developed with PV-WAVE Foundation, Visual Numerics' flagship UNIX® product for data visualization. "Other visualization tools that I had tried were painfully slow and inadequate for these large data sets," Bray explains. "They usually required data to be put in their own special format before they could be accessed, which required tedious programming.

"PV-WAVE's 4GL, by contrast, reduces coding efforts by up to 80 percent compared with traditional programming languages, such as C and FORTRAN," Bray adds. "It takes time to get used to the syntax and language constructs. But once you get used to it, you can become very proficient at data analysis and visualization. It is my preferred language because you can quickly create applications that are easy for users to understand, yet have all the capabilities required by power users." Bray's early work with PV-WAVE was performed on Digital's VMS-based VAXstations. As interest in PV-WAVE grew, Bray was able to port his PV-WAVE routines to a variety of UNIX platforms, as well as Windows® NT and MS-Windows.

"PV-WAVE runs as an X application on the VAX, so any PC or Macintosh® computer that does X emulation can be used to access PV-WAVE applications," Bray says. "Porting a PV-WAVE application among platforms takes minimal effort."

RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Today, PV-WAVE is still playing a critical role in Bray's work. His team uses PV-WAVE to assist with their work creating dynamic simulations to help regulate manufacturing processes for Litwin clients. They work with large data sets, typically 50 to 400 tags, with anywhere from 5,000 to 30,000 points per tag.

Even though Bray created the actual PV-WAVE routines, he credits Visual Numerics for making it possible for one person to quickly develop applications that improve the overall productivity of several process control project teams.

"Without PV-WAVE, it would have been impossible for a single engineer to develop and support such a powerful and useful application as a sideline to the usual work that must be done," Bray concludes. "We have been very impressed with the speed and robustness of the Visual Numerics products, yet I feel we are just beginning to explore their full potential. They integrate well with many types of data and software tools and dramatically increase productivity where visual data analysis is concerned."

WORLD CLASS PRODUCTS, SERVICES, AND SUPPORT
Visual Numerics has provided technical software solutions for numerical analysis and visualization for over 30 years. The company's software products help users understand complex data from a variety of sources and build business-critical applications. Visual Numerics offers two product lines: the IMSL® Numerical Libraries for powerful mathematical and statistical analysis and the PV-WAVE® visual data analysis development environment. Visual Numerics also offers customized consulting services for applications that involve mathematical, statistical, or visual data analysis to meet today’s business analytical needs.

The IMSL Numerical Libraries ­ which include the IMSL C Library, IMSL Fortran Library and JMSL™ Library for Java™ applications ­ are the industry standard for numerical analysis. They deliver developers with the breadth and depth of core algorithms allowing for the rapid development of any application. Whether developing applications in C, Fortran, or Java, or on UNIX, Windows or Linux, the robust IMSL Libraries provide the reliable foundation and the building blocks developers need.

The PV-WAVE family of products ­ which includes PV-WAVE, TS-WAVE, and JWAVE ­ delivers engineers with the development tools to efficiently and accurately meet their data analysis needs. PV-WAVE solutions allow users to rapidly import, manipulate, analyze and visualize data. The PV-WAVE family also includes robust time series analysis software as well as the ability to share analysis results across the enterprise with a Java-based solution. And, unlike other products, PV-WAVE Advantage includes a sophisticated set of analysis routines based on the industry-standard IMSL Libraries.

In addition, Visual Numerics Consulting Services combine technical expertise, decades of hands-on experience and a combination of powerful products to create the highest quality solutions possible for your visual data analysis needs.

Visual Numerics unique combination of products and services rapidly enhance ROI by delivering the highest efficiency, greatest accuracy and maximum performance.


Litwin Process
Automation


Industry
Manufacturing

Application
Process Automation and Control

Product
PV-WAVE



Houston-based Litwin Process Automation provides advanced control and training simulator applications to the Refining and Petrochemical industry. It works to create dynamic simulations to help regulate manufacturing processes for its clients.


Key Benefits

> Tightly integrated graphics
> Rapid interpretation of complex data sets
> Quick productivity with applications
> Efficient and compact code
> Strong image and signal processing
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
Company Products & Services Solutions Success Stories Support Downloads Email this page
© Copyright 2009 Visual Numerics, Inc. All Rights Reserved Legal Privacy