Industrial Communications: - by Rajeshkumar Modi
Industrial Communications: - by Rajeshkumar Modi
Industrial Communications: - by Rajeshkumar Modi
Communications
- by Rajeshkumar Modi
Hybrid
Analog (Smart, Brain) Fieldbus (Profibus,
Pneumatic 4 -20 mA Foundation
3-15 psi Fieldbus,)
2
Instrumentation Signals
Pneumatic (1930’s)
6 - 30 PSI
3 - 15 PSI (ISA SP-50 Standard)
Electrical (analog)
10 - 50 mA (1950’s)
4 - 20 mA (ISA SP-50 Standard, 1975)
Electrical (hybrid)
4 - 20 mA with superimposed digital signal
Electrical (digital)
FOUNDATION Field bus (ISA SP-50 Standard, 1994)
Profibus (1990)
3
4-20 mA Systems
Advantages:
OPEN, interoperable,
Broad range of equipment
Multiple suppliers
Standard control system interfaces
I/O
Standard support equipment
Shortcomings:
Limited information
4-20 mA - one variable, one direction
Point-to-point wiring
Traditional
Analog & Discrete
Instruments
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HART
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Communication Mode
Master-Slave mode which means that during normal operation, each slave
(field device) communication is initiated by a master communication
device.
Burst mode enables faster communication (3–4 data updates per second).
In burst mode, the master instructs the slave device to continuously
broadcast a standard HART reply message (e.g., the value of the process
variable).
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Frequency Shift Keying
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Simultaneous Analog and Digital
Communication
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Wiring and Installation
Most installations are well within the 3,000 meter (10,000 ft) theoretical limit
for HART communication.
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Intrinsic Safety
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Control System Interfaces
Gateways can be used to bring HART digital data into control systems
that do not support HART-capable I/O.
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HART Multiplexers
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Universal Handheld Communicator
Using HART DDL, the communicator can fully communicate with and
configure any HART device for which it has a DD installed.
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PC Configuration Software
The software packages listed in Table below are used for configuration
management, parameter tuning, and data acquisition with a HART device.
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List of HART Softwares
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Smart Instruments (HART)
Advantages:
More information
Proprietary or
Two-way communication of multiple Custom
variables
Interface
Better accuracy, reliability
Faster system commissioning
Easier configuration, calibration maintenance,
and support
Tradeoffs: PLC
PLC
Limited interoperability
Lack control loop performance
Analyzer
Analyzer
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Fieldbus
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How is Fieldbus Different from 4-20mA
4-20mA fieldbus
P.S. P.S.
Fieldbus devices are connected in parallel on the bus, which carries digital
data from/to all the devices on the bus
Fieldbus devices provide almost unlimited information to all other devices
on the network
Data have cyclical redundancy checking (CRC) to ensure receiving
devices use only good data
A multi-drop fieldbus does not have the shortcoming of point-to-point
wiring
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Terminology in Field Bus Systems
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OSI Model
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Fieldbus Communication
The delimiters use binary levels and edges. Other data use only binary
edges.
The individual devices take over the bus based upon a priority assigned.
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Physical Components in a Foundation
Fieldbus
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Topology
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Foundation Fieldbus Cable
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Cable length Calculation Limit
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Trunk
Use Type A (18 AWG) multi-pair, individually shielded cable for FF signals for all trunk
wiring
Total Segment Length = Trunk + All Spurs
Good design practice dictates providing a 20% spare pairs capacity all multi-pair FF
segment trunk cables, with a minimum of one spare pair.
Typically, the trunk cable is a multi-pair cable if there is more than one segment in the
area or the segment in the area is to be loaded to maximum
The maximum allowed length of an FF segment is 1900 m (6232 ft) Compute total
segment length by adding the length of the main trunk line and all the spurs that extend
from it
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Spurs
A spur is an H1 branch line connecting to the main trunk line
The trunk is considered to be the main cable run and contains segment terminators at
each end.
A spur can vary in length from 1 meter to 120 meters.
When a short circuit protection wiring block is utilized, the segment design is limited to
one device per spur.
The maximum spur length, that is, the length of the cable from the wiring block to the
H1 device, is 120 meters
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Foundation Fieldbus Terminators
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Foundation Fieldbus Segment design
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Segment Limits
Wire Size - high impedance wire reduces segment length and number of
devices
Segment Capacity - 32 devices/segment; up to 240 devices total with
repeaters
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Surge Protection Applied to Trunk and Spur
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Concept
– FISCO : As per IEC 60079-27, 1km/ 4 device/ 12.4V@ 120mA (Zone 1,IIC), 1.9
km/ 9 device/ 13.1@250 mA (Zone 2, IIB), Spur length 60 m
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FISCO (Fieldbus Intrinsically Safe Concept)
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Boundary conditions for the application of
FISCO
The cable length must not exceed 1000 m (ignition protection class i,
category a)/ 1900 m (ignition protection class i, category b)
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Foundation Fieldbus Engineering
Control assignment
Cable routing, Control room location based on above, Design basis / Std
Specifications for FF shall be prepared for the project
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Termination Count
Field
Marsh Cab. I.S. I/O
Junction Box
FT-100 Barrier Assembly
+
-
1 1 + 1 + +
- - -
2 2 + 2 + +
3 3 - - -
FCV-100 + 3 + +
4 4 - - -
+ 5 5 + 4 + +
- - -
- 6 6 +
7 7 -
+
8 8 -
TT-100 9 9
+ 10 10
- 11 11
12 12
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Increased Information
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FF Diagnostics
Shield short
• Easy to measure and understand
• Further measurements can identify location
Signal level
• Minimum level is specified by Fieldbus specification
• Low or high levels on all devices suggests incorrect bus termination
• If only one device, suggests problem on single spur
DC voltage
• Indicates correct function of power supply/conditioner
Noise
• Maximum level is specified by Fieldbus specification
Retransmissions
• Good measurement of physical layer health
• Re-tries can obscure faulty device or network
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I/O Card Savings
Fieldbus
Conventional 4-20mA
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Reduced Space Requirements
Fieldbus System
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Function Blocks
A location-independent model for distributed control
HMI
H1 Fieldbus
FT
FT
FC
FC
Process
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Advantages of Control in the Field
All function blocks control logic are implemented in the field devices
• Host control system execution time and I/O scan rate does not affect
• This gives flexibility of adding more devices per H1 card and enable
future expansion without needing additional controllers.
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Interoperability (DD)
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Comparison
Conventional Technology Foundation Fieldbus
Technology
TOPOLOGY One to One Multi-drop
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Invensys Foxboro I/A FF Architecture
I/A FBM228
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Emerson Delta V FF Architecture
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Emerson Delta V FF Components
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PROFIBUS
50
Profile
PA
Ethernet
Encoder
RS-485 TCP/IP
IEC 1158-2 FMS PROFIDrive
DP
Optical Fiber PROFISafe
PROFIBUS EN 50170
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Types of Profibus
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Profibus DP (Distributed Peripherals)
Master
PLC
PLC
DP - RS 485 - 9.6 kBit/s to 12 MBit/s
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Profibus DP (Distributed Peripherals)
The objective of PROFIBUS DP is fast and effective communication on the
field level. It uses RS 485 (Voltage levels 0 and 5 V) or Fiber Optics. The
baudrate can be chosen from 9.6 kBit/s to 12 Mbit/s.
PLC
Valve
Node
Operator Panel Modular I/O
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Profibus PA
Process
Device
Manager
x
PROFIBUS-DP 9.6kBit/s 12 MBit/s H2
+ x
PROFIBUS-PA 31.25 kBit/s H1
Segment
Coupler / Link
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Profibus PA
A Coupler does signal transmission only – Seen from the DP side, all
the PA instruments act like DP stations. The coupler is totally
transparent. If a coupler is used, the baudrate on the DP side will be
fixed.
A Link is equipped with intelligence so that the DP network can run with
any of the H2 baudrates (9.6 kBit/s to 12 Mbit/s). The link has its own DP
address – and the PA stations are addresses under this.
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PA - Example
DP/PA Coupler
DP
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FMS : Fieldbus Message Specification
Master
PLS
PLC
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FMS - Example
SCADA PC with
CITECT and
PROFIBOARD
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Modbus
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Modbus Serial line RS485
7 Application Modbus
6 Presentation
5 Session
Modbus Serial line RS485 is a low cost network using a master slave
medium access
4 Transport
with a transmission speed from 115 to 1200 Kbits/s
3 Network
Physical RS485
1
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Modbus TCP/IP
7 Application Modbus
6 Presentation
MODBUS TCP/IP uses TCP/IP and Ethernet 10 Mbit/s or 100 Mbits/s to
Session
5
carry the MODBUS messaging structure.
4 Transport
3 Network
CSMA / CD
2 Link ETHERNET V2 ou 802.3
1 Physical
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Modbus ASCII & RTU Mode
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Modbus Frame Structure
The Modbus frame structure is the same for requests (master to
slave messages) and responses (slave to master messages).
Modbus RTU
Modbus ASCII
0A Hex
3A Hex 0D Hex
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Function Code Example
Code Function
01 (0x01) Read Coils
02 (0x02) Read Discrete Inputs
03 (0x03) Read Holding Registers
04 (0x04) Read Input Registers
05 (0x05) Write Single Coil
06 (0x06) Write Single Register
15 (0x0F) Write Multiple Coils
16 (0x10) Write Multiple Registers
23 (0x17) Read/Write Multiple
Registers
43 (0x2B) Read Device Identification
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OPC
OPC (formerly: "OLE for Process Control", now: "Open Process Control") is an industry
standard set up by the OPC Foundation specifying the software interface (objects, methods) to a server
that collects data produced by field devices and programmable logic controllers.
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Before OPC
visualization
history
data base
More than 150 vendors offer OPC servers to connect their PLCs, field
bus device, displays and visualization systems.
OPC is also used for data exchange between applications and for
accessing databases
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OPC DA for Data Access
Process variables describe the plant's state, they are generated by the sensors or
calculated in the programmable logic controllers (PLCs).
Process variables can be sent upon a change, on demand or when a given time elapsed.
The OPC DA (Data Access) specification addresses collecting Process Variables.
The main clients of OPC DA are visualization and (soft-) control.
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OPC AE for Alarms and Events
determine
OPC the exact
AE (Alarms and time of specifies how alarms and events are
Events)
change (time
subscribed, stamping)
under which conditions they are filtered and sent with their
associated messages.
categorize by priorities
The main
log clientsuse
for further of OPC AE are the Alarms and Event loggers.
acknowledge alarms
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HDA for Historical Data Access
Historical Data are process states and events such as: process
variables, operator actions, recorded alarms that are stored as logs in a
long-term storage for later analysis.
OPC HDA (Historical Data Access) specifies how historical data are
retrieved from the logs in the long-term storage, filtered and aggregated
(e.g. compute averages, peaks).
The main client of OPC HDA are Trend Displays and Historians.
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QUESTIONS?
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