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Salvatore Graziani

Researcher at University of Catania

Publications -  232
Citations -  4654

Salvatore Graziani is an academic researcher from University of Catania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ionic polymer–metal composites & Actuator. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 231 publications receiving 4231 citations. Previous affiliations of Salvatore Graziani include STMicroelectronics.

Papers
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Book

Soft Sensors for Monitoring and Control of Industrial Processes (Advances in Industrial Control)

TL;DR: This book reviews current design paths for soft sensors, and guides readers in evaluating different choices, and presents case studies resulting from collaborations between the authors and industrial partners.
Book

Soft Sensors for Monitoring and Control of Industrial Processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present case studies resulting from collaborations between the authors and industrial partners, some of which are implemented on-line in industrial plants, are designed to cope with a wide range of applications from measuring system backup and what-if analysis through real-time prediction for plant control to sensor diagnosis and validation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A nonlinear model for ionic polymer metal composites as actuators

TL;DR: In this article, a nonlinear dynamic model of motion actuators based on ionic polymer metal composites (IPMCs) working in air is presented, where significant quantities ruling the acting properties of IPMC-based actuators are taken into account.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soft sensors for product quality monitoring in debutanizer distillation columns

TL;DR: In this article, a neural-based soft sensor was designed to improve product quality monitoring and control in a refinery by estimating the stabilized gasoline concentration (C5) in the top flow and the butane (C4) concentration in the bottom flow of a debutanizer column, on the basis of a set of available measurements.
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A model for ionic polymer metal composites as sensors

TL;DR: It is observed that the need for a wet environment is not a key issue for IPMC-based sensors to work well, showing that sensors do not suffer from the same drawbacks as corresponding actuators.