Cutler-Hammer: Learning Module 26: Devicenet
Cutler-Hammer: Learning Module 26: Devicenet
Cutler-Hammer: Learning Module 26: Devicenet
Cutler-Hammer
DEVICENET
WELCOME
Welcome to Module 26, which is about DeviceNet, a communication protocol that allows individual devices (starters, photoelectric sensors, scanners, etc.) to communicate with the network controller. DeviceNet users may choose either an industrial Personal Computer (iPC) or a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) as their controller. DeviceNet allows its users to replace large amounts of wiring with a single cable. It also introduces small chips onto each device to enable communication and allow the devices to gather diagnostic information. Like the other modules in this series, this one presents small, manageable sections of new material followed by a series of questions about that material. Study the material carefully, then answer the questions without referring back to what youve just read. You are the best judge of how well you grasp the material. Review material as often as you think necessary. The most important thing is establishing a solid foundation to build on as you move from topic to topic and module to module.
Key points are in bold. Glossary terms are underlined and italicized the first time they appear. You may view definitions of glossary items by clicking on terms and words that are underlined and italicized in the text. You may also browse the Glossary by clicking on the Glossary bookmark in the left-hand margin.
DEVICENET
Introduction The Purpose Of DeviceNet Diagnostics Hot Insertion Input/Output (I/O) Devices
4 5 5 5 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 20 22 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
DeviceNet Advantages Or, Why Buy DeviceNet? Where DeviceNet is Used DeviceNet In The Workplace Open Architecture Open DeviceNet Vendor Association (ODVA) Advantages of Open Architecture
Review 1 The Elements Of DeviceNet A CAN-Based System The Basics of CAN Intelligent Control Devices Software
DeviceNet In The Workplace Review 2 The Physical Media Of DeviceNet Cables Connecting Devices to the Cable Computer/PLC Network Scanner Card Cabling Connectors Intelligent Network Devices Standard Devices
DEVICENET
Section Title
Page Number
General Characteristics of DeviceNet Communication Rates and Distances Maximum Distances UL Ratings Node Count Terminating Resistors
24 24 25 25 26 27 29 30 31 31 31 32 32 32 33 33 34 35 36
Standards Power Supplies Products For DeviceNet Enhanced Performance of DeviceNet Products Over Conventional Products Photoelectric Sensor Tubular Inductive Proximity Sensor Limit-Switch Style Photoelectric/ Proximity Sensor Limit Switch Sensor I/O Blocks Starters
DEVICENET
INTRODUCTION
During the Industrial Revolution of the 18th-and 19th-centuries, many traditionally manual processes were taken over by machines. These early machines relied on gears and pulleys to work and were, by our standards, extremely primitive. The first major breakthrough in the development of control systems came with the invention of electrically powered machines. The first control systems were developed in the early years of the 20th century and used sequential relay circuits for machine control (see the Relay Control Module for more information). A major technical breakthrough in its day, and still used in some plants today, relay technology enabled machines to work faster and more safely. Relay circuits performed their job very well, but they required large amounts of floor space, and huge amounts of energy. Adding to their drawbacks as the basis for a machine control system, relay circuits also took a long time to install, troubleshoot, and modify. Finally, in the early 1970s, a device was developed to replace sequential relay circuits: the Programmable Logic Controller (PLC). As you will remember from reading about them in Module 24, PLCs are more reliable, faster, more flexible and more efficient than relay-based systems. For example, PLCs are cheaper and easier to wire and maintain than relays. Furthermore, when it comes to troubleshooting, PLCs are much quicker than relays at testing and debugging the program. PLCs are used in all kinds of industries. In fact, almost any industrial process that uses electrical control needs a PLC. For example, let's assume that when a switch turns on we want to turn a solenoid on for 5 seconds and then turn it off regardless of how long the switch is on for. We can do this with a simple external timer. But what if the process included 10 switches and solenoids? We would need 10 external timers. What if the process also needed to count how many times the switches individually turned on? We need a lot of external counters. With a PLC, however, we can dispense with those unwieldy timers and counters, and simply program the PLC to count its inputs and turn the solenoids on for the specified time. PLCs, then, offered a significant advance on relay-based control systems. Now, in the 1990s, field communications networks have emerged to offer an advance on PLC based control systems. Field communications networks take advantage of microprocessor technology and help fill industrys need for smarter devices with more diagnostic capabilities, and further reductions in the cost of installation, wiring, and troubleshooting. Several major vendors in the control business have developed field communications networks. DeviceNet is one of those networks. DeviceNet is an open network designed to replace large, complex wiring schemes with a simple trunk and branch structure, while also providing a highlevel of diagnostics to each device on the network. DeviceNets open network architecture allows products from different vendors to communicate and work together. Open Architecture means users can easily add incremental devices to an existing or planned installation. DeviceNet is able to work with either a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) or an industrial Personal Computer (iPC) as the controller.
DEVICENET
You get the attention of end users if you can reduce operating costs, increase profitability and enhance competitive advantage. The four main areas in which you can achieve these things are: installation, maintenance, troubleshooting, and downtime. DeviceNet brings advantages in each of these four areas. For example, DeviceNet reduces set-up and installation times because of its simplified multi-drop wiring scheme and the elimination of point-to-point wiring. DeviceNet can also reduce potential wiring errors and the time it takes to fix them. This may decrease wiring costs by a factor of three or four. Just as it saves time and money when it comes to installation, DeviceNet also offers significantly lower on-going maintenance costs because its smart devices can detect a problem before it causes serious damage, loss of product, or downtime.
Diagnostics
By placing micro-processors on each device, we have added a form of intelligence to them. We take advantage of this intelligence by having each device monitor both itself and any associated devices (such as motors, pumps, or drives) for signs of wear, damage, or failure. Having diagnostics in devices reduces downtime by alerting operators immediately when a device fails. We can also use diagnostics to monitor devices for potential problems and correct them before they shut down our system. How can having devices all linked on DeviceNet make them that much better if the device is doing the same task as it used to do? Well, DeviceNet was designed with hot insertion and removal of components in mind. For example, a photo-electric sensor can have its focus changed online, so it can adapt to different tasks without shutting down the operations to set a new configuration. If there is a problem, a device is smart enough to tell the engineers that it is no longer reliable, so the problem can be resolved almost immediately. And to correct the problem, the operations no longer have to be shut down for re-wiring. They simply unscrew the faulty device and screw in the new DeviceNet-compatible device. This on-the-fly replacement is called hot-wire insertion because power can still be connected and the machine can still be running while repairs are made. Downsized engineering departments view smart I/O as a time-saver. DeviceNet instruments have database ability, can be calibrated in the field, and can perform remote diagnostics. DeviceNets plug and play capability, improved troubleshooting, and diagnostics down to the node level all contribute to reduce downtime. And increased intelligence in the nodes doesnt just save users time, along with distributed logic it can also eliminate the need for separate controllers for many applications. Finally, on top of all the time- and cost-efficiencies it offers, DeviceNet will help plants comply with quality, ISO 9000 regulatory and safety standards.
Hot Insertion
DEVICENET
Before we continue, lets summarize the advantages DeviceNet offers: DEVICENET ADVANTAGES Reduced set-up and installation times because of a simplified multi-drop wiring OR, WHY BUY scheme and the elimination of point-to-point wiring. DeviceNet can also reduce DEVICENET? potential wiring errors and the time it takes to fix them. This may decrease wiring costs by a factor of three or four. Significantly lower on-going maintenance costs. Smart devices can detect a problem before it causes serious damage, loss of product, or downtime. Reduced downtime due to diagnostics down to the node level. Downsized engineering departments view smart I/O as a time-saver. For example, instruments have database ability, can be calibrated in the field, and can perform remote diagnostics. Plug and play capability, as well as improved troubleshooting and diagnostics, reduces downtime. DeviceNet will help plants comply with quality, ISO 9000 regulatory and safety standards. Ability to easily add incremental devices to an existing or planned installation. Increased intelligence in the nodes, distributed logic, will eliminate the need for separate controllers for many applications.
DEVICENET
To understand where DeviceNet is used, we first need to understand how WHERE DEVICENET IS DeviceNet fits into the overall structure of control systems. USED
As the diagram above shows, control systems can be divided into three basic levels: bit, byte, and process. BitSystems where very small (1-4 bits per device) informational packages are passed from the device to the controller. Examples of this include limit switches passing on/off data, photoelectric sensors passing active/inactive signals, and contactors sending open/closed signals. Bit-level control systems are very good at high-speed, low-diagnostics applications. Standard wired PLC systems and sensor/actuator networks fall into this level of control. ByteAt this level, each device is capable of transmitting more information. While this is typically from 0 to 8 bytes of information, the amount can be much more. This communication size provides for rapid scan times, quick response, and some diagnostic information. Examples include devices passing multiple data segments, analog signals, or status messages. Byte-level is ideal for devices such as barcode scanners and electrical current signals. ProcessLarge applications, those that might control the heating and airconditioning needs of a building, use the largest package of information that is delivered over field bus networks, called process level. The process control data can be as long as the design engineers need it to be. The public is generally unaware of the hundreds of valves, thermometers, dampers, fans, and other devices constantly in motion in a large building. Since these systems do not have to respond immediately, and there is so much data, the time it takes for all the data to make the rounds can be quite lengthy for a computer, perhaps 30 seconds or more. DeviceNet uses byte-level communications, or packages of 64 bits. This size balances network speed and data throughput to best suit manufacturing processes, where more than a hundred individual tasks can be carried out, all very quickly. You've probably seen video segments of "Robotic" assembly lines. This is the type of work carried out by networks like DeviceNet.
DEVICENET
Machine control applications make a modern auto assembly line almost unrecognizable to workers from twenty years ago. Read about this plant in Detroit and learn of how DeviceNet is helping to keep costs down and quality up. IN THE WORKPLACE
This engine plant used to run three shifts to compensate for lost production due to downtime. The control boxes alone had a special maintenance staff. With DeviceNet, downtime was no longer part of the daily plan. The cabling was easy to maintain, and control devices that were operating at marginal spec could be identified on screen and swapped out before a breakdownand without shutting down the line. Plus, the space savings from eliminating the bulky control boxes allowed the boxing and labeling station to be placed right on the factory floor, speeding up delivery of product from the factory.
Here are a few other common DeviceNet applications: Material HandlingConveyor belts and storage systems can eliminate long runs of hard-wired control; plus, the installation time is greatly reduced. PackagingAgain, significantly reduced installation time lowers start-up costs for new systems. Packaging is an industry with a lot of maintenance and downtime. The diagnostics inherent in intelligent control keep that to a minimum. Food and beverageFilling, bottling, baking, and canning machines can be tied into a monitoring program for greater efficiency and safety. Machine toolsMetal cutting, forming, and drilling operations can not only save wiring and startup costs, but with online adjustments of device parameters, reconfiguring for new jobs is a snap.
DEVICENET
OPEN ARCHITECTURE
One major advantage of DeviceNet is that it is an Open Architecture Network. What is Open Architecture and why is it a good thing? Well, as an analogy, lets think about the decisions you have to make in a situation with which many of you will be familiar: buying a stereo system. When you purchase stereo equipment, you have two basic options: buy a ready made system from one manufacturer or construct your own system by buying each component (speakers, amplifier, receiver, CD player, etc) from different manufacturers. If you buy all of the components from one manufacturer, you know that they will work together and that theres guaranteed service if something goes wrong. Of course, the drawback to buying a pre-packaged system is that it may force you to sacrifice quality for convenience. To overcome this drawback, you could choose to purchase the best component on the market for each piece of the system. Unlike before, you now get the best equipment available; however, you may have to do some additional work to get everything to work together and, if something goes wrong, you will have to call four different vendors for service. As you can tell, there are advantages and disadvantages to both the above ways of buying a stereo system. But what, you may be asking, do stereo systems have to do with DeviceNet and Open Architecture? Well, simply put, purchasers of control systems have often been in much the same boat as our stereo buyer: they could either buy everything from one company--thus having their choices limited and, potentially, making sacrifices in quality--, or they could spend time and money trying to iron out the incompatibilities of devices bought from competing suppliers. With an Open Architecture network, however, these problems are overcome: a company can choose the products and components that best fit its needs and be assured of their compatibility.
FIGURE 4: ALL DEVICENET PRODUCTS OPERATE IN AN OPEN, PUBLISHED PROTOCOL, SO ANY PRODUCT CAN "PLUG IN" TO ANY NETWORK
DEVICENET
DeviceNet is an industry-standard network, with published specifications. This means any company can build a product that meets the specifications of the DeviceNet standard, and sell it to any user with the expectation that their product will function correctly in a DeviceNet system. The Open Architecture of DeviceNet not only allows products from different vendors to communicate and work together, it also enables easy addition of incremental devices to an existing or planned installation. Open Architecture also means that DeviceNet is not controlled by one company able to charge a high price for every new component once you're locked into its system. Since users can go to many companies for products, prices come down. Secondly, as more and more companies develop products, the functionality of the system increases and more parts become inter-operableand availableworldwide. Over 240 companies belong to a group that establishes the DeviceNet standardsthe Open DeviceNet Vendor Association (ODVA). ODVA is an independent group of hardware and software companiesvendors and userswho develop and foster standards to perfect the optimal network for machine control. The Open DeviceNet Vendor Association was founded in 1995 by Cutler-Hammer, Allen-Bradley, Omron, and Hitachi. In less than two years, ODVA increased its membership companies to over 240, including Samsung, Hewlett-Packard, Molex, Sharp, Ingersoll Rand, and Mitsubishi. Membership is open to all interested individuals, groups, and companies. Two key words for ODVA are independent and standards. Together, they ensure an open market and Open Architecture for DeviceNet. ODVA activities include: Publish the ODVA catalog of products for DeviceNet Sponsor various Special Interest Groups (SIGs) to address new standards or problems Extend and maintain memberships for companies or individuals. Members make recommendations or requests for improvements to existing ideas or products Publish specifications and conducts conformance testing Advance new standards as technology moves forward
You can find out more information on ODVA on the World Wide Web at: www.odva.org
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DEVICENET
Advantages of Open Architecture Lets summarize what weve just learned. With so many companies making parts according to DeviceNet specifications: Users can choose the best devices for their system Products are more widely available, and less expensive A single communication network interfaces plant-floor devices, sensors, and actuators. This network is now an industry standard, with over 240 members producing DeviceNet products Devices are interchangeable, although individual companies may exceed industry specifications
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DEVICENET
Answer the following questions without referring to the material just presented. Begin the next section when you are confident that you understand what youve just read. 1. Identify the four areas in which DeviceNet allows users to save time and money. ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________
REVIEW 1
2. Which of the following is not a general advantage of DeviceNet over conventional systems? A. Lower wiring costs B. Open standard provides larger pool of inter-operable products C. The system can be programmed D. Devices may be diagnosed and adjusted online 3. Match DeviceNet with the correct definition of byte-level control:
A. Complex systems using hundreds of devices and allowing response times of several seconds. B. Small, very fast systems, having only a few components and using information packages of 8 characters. C. Discrete applications using up to a hundred devices while keeping response time below a few seconds. Uses an information package of 64 characters.
DeviceNet
4. What is the characteristic of ODVA that guarantees DeviceNet does not become a proprietary system? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 5. What does ODVA publish to make DeviceNet an Open Architecture? ___________________________________________________________ 6. List three advantages of Open Architecture. ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________
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DEVICENET
One way to improve your understanding of DeviceNet is to grasp the roles played by its different elements and components. Lets start by looking at what we mean when we say DeviceNet is a Control Area Network (CAN) based system. Those of you who have worked on cars (or those who have even opened their hoods and looked inside), realize that they have become more and more complex. In the1970s, you could open up your hood, identify everything inside the engine compartment, and even do some basic maintenance work. By the mid 1980s, however, cars had increased in complexity to the point where it looked like spaghetti under the hood. Most of this increased wiring was due to the addition of electric components such as power windows, locks, seats, defrosters, seat heaters, power mirrors and alarm systems. Around this time, Mercedes commissioned Bosch to develop a microprocessor chip that could replace this wiring with a simpler wiring scheme. The new wiring scheme was so successfulworking reliably under harsh conditions at extremely fast speedsthat it led the way to CAN being adopted for many other purposes. One of these is the protocol for DeviceNet.
CONTROLLER
In a conventionally wired control system, a set of wires goes to each device. Each set of wires carries all of the data for a specific device. Look at the control box above. Go ahead, pick out that faulty wiring for device number 174! The CAN chip protocol, on the other hand uses a single cable. This single cable carries the communication of all devices and also carries the power for the system. CAN also solves the problem of managing which messages have priority and how to check forand isolateerrors to protect the system.
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DEVICENET
A CAN-Based System (continued) Figure 7 below shows how the CAN frame is segmented to determine priorities and isolate errors.
Every intelligent device on the network contains a CAN chip. This provides the communication and diagnostic capabilities of the devices. If you like, you can think of the CAN chip as the brains of the component. Its the CAN chip that makes different devices from different manufacturers speak a common language. In short, its the CAN chip that makes intelligent devices intelligent.
To identify which CAN chip is on which device, we assign identifiers to each CAN chip on the network. The Media Access Control Identifier (MAC ID) is an integer identification value assigned to each node on DeviceNet. This is commonly referred to as either a device MAC ID or Node Address. No two devices on a network may have the same MAC ID assigned to them. DeviceNet takes advantage of some built in features of the CAN chip. As you just saw, the chips can prioritize messages and determine which messages have a higher priority and should transmit first. The CAN chip uses non-destructive bitwise arbitration to determine who has priority. Once arbitration is determined in the arbitration field (see the diagram above), the losing node stops transmitting and the winning node continues on uninterrupted. The CAN chip also has the ability to monitor and check each message to make sure it issues data in the proper format and with the proper content. These self-diagnostic capabilities spare engineers the task of troubleshooting a few hundred devices when something on the system stops working.
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DEVICENET
Another major feature of DeviceNet is that it gives customers a choice of controllers. With DeviceNet, customers can use either an industrial Personal Computer (iPC), or the standard Programmable Logic Controllers (PLC) that have been used in the past.
FIGURE 9: IPC
Many factors go into choosing the correct control platform. What follows is a brief comparison of some features and advantages of PLCs and iPCs. PLCs have long been used as small computers specifically geared to a task that is programmed into their code. However, the PLC code is proprietary to the company that built it. Therefore, even if the rest of the system is based on Open Architecture, when PLCs are used to store the program that gives direction to the system, that part of the system is not interchangeable with all vendors. Despite this potential disadvantage, PLCs are still useful because of their reliability, familiarity, and customer inventory. Furthermore, engineers are comfortable using them. As a result of such factors, DeviceNet has adapted itself to work with these traditional tools of industrial control. iPCs are very much like an everyday Windows - based PC that youd find on a desktop anywhere. iPCs are built to operate in a manufacturing environment and can withstand more vibration, heat, electrical noise, etc. than your average personal computer. By using iPCs, we can take advantage of Windows functionality and combine several pieces of machinery into one (Operator Interfaces, control software, Human Machine Interfaces (HMI), etc). iPCs also allow the customer a choice of control editors, which are easily transportable between different systems and vendors.
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DEVICENET
PLC Proven technology Existing products in plant Plant personnel familiar with product Expandable
iPC Greater flexibility Wide availability and interchangeability Combines control and HMI Strength in Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE), communications
These are the devices connected to the network that carry out the normal tasks of prisms, limit switches, photoelectric sensors, proximity sensors, starters, and so on. As you read in the section on CAN, intelligent devices are "intelligent" because they contain the CAN microprocessor that enables them to communicate on the DeviceNet system. Intelligent devices help an engineer to diagnose problems and make adjustments with the software, instead of "walking the line" to hunt down wire or device errors.
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DEVICENET
Software The control editor is the software that organizes and controls the network. This may be a Windows-based program, and can use flowchart code, ladder logic, or any other control language. You need configuration software to assign each component an address. In addition, software is necessary to display the system on a monitor so people can "look into" the system, see what's happening, and make changes. This software is called the Human Machine Interface, or HMI.
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DEVICENET
Read about this plant for another DeviceNet success story IN THE WORKPLACE
This thermal machining operation brand-labels components for several companies. Each product run of parts uses a slightly different configuration. On conventional systems, converting the line meant getting out the pliers and screwdriver to change parameters on all the affected devices, or swapping devices altogether. With DeviceNet this engineer simply uses the software to reset devices to accommodate the new parameters.
FIGURE 15: THERMAL MACHINING OPERATION USING DEVICENET
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DEVICENET
REVIEW 2
Answer the following questions without referring to the material just presented. Begin the next section when you are confident that you understand what youve just read. 1. DeviceNet can be run from two platforms. The first is based on conventional control systems using ladder logic. _______________ are the core of this form of DeviceNet. Computers similar to desktops PCs everywhere provide the second basic platform. In industrial use, these computers are called _______________. 2. CAN chips can prioritize messages and determine which messages have a higher priority and should transmit first. TRUE FALSE
3. Name three intelligent control devices. _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ 4. Explain how intelligent devices help reduce time spent troubleshooting problems. ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ 5. What is a Control Editor and what does it do? ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ 6. Which of the following features are advantages of PLCs and which are advantages of iPCs? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ Proven technology Existing products in plant Greater flexibility Combines control and HMI Plant personnel familiar with product Strength in Dynamic Data Exchange, communications Expandable Wide availability and interchangeability
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DEVICENET
Although a network also consists of its protocol and software, the word "network" often conjures up the image of the snakelike cabling that spreads throughout the system to physically link every device. Let's begin with the cables before showing how products connect to the system. Information is carried back and forth across the network along a cable. The cable can be strung together in any configuration, but it is typically set up with a trunk and dropline layout. This means the main cable can either connect directly to devices along the way, or have a group of devices attach to a secondary cable, which then taps into the main cable. The two cables that work together to connect a DeviceNet system are called thick cable, which is roughly " in diameter, and thin cable, which is roughly " in diameter. You can use either cable to connect a system; however the thick cable is typically used as the main cable (or trunk line), since it carries more amperage and can usefully extend for longer distances. The thin cable usually is a secondary cable, the drop line, connecting a group of devices up to the trunk line. A typical cable configuration looks like this, with the line at the top handled by the thick cable and each drop made of thin cable:
Thick cable is 0.48 in diameter and carries up to 8 amps Thin cable is 0.26 in diameter and carries up to 3 amps
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DEVICENET
Cables (continued) Below is a cross-section of the thin DeviceNet cable (the only physical difference between thick and thin cable is their diameter). The outer jacket provides a high degree of turning flexibility to wind around equipment corners. The power is a safe 24 Volts, and you can see from the temperature range that DeviceNet functions under almost any working condition.
5 wire design: 1 drain, 2 communication, 2 power cables 24 volt wire Mylar (AL/MY) insulation on power and communication pairs Industrial temperature range = -40C to +80C @ 8 Amp PVC Jacket
FIGURE 17: CROSS SECTION OF THIN CABLE
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DEVICENET
Connecting Devices to the Cable After laying out the main trunk of the cable, you connect devices and drop lines. Connectors typically connect control devices to drop lines or Input/Output ( I/O) blocks. Device taps typically connect groups of devices to a cable, or splices one cable into another (i.e., where the dropline meets the trunk). The system also has some built-in protective features. Most vendors also have designed in-wiring protection on their devices. This protects a device even if you apply the 24 VDC power to the communication line. Now, if you try applying 120 VAC to the system, it will still have some very undesirable effects! Below are illustrations of various connectors and taps, along with explanations of when to use them. Screw Connectors A screw connector is the most economical way to connect a device to the line. Control, power, and ground wires from a device insert under the clamps, which are pinned down by the screws on top. This connector is for environments that are dry and free of air-borne contaminants such as sawdust or metal filings. Sealed Connectors (Mini style) A sealed connector installs quickly to save labor costs. It also protects the connection from splashed water, debris, and windblown contaminants. A micro style is available for small devices.
FIGURE 19: SEALED CONNECTORS FIGURE 18: SCREW CONNECTORS
Device Taps Both open and sealed versions attach branches or devices to the trunk without disrupting network operations.
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DEVICENET
Now that you have a basic understanding of DeviceNet cabling, here is a walkthrough of building a system.
Either a computer or a PLC can be the controller of DeviceNet. Computers have a monitor for the Human Machine Interface, as well as hard drive capacity for data collection and storage. PLCs typically are programmed and then left to run unattended. They do not have a monitor or hard drive, although these can be added. The scanner card physically connects the DeviceNet cable to the computer or PLC. It transmits and receives messages from the devices and stores the information in memory. Each computer can have as many scanner cards as it has slots available. Each card is a separate DeviceNet network.
FIGURE 23: NETWORK SCANNER CARD
Cabling
Cabling comes in two sizes, thick and thin. Both contain two shielded, twisted pairs (power transmission, communication) and a ground wire. Cabling replaces the wiring used by traditional systems and provides both the communication path and the power to devices. It thus reduces install time and allows for easy expansion or additions. Connectors come in several varieties, including open and closed versions. The connectors string the main cable together and allow for individual or multi-port node hookups.
Connectors
64 intelligent devices can be attached to each DeviceNet system. They can communicate with each other regardless of which vendor produced them. Intelligent devices allow transmission of diagnostic information on both the devices and equipment they may be running (for example, motors, pumps, etc.). Using an "intelligent" interface block allows you to add many standard devices to the system. These devices are the same as you are currently using. They would be used when no diagnostics are required.
Standard Devices
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DEVICENET
Now lets look at some general characteristics and properties of DeviceNet. Well begin by glancing at communication rates and system lengths. Because the CAN chip was designed to operate at a variety of speed, end users can also choose to use DeviceNet at different speeds. We measure the rate of communication in number of bits (counted in 1000s) per second (KPS or K baud). The rate of communication depends on the length of the system cable. The shorter the system, the faster DeviceNet can communicate. DeviceNet has three rates of speed corresponding to the different lengths of systems: 125, 250, and 500 kbaud. In metric terms, the cable lengths are easy to remember: 500 meters, 250 meters , and 100 meters respectively if you are using thick cable for the entire trunk. The English measurement equivalents are shown in the table on the next page. The graph on the next page shows how speeds vary according to the length of thick and thin cables used in the system.
FIGURE 28: THE SHORTER THE SYSTEM, THE FASTER DEVICENET CAN COMMUNICATE
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DEVICENET
Maximum Distances Maintaining the desired communication speed also involves two additional rules for the trunk and dropline configuration: Maximum individual drop: the longest length that any one secondary cable can have Cumulative drop: the total length of all the secondary cables
The following table summarizes the distance versus speed parameters. Notice that all distances and speeds can still have 64 nodes on the line. Its also worth remembering that a system is only as fast as its slowest component.
Data Rates Number of nodes Thick cable distance Thin cable distance Maximum individual drop Cumulative drop 125 kbaud 64 1640 ft (500 meters) 328 ft (100 meters) 20 ft (6 meters) 512 ft (156 meters) 250 kbaud 64 656 ft (200 meters) 328 ft (100 meters) 20 ft (6 meters) 256 ft (78 meters) 500 kbaud 64 328 ft (100 meters) 328 ft (100 meters) 20 ft (6 meters) 128 ft (39 meters)
UL Ratings
The physical media can have a UL rating from 300-600 Volts. The rating that you need will be determined by the demands of the particular application, where you install the cable on the plant floor, what electrical and environmental conditions exist, and what work is being performed.
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DEVICENET
Node Count A node is a junction, or a collection point, on a network. It may refer to a single device, i.e., a particular limit switch. A node could also be a group of devices wired to a terminal block of inputs and outputsa block I/O. A block I/O relays the information from the devices connected to it from a single node address. There are some limits to the combinations of block I/O that can be on the network. DeviceNet can support a minimum of 64 nodes, and up to three or four times that number of objects, depending on the configuration. Here is a node connecting devices to the trunk:
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DEVICENET
Terminating Resistors Most current communication networks use terminating resistors for impedance matching along communication lines. This is true of older systems (such as Data Highway and Data Highway Plus), as well as of newer network communication systems (such as DeviceNet, Interbus-S, and Profibus DP). Without terminating resistors, there would be so much noise and interference on the line that it could shut down the control system. DeviceNet requires two terminating resistors on its network, one on each end of the trunk. The resistors are: 121 Ohm 1% Metal Film 1/4 Watt
The illustrations below show some examples of correctly and incorrectly installed resistors.
FIGURE 31: TERMINATING RESISTORS ARE REQUIRED AT EACH END OF THE TRUNK
FIGURE 32: THE RESISTORS MUST BE ATTACHED TO THE LONGEST LENGTH OF CABLE
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DEVICENET
Terminating Resistors (continued)
FIGURE 33: IF A DROP COMPLETES THE LONGEST LENGTH OF CABLE, THE RESISTOR IS ATTACHED THERE
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STANDARDS
As a way of standardizing enclosure performance, groups like National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) and International Standard (IP) have created rating systems to identify a products ability to withstand outside environmental forces. Here is a list of standards that cables and sealed connectors in DeviceNet should conform to: NEMA IP 1, 3, 4, 6, and 13 67
These NEMA enclosure standards are applied to cables and sealed connectors:
Type Designation 1 NEMA Definition
Enclosures are intended for indoor use, primarily to provide a degree of protection against contact with the enclosed equipment or locations where unusual service conditions do not exist. Enclosures are intended for outdoor use, primarily to provide a degree of protection against windblown dust, rain, and sleet; undamaged by the formation of ice on the enclosure. Enclosures are intended for indoor or outdoor use, primarily to provide a degree of protection against windblown dust and rain, splashing water, and hose-directed water; undamaged by the formation of ice on the enclosure. Enclosures are intended for use indoors or outdoors where occasional submersion is encountered. Enclosures are intended for indoor use, primarily to provide a degree of protection against dust, spraying of water, oil, and noncorrosive coolant.
6 13
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DEVICENET
POWER SUPPLIES
DeviceNet allows you to use both single and multiple power supplies, and supplies much greater current to devices than do comparable networks. By using off-the-shelf power supplies, DeviceNet also guarantees a wide accessibility of parts at a reasonable cost. Here are some details regarding the carrying capacity of the DeviceNet cabling system: Single supply current capacity of up to 16 total Amps continuous (thick trunk) Up to 8 Amps available to a device located near a power supply Note: In the United States and Canada, current is limited to a maximum of 4 Amps continuous by NEC and CECode. If a cable is placed in a conduit, this limit can be increased to 8 Amps. Up to 3 Amps available if a dropline is used Continuous power bus (not segmented) when using multiple power supplies. This means all devices can use power from any supply on the line, instead of being limited to a specified power supply. DeviceNet system is optically isolated from devices. This protection shields the system from the destructive effects of an over-voltage or over-current (short circuit) taking place at a device (okay, who dropped that limit switch into a bucket of water?)
Power supplies can be arranged in a variety of ways. Any arrangement is feasible that meets all current limits on the system and is able to supply sufficient power to all devices.
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DEVICENET
We've already mentioned some of the devices that function on DeviceNet: photoelectric sensors, limit switches, and starters. You can add motion control devices, valve manifolds, Resistance Temperature Detectors (RTDs) and hundreds of other products. Essentially, the control products that are used to automate machine control applications are still used, only they have the CAN chip inside to make them "intelligent." DeviceNet is not giving up on standard devices. They can be installed on the network and used to their full capacity utilizing intelligent Block I/O. A wide variety of intelligent products are available for DeviceNet through ODVA members. These products include, but are not limited to:
Industrial Personal Computers Programmable Logic Controllers Operator Interface Stations Motor Starters Drives (AC and DC) Servos Block I/O Push Buttons RTDS Bar Code Readers Scanner Cards Valve Manifolds Photoelectric Sensors Limit Switches Proximity Switches Motion Control Devices Analog I/O Devices Gateways
By examining the benefits offered by individual products, you can begin to estimate the advantages of intelligent control compounded over hundreds or thousands of devices in a plant. In addition to the advantages youll see outlined in the tables below, the customer also makes large savings on installation and program debugging. The following tables allow you to see a sampling of the advantages intelligent control by examining the benefits of using individual products on DeviceNet.
Conventional Use Change gain: manual DeviceNet Use Change gain: via network command Monitors for alignment/dirty lens Light/Dark operating change: manual Light/Dark operating change: via network command To replace: swap device via quick disconnect To test: force state via network Diagnostics available
Photoelectric Sensor
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DEVICENET
Tubular Inductive Proximity Sensor
Conventional Use Light/Dark operating change: manual DeviceNet Use Light/Dark operating change: via network command Target too near/too far Stray metal detection On-delay, Off-delay, one shot timing functions programmable via network To replace: swap device via quick disconnect To test: manual check To test: force state via network To identify: visual indication of node address
Conventional Use Wide variety of standard sensing heads available for use Light/Dark operating change: manual
DeviceNet Use Wide variety of standard sensing heads available for use Light/Dark operating change: via network command NOVRAM writes exceeded, power interruption notification On-delay, Off-delay, one shot timing functions programmable via network To replace: swap device via quick disconnect To test: force state via network To identify: visual indication of node address
No diagnostics available
Conventional Use Wide variety of standard sensing heads available for use No diagnostics available
DeviceNet Use Wide variety of standard sensing heads available for use Diagnostics for end of life prediction, NOVRAM writes exceeded, power interruption notification On-delay, Off-delay, one shot timing functions programmable via network To replace: swap device via quick disconnect To test: force state via network To identify: visual indication of node address
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DEVICENET
I/O Blocks
Conventional Use N.A. DeviceNet Use Reduced wiring requirements Diagnostics available to the node level and limited diagnostics to the device level Ability to be used as a power supply To identify: visual indication of node address Indicates condition of individual I/O points
Starters
Conventional Use Wiring includes 2 PLC inputs/outputs Setup requires install heaters or Dial/DIP switches 20 - 40 starters needed to cover 1 - 50 hp IEC Mounting: large control cabinet plus disconnect at motor Diagnostics limited to on/off and overload trip
DeviceNet Use Wiring includes a DeviceNet node Setup uses download set points
Diagnostics include on/off and overload trip, plus ground fault, phase unbalance, phase loss, jam trip, motor current and percent of thermal loading Motor protection (Electronic) includes overload and phase loss, plus phase unbalance, jam, ground fault, and provides a custom trip class of 10 - 60 Configuration with hand-held programmer or over network
Motor protection (Bimetal/ Eutectic) limited to overload, phase loss, and trip class 10 or 20
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DEVICENET
REVIEW 3
Answer the following questions without referring to the material just presented. 1. DeviceNet operates on a 24 V system. Thick cable can deliver a maximum of _____ amps; thin cable a maximum of _____ amps. 2. In the trunk and dropline cable configuration, what is the typical role of the dropline? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 3. DeviceNet only allows you to use single power supplies. TRUE FALSE
4. How many rates of speed does DeviceNet have? List the lengths in meters of the systems to which they correspond. ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 5. Match up these starters with their definitions.
1. conventional starter A. Motor protection: (Electronic) includes overload and phase loss, phase unbalance, jam, ground fault, and provides a trip class of 10 - 60 B. Motor protection: (Bimetal/ Eutectic) includes overload and phase loss, and provides a trip class 10 or 20
2. DeviceNet starter
6. List four types of products currently available for use on DeviceNet. a) b) c) d) _______________ _______________ _______________ _______________
7. Identify a market benefit that is not associated with DeviceNet: 1. 2. 3. 4. Replaces complex wire harnesses with single cables. Uses an inexpensive, widely available communications protocol (CAN) Operates reliably in harsh environments Allows inter-operable components to install on the system, while its under power ("hot insertion") 5. Operates process-level control to link campus-wide fire safety facilities 6. Provides self-diagnostics
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DEVICENET
GLOSSARY
Mechanism of the switch or switch enclosure which operates the contacts. A measure of communication speed. Defined as bit/second. A single unit of memory (i.e., 0 or 1). See Byte. A unit of memory storing 8 adjacent bits, and defining one alphanumeric character. The software that organizes and controls the network. This may be a Windows based program, and can use flowchart code, ladder logic, or any other control language. A communications protocol specification that defines: (1) A media access control methodology, and (2) Physical signaling. CAN is a broadcast-oriented protocol. CAN frames transmitted on the network are assigned an identifier, and each station decides, based on this identifier, whether or not it receives the frame. Cable attaching a device to the trunk cable of a DeviceNet system. Must be a thin cable. A communication protocol that allows different software to packages to pass information back and forth. Noise results from the presence of undesirable electrical voltages or current. It causes devices to operate erratically (if the noise is on the supply line to a device), or produces false information or erratic operation (if present on wires carrying signals from the output of a device to the load). Noise can be present in the supply or picked up on lines in many ways. Pick-up from noisy adjacent wires or metal parts is possible. Good wiring practice and/or additional parts can be used to diminish the effects of noise. Software package that uses a graphical interface to allow an operator to control a machine or operation. Computer specifically designed to handle harsh environments but still give all the features of a standard PC. Device that is able to transmit a higher level of information about its condition (i.e., diagnostics), and react to received information in an advanced manner (i.e., change via network command). Contact sensors used for detecting the presence or position of objects.
Human Machine Interface (HMI) Industrial Personal Computer (iPC) Intelligent Device
Limit Switch
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DEVICENET
Media Access Control Identifier (MAC ID) NEC NEMA Node An integer identification value assigned to each node on DeviceNet. This is commonly referred to as either a device MAC ID or Node Address. No two devices on a network may have the same MAC ID assigned to them. National Electrical Code. National Electrical Manufacturers Association. A junction, or a collection point, on a network. It may refer to a single device, i.e., a particular limit switch. A node could also be a group of devices wired to a terminal block of inputs and outputsa block I/O. Open DeviceNet Vendor Association. ODVA is an independent association made up of hardware and software vendors, and customers, whose purpose is to develop and foster standards for devices, software, and a network for byte level (machine control) communications. Adjustable delay (after input signal stops) before output is de-energized. Adjustable delay (after onset of input signal) before output is energized. Refers to the ability of any vendor to produce products that can communicate freely on a published standard. Non-contact sensor used for detecting the presence or absence of objects. It is turned on or off by the presence or absence of received light. The PLC is the dominant tool for plant-floor control, monitoring, and sequencing of events involving input devices and output devices. Built around a microprocessor, it is designed specifically for control. A sensor with the ability to detect the presence of a metalonly target, within a specified range, and without making physical contact. Devices often used in control. Can be opened and closed electronically to complete logic circuits. A sensing element. The basic element that usually changes some physical parameter to an electrical signal. Special Interest Groups (SIGs) are formed by two or more members with a common interest or product line, for the purpose of setting and advancing standards. The Open DeviceNet Vendor Association offers numerous SIGs to join.
ODVA, Open DeviceNet Vendor Association Off Delay Logic On Delay Logic Open Architecture Photoelectric Sensor Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) Proximity Sensor Relay Circuits Sensor Special Interest Group
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DEVICENET
Standard Device Device on a network that does not convey advanced information about its status over the network, or react to a received command in an advanced manner. In general terms, other than On/Off, standard devices must be inspected manually and have their status changed manually. A control device usually consisting of a contact and overload. With DeviceNet, it will also contain a communication module used for starting and stopping loads. The main line of communication for a DeviceNet system. It can be either thick or thin cable. A non-profit organization that establishes, maintains and operates laboratories for the examination and testing of devices, systems and materials, primarily for safety.
Starter
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DEVICENET
REVIEW 1 ANSWERS
1. Reduced set-up and installation times Lower maintenance costs Reduced downtime Eliminates need for separate controllers for many applications 2. C 3. C 4. Membership is open and the organization insures that DeviceNet is not controlled by any one company 5. Specifications 6. Any three of the following: Users can choose the best devices for their system Products are more widely available Products are less expensive Devices are interchangeable A single communication network interfaces plant-floor devices, sensors and actuators
REVIEW 2 ANSWERS
1. PLCs, iPCs 2. True 3. Any three of the following: Photoelectric sensor Limit Switch Starter Proximity sensor Prism 4. Answer should basically say They help engineers diagnose problems and make adjustments to the software without having to walk the line to find the problem. 5. Answer should basically say The control editor is the software that organizes and controls the network. 6. PLC 1, 2, 5, 7 iPC 3, 4, 6, 8
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DEVICENET
REVIEW 3 ANSWERS
1. 8, 3 2. Answer should basically say The dropline is typically a secondary cable that connects a group of devices up to the trunk line. 3. False 4. Answer should basically say DeviceNet has three rates of speed. The lengths in meters of the systems to which they correspond are 125, 250, and 500. 5. 1B, 2A 6. Any four of the following: Industrial Personal Computers Programmable Logic Controllers Operator Interface Stations Motor Starters Drives (AC and DC) Servos Block I/O Push Buttons RTDS Bar Code Readers Scanner Cards Valve Manifolds Photoelectric Sensors Limit Switches Proximity Switches Motion Control Devices Analog I/O Devices Gateways Note: Instructor should supplement the above list with Cutler Hammers current list of available DeviceNet products 7. Item #5
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Cutler-Hammer
Milwaukee, Wisconsin U.S.A.
Publication No. TR.09.02.T.E February 1999 Printed in U.S.A. (GSP) 101 Basics Series and 201 Advanced Series are trademarks of Cutler-Hammer University, Cutler-Hammer and Eaton Corp. 1999, Eaton Corp.