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LATEST NEWS

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Increasing Production Line Performance and Reducing

Operations Costs with IoT Technologies

24

M12 connectors become more reliable, easier to fit

and

reduce installer injuries

26

Design an optimized circuit for HART-enabled 4- to

20-mA inputs

30

Expanding

Frequency

Range

in

High-Power

Splitter/Combiners by Minimizing Resistor Capacitance

34

ASICs

allow

cost-effective

IP

protection

for

technology inventions

38

A Recipe for Embedded Systems

42

Connector selection crucial for high performance industrial

applications

44

Intelligent Gateways Make a Factory Smarter

52

Manage the IoT on an Energy Budget​part 1

60

OUT OF THE BOX

62

New Products

82

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Contents

An intelligent gateway powered

by the Zynq SoC enhances

productivity in a state-of-the-art

manufacturing plant.

The Industrial Internet of Things-

on-Chip engineering S.L. (SoC-e),

streamlines productivity and helps

companies like Microdeco become

more reliably connected and secure.

To maximize profitability, factories

In order to achieve

callingthe“fourthindu

factories need infra

systems to use the IT

for automated produ

Intelligent Gateways Make a

Factory Smarter

Armando Astarloa, System-on-Chip engineering S.L

Executive Summary

Equipment maintenance personnel are

tasked with keeping the production

line running at peak performance while

minimizing operations costs. This is made

more difficult by the need for specialized

skill sets to support a wide range of

factory devices that use different

communications protocols, data formats,

and device management tools, etc.

Greatly simplifying this task, it is possible

to seamlessly

link factory floor devices and processes

using technologies from the Internet

of Things (IoT), thus enabling remote

equipment monitoring and management

from a centralized dashboard.

Providing such a solution, the SUSIAccess*

remote management system from

Advantech* allows maintenance personnel

to perform equipment status and

maintenance checks from a web browser

at any time, from anywhere, and with any

connected device. The factory automation

solution uses an Intel® processor-based

gateway running an Advantech client-side

agent to transparently handle protocol

and data conversion, and acts as a conduit

between manufacturing equipment

and the Advantech server-side software.

This solution can interoperate with

high-level applications such as data

analytics and machine learning. This

paper details the benefits and the key

ingredients of the solution.

Key Business Objectives

Increase production line performance and

reduce operations costs without sacrificing

quality.

Business Challenge

Although large manufacturers have

been using statistical process control

and statistical data analysis to optimize

production for years, the extreme

complexity of today’s data provides

opportunities to deploy new approaches,

infrastructure, and tools. The challenge

is figuring out how to cost-effectively unify

device management, control, and data

analytics.

In addition, manufacturers need a real-

time device management platform that

enables them to address maintenance

issues on a timely basis. Today, there are

many disparate manufacturing sy

with their own management tools,

makes maintenance cumbersome

time consuming.

Solution Beneits

Revolutionizing

factory

equip

management in the IoT era, the Adva

SUSIAccess remote management sy

delivers the following advantages:

• Reduced Total Cost of Owner

(TCO):

Saving time for mainten

personnel, centralized remote monit

continuously checks factory floor de

and sends alerts to their mobile de

as needed. Power usage may be low

by automatically powering systems o

according to a preset schedule.

•Improved

Production

Performance:

Machine data aggreg

by the SUSIAccess server is proce

by big data analytics to uncover wa

increase product yields, improve

predictive maintenance, and ide

manufacturing problems more quickl

• Easy Integration:

The sol

provides a comprehensive, seam

device monitoring and control system

Increasing Production Line Performance and

Reducing Operations Costs with IoT Technologies

Advantech-Intel

20

ngineers never lose sight of

the need to deliver projects

that hit the quality, schedule and

budget targets. You can apply the

lessons learned by the community of

embedded system developers over

the years to ensure that your next

embedded system project achieves

those goals. Let’s explore some

important lessons that have led to best

practices for embedded development.

THINK SYSTEMATICALLY

Systems engineering is a broad

discipline covering development

of everything from aircraft carriers

and satellites, for example, to the

embedded systems that enable their

performance. We can apply a systems

engineering approach to manage

the embedded systems engineering

life cycle from concept to end-of-life

disposal. The first stage in a systems

plan defines the engineering life cycle

for the system and the design reviews

that the development team will

perform, along with expected inputs

and outputs from those reviews. The

plan sets a clear definition for the

project management, engineering

and customer communities as to the

sequence of engineering events and

the prerequisites at each stage. In

short, it lays out the expectations

and deliverables. With a clear

understanding of the engineering

life cycle, the next step of thinking

systematically is to establish the

requirements for the embedded

system under development. A good

requirement set will address three

areas. Functional r quirements define

how the embedded system performs.

Nonfunctional requirements define

such aspects as regulatory compliance

and

reliability.

Environmental

(for example, EMI and EMC). Within

a larger development effort, those

requirements will be flowed down

and traceable from a higher-level

specification, such as a system or sub-

system specification (Figure 1). If there

is no higher- level specification, we

must engage with stakeholders in the

development to establish a clear set

of stakeholder requirements and then

use those to establish the embedded

system requirements.

Generating a good requirement set

requires that we put considerable

thought into each requirement to

ensure that it meets these standards:

1. It is necessary.

Our project

cannot achieve success without the

requirement.

2. It is verifiable.

We must

E

A Recipe for

Embedded Systems

Adam Taylor, e2v

he advantages over traditional

circuits include less bo rd

space and lower cost.

The highway addressable remote

transducer (HART) protocol allows for

bi-directional 1.2/2.2-kHz frequency

shift keying (FSK) modulated digital

communication over traditional

analog 4- to 20-mA current loops.

This allows for interrogation of

the sensor/actuator, and provid s

significant

advantages

during

equipment installation, monitoring

and maintenance. HART provides

benefits to m intenance crews using

a portable secondary device to

interrogate the sensor/actuator. But

to fully realize all the benefits HART

can bring, the sensor/act ator must

be connect d to a contro system

with HART ena led current inputs or

outputs.

Let's focus on the HART FSK transmit

circuitry. Figure 1 shows a traditional

approach. Rsense converts the 4- to

20-mA signal to a 1- to 5-V signal to

be read by an ADC. The HART FSK

transmit circuitry AC couples ±500-mV

HART FSK signals to the 4- to 20-mA

loop via C1. These signals are either

sinusoidal or trapezoidal waveforms.

A good buffer with enough drive

strength is required at the HART

modem's output as the Rsense

represents a low impedance and there

may also be significant capacitance

on the current loop cabling. When

the HART isn't transmitting, the buffer

output would present a low impedance

to the loop which could compromise

the 4- to 20-mA signaling. For this

reason the switch, SW1, is used

in series with the buffer output to

provide a high impedance when not

transmitting.

The 4- to 20-mA loop can swing

betwee 1 and 5 V while SW1 is open.

As this change is AC coupled to SW1,

the switch could see up to ±4 V at its

input. Hence, a bi-polar supply of ±5

V or more would be required for the

switch, or alternately an opto-switch

could be used. A tri-state buffer is

anoth option, though gain this

buffer would require bi-pol

Another option is to use

isolat on. Given the H

frequencies, an audio

would be required which is

bulky and consume a larg

board area.

Figure 2 shows an impr

FSK transmit circuitry de

reduces space and co

circuit, the AD5700 HART

enough drive strength t

±500 mV FSK signals di

the current loop without t

an external buffer. When

isn't transmitting, the AD

output is biased to 0.75V

impedance. R2, R3 provid

0.75-V ias, ith AC im

R2||R3 = 1.7 kΩ. The

filter formed by the this

C1 ensures that the wor

20-mA input signal, which

at 25 Hz across the 200

only results in the HART

output being drive to bet

1.5 V. This means that the

T

Design an optimized circuit for HART-

enabled 4- to 20-mA inputs

DERRICK HARTMANN & MICHAL BRYCHTA, ANALOG DEVICES

www. new- techeurope . com

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