Water pumping systems play a critical role in various industries, including water supply, cooling, heating, and HVAC systems (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning systems), by ensuring efficient fluid transfer. In the control of pumps, Proportional–Integral–Derivative (PID) algorithms are widely employed for frequency adjustment in Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs). However, the performance of this conventional controller in nonlinear and time-variant systems, as well as its impact on energy consumption, needs further improvement. To overcome these shortcomings, this paper proposes a Modified Particle Swarm Optimization (MPSO)-based PID controller. The novelty of the proposed approach lies in the integration of a linearly decreasing inertia weight strategy with a composite objective function (Minf), which simultaneously considers multiple performance criteria, including overshoot, rise time, settling time, and the integral of absolute error. The proposed controller is experimentally compared with controllers developed using two different objective functions and conventional PSO. The results indicate that the proposed controller not only exhibits superior performance in terms of time response parameters (such as settling time, overshoot, and steady-state error) but also provides significant advantages in terms of energy savings.
Cingöz et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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