209  Processes & Systems: Fundamentals

209.1 Learning Objectives

By the end of this series, you will be able to:

  • Define Process Concepts: Explain systems, processes, and input-output transformations in IoT
  • Compare Control Types: Differentiate between open-loop and closed-loop control systems
  • Analyze Feedback Loops: Describe how feedback mechanisms maintain system stability
  • Apply PID Control: Understand proportional, integral, and derivative control components
  • Design Stable Systems: Evaluate trade-offs between different control strategies for IoT
  • Implement Self-Regulation: Build systems that automatically adjust to maintain desired behavior

209.2 Prerequisites

Before diving into this series, you should be familiar with:

  • Sensor Fundamentals and Types: Understanding how sensors measure physical phenomena is essential for grasping how systems transform inputs into meaningful data
  • Actuators: Knowledge of actuators helps understand how systems produce physical outputs in response to control signals
  • IoT Reference Models: Familiarity with layered IoT architectures provides context for where processes operate within the device-to-cloud stack

209.3 Chapter Overview

NoteAbout This Series

This chapter introduces the fundamental concepts of processes and systems in IoT architectures. Understanding how electronic systems transform inputs into outputs through controlled processes is essential for designing robust IoT solutions.

This topic has been organized into three focused chapters:

  1. Core Definitions - What are processes and systems, block diagrams, decomposition
  2. Control Types - Open-loop vs closed-loop, feedback mechanisms
  3. PID Control - Proportional-Integral-Derivative control theory and applications

209.4 Chapter 1: Core Definitions

Processes & Systems: Core Definitions

Learn the foundational concepts that underpin all IoT system design:

  • System vs Process: Understand the difference between the collection of components (system) and the transformation they perform (process)
  • Block Diagram Representation: Use abstraction to represent complex systems as interconnected black boxes
  • IoT System Decomposition: Break down systems into hardware, software, and network subsystems
  • Input-Output Transformations: Analyze how sensors provide inputs, microcontrollers process data, and actuators produce outputs

Key Concept: Every IoT device can be analyzed as a system with inputs, a process, and outputs—understanding this framework is essential for debugging and optimization.

209.5 Chapter 2: Control Types

Processes & Systems: Control Types

Explore the fundamental distinction between control strategies:

  • Open-Loop Control: Systems that operate based on predetermined inputs without measuring output
  • Closed-Loop Control: Systems that continuously measure output and adjust to maintain desired setpoint
  • Feedback Mechanisms: How sensors, controllers, and actuators work together in feedback loops
  • Real-World Applications: Smart factory temperature control, irrigation systems, HVAC automation

Key Concept: Closed-loop systems that measure output and adjust inputs automatically are the foundation of “smart” IoT—turning simple timers into intelligent devices.

209.6 Chapter 3: PID Control

Processes & Systems: PID Control

Master the most widely used feedback control algorithm:

  • The PID Formula: Proportional, Integral, and Derivative control actions
  • Tuning Controllers: Finding optimal gain values for system performance
  • Real IoT Examples: Smart thermostats, drone stability, water tank level control
  • Control Strategy Selection: When to use PID vs simpler on/off control

Key Concept: PID combines three actions—react to current error (P), eliminate persistent offset (I), and dampen oscillations (D)—to achieve precise, stable control.

209.7 Quick Reference: Control System Comparison

Control Type Feedback Accuracy Complexity IoT Example
Open-Loop None Low Simple Timer-based irrigation
Closed-Loop (On/Off) Yes Medium Moderate Simple thermostat
Closed-Loop (PID) Yes High Higher Smart HVAC, drones

209.8 What’s Next

Start with Core Definitions to build your foundation, then progress through Control Types and PID Control for complete understanding.

For hands-on practice, continue to Process Control and PID for advanced implementations and Processes Labs and Review for practical exercises.