Ethernet,an established universal standard for office networking, is now moving its way down to the plant floor.
Published:
28 March 2001 y., Wednesday
While proprietary plant networks often run at speeds only up to 2Mbps, the imminent Gigabit Ethernet at 1000Mbps promises to ensure Ethernet’s place at the heart of factory networks. As factory automation processes are driving up bandwidth requirements, fieldbus networks, the networks designed for factory automation, are failing to meet bandwidth requirements. Only Ethernet can handle the huge increase in data traffic we are already beginning to see in 21st century manufacturing.
Ethernet as a control network is cheap, standardised, open, faster and available worldwide from multiple suppliers. With the PC industry behind it, Ethernet in industry will be able to compete on price as well as on performance. The high volume of Ethernet shipments drives economies of scale and its large customer base has brought down prices for components. New quality of service assurances over the once doubted robustness of Ethernet and the move to switched Ethernet technology mean that at last it is a viable alternative on the factory floor.
Cisco and GE Industrial Systems launched last June a joint-venture, GE Cisco Industrial Networks, designed to extend the reach of Ethernet onto the factory floor. The venture is aiming to achieve US$100 million in annual turnover by 2005. At the moment, proprietary fieldbus systems remain the most common network communications technologies on the factory floor. They join together equipment such as programmable logic controllers (PLCs) and distributed control systems (DCS). While many people are predicting the imminent disappearance of the 60 or so proprietary bus systems, this is unlikely. Since major vendors are not likely to ask customers to rip out their proprietary system, there could be life in the buses for a while.
A more likely interim solution will be that pursued by Siemens, the maker of the Profibus system, which is introducing gateway devices between buses and Ethernet. The Automation and Network Solutions of Hirchsmann are also popular Ethernet-based products for the factory.
Ethernet now promises to be able to link factory control systems more easily to enterprise systems such as ERP and CRM, and then to the front end – creating a genuine e-business. Integrating the plant-floor system via Ethernet should help encourage a build-to-order, just-in-time efficiency culture throughout the company, allowing low inventories and quick-order execution, on the basis of a real-time flow of information.
plant automation industry is now looking to create a universal Ethernet/IP industrial application layer. In this case, ‘IP’ stands for Industrial Protocol. This layer will ensure the interoperability of their products, so that users will be able to link to all Ethernet/IP-enabled devices.
Ethernet/IP is supported by three standards organisations: ControlNet International (CI), the Industrial Ethernet Association (IEA) and the Open DeviceNet Vendor Association (ODVA).
Šaltinis:
cebitnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan have completed their parliamentary elections according to schedule, despite the American prognosis that Central Asia is ripe for revolution
more »
Russian security service paid $10 million for information leading to Maskhadov's killing
more »
When Poland and six other former communist countries entered the European Union last year, many feared they would lose their most talented and skilled denizens to Britain, Ireland and Sweden
more »
When Poland and six other former communist countries entered the EU last year, many feared they would lose their most talented and skilled denizens to Britain, Ireland and Sweden
more »
Russia says Chechen separatist leader Aslan Maskhadov was killed today in a gun battle with federal forces in the Chechen village of Tolstoi-Yurt
more »
Macedonian citizens are worried the most about socio-economic problems, such as unemployment, poverty and corruption
more »
Moldova's Communist Party has retained its dominant position after parliamentary elections, according to an independent exit poll released after voting stations closed
more »
The former interior minister was found dead in his home Friday, an apparent suicide
more »
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has welcomed a decision by the Turkmen parliament to pass legislation banning child labour and guaranteeing freedom from economic exploitation as a right of children
more »
Latvian Prime Minister Aigars Kalvitis believes prominent Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky's arrival in Latvia is "a legal, rather than political issue"
more »