© 2005 HART Communication Foundation
© 2005 HART Communication Foundation
© 2005 HART Communication Foundation
HART® is a registered trademark of the HART Communication Foundation. Any use of the word “HART” hereafter in this
document implies the registered trademark. All other trademarks used in this document are acknowledged to be trademarks of their
respective companies.
Preface
In today’s competitive environment, all companies seek to reduce operation
costs, deliver products rapidly, and improve product quality. The HART®
(highway addressable remote transducer) protocol directly contributes to
these business goals by providing cost savings in:
T Commissioning and installation
T Plant operations and improved quality
T Maintenance
Theory of Operation
The following sections explain the basic principles behind the operation of
HART instruments and networks:
T Communication Modes
T Frequency Shift Keying
T HART Networks
T HART Commands
Communication Modes
MASTER-SLAVE HART is a master-slave communication protocol, which means that during
MODE normal operation, each slave (field device) communication is initiated by a
master communication device. Two masters can connect to each HART
loop. The primary master is generally a distributed control system (DCS),
programmable logic controller (PLC), or a personal computer (PC). The
secondary master can be a handheld terminal or another PC. Slave devices
include transmitters, actuators, and controllers that respond to commands
from the primary or secondary master.
BURST MODE Some HART devices support the optional burst communication mode.
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).
The master receives the message at the higher rate until it instructs the slave
to stop bursting.
Use burst mode to enable more than one passive HART
device to listen to communications on the HART loop.
20 mA
Digital
Signal
“1” “0”
“1”
“1” “0”
“1”
“0” “0”
“1”
Analog
Signal
4 mA
Time
Note: Drawing not to scale.
HART Networks
HART devices can operate in one of two network configurations—point to
point or multidrop.
Control System
Multiplexer or Other Host
Application
Barrier
Handheld Terminal
Field Device
HART Networks
MULTIDROP The multidrop mode of operation requires only a single pair of wires and, if
applicable, safety barriers and an auxiliary power supply for up to 15 field
devices (Figure 3). All process values are transmitted digitally. In
multidrop mode, all field device polling addresses are >0, and the current
through each device is fixed to a minimum value (typically 4 mA).
Use multidrop connection for supervisory control
installations that are widely spaced, such as
pipelines, custody transfer stations, and tank farms.
Handheld Terminal
Input/Output (I/O)
System
Field Devices
HART Commands
The HART command set provides uniform and consistent communication
for all field devices. The command set includes three classes: universal,
common practice, and device specific (Table 1). Host applications may
implement any of the necessary commands for a particular application.
UNIVERSAL All devices using the HART protocol must recognize and support the
universal commands. Universal commands provide access to information
useful in normal operations (e.g., read primary variable and units).
DEVICE SPECIFIC Device-specific commands represent functions that are unique to each field
device. These commands access setup and calibration information, as well
as information about the construction of the device. Information on
device-specific commands is available from device manufacturers.
SUMMARY TABLE
Universal Commands Common Practice Commands Device-Specific Commands
• Read manufacturer and • Read selection of up to four • Read or write low-flow cut-off
device type dynamic variables • Start, stop, or clear totalizer
• Read primary variable (PV) • Write damping time constant • Read or write density calibration
and units • Write device range values factor
• Read current output and • Calibrate (set zero, set span) • Choose PV (mass, flow, or
percent of range • Set fixed output current density)
• Read up to four predefined • Perform self-test • Read or write materials or
dynamic variables construction information
• Perform master reset
• Read or write eight-character • Trim sensor calibration
tag, 16-character descriptor, • Trim PV zero • PID enable
date • Write PV unit
• Write PID setpoint
• Read or write 32-character • Trim DAC zero and gain
message • Valve characterization
• Write transfer function (square
• Read device range values, root/linear) • Valve setpoint
units, and damping time • Write sensor serial number • Travel limits
constant • User units
• Read or write dynamic variable
• Read or write final assembly assignments • Local display information
number
• Write polling address
HART Commands
ESTABLISHING Each HART device has a 38-bit address that consists of the manufacturer
COMMUNICATION ID code, device type code, and device-unique identifier. A unique address
is encoded in each device at the time of manufacture. A HART master must
WITH A HART know the address of a field device in order to communicate successfully
DEVICE with it. A master can learn the address of a slave device by issuing one of
two commands that cause the slave device to respond with its address:
T Command 0, Read Unique Identifier—Command 0 is the preferred
method for initiating communication with a slave device because it
enables a master to learn the address of each slave device without user
interaction. Each polling address (0–15) is probed to learn the unique
address for each device.
T Command 11, Read Unique Identifier by Tag - Command 11 is useful
if there are more than 15 devices in the network or if the network
devices were not configured with unique polling addresses.
(Multidropping more than 15 devices is possible when the devices are
individually powered and isolated.) Command 11 requires the user to
specify the tag numbers to be polled.
DEVICE Some HART host applications use device descriptions (DD) to obtain
DESCRIPTION information about the variables and functions contained in a HART field
device. The DD includes all of the information needed by a host application
to fully communicate with the field device. HART Device Description
Language (DDL) is used to write the DD, that combines all of the
information needed by the host application into a single structured file. The
DD identifies which common practice commands are supported as well as
the format and structure of all device-specific commands.
A DD for a HART field device is roughly equivalent to a printer driver for a
computer. DDs eliminate the need for host suppliers to develop and support
custom interfaces and drivers. A DD provides a picture of all parameters
and functions of a device in a standardized language. HART suppliers have
the option of supplying a DD for their HART field product. If they choose
to supply one, the DD will provide information for a DD-enabled host
application to read and write data according to each device’s procedures.
DD source files for HART devices resemble files written in the C
programming language. DD files are submitted to the HCF for registration
in the HCF DD Library. Quality checks are performed on each DD
submitted to ensure specification compliance, to verify that there are no
conflicts with DDs already registered, and to verify operation with standard
HART hosts. The HCF DD Library is the central location for management
and distribution of all HART DDs to facilitate use in host applications such
as PCs and handheld terminals.
Additional information, not provided by the DD, may be required by some
host applications for screen formatting and other uses.
COST SAVINGS IN HART-based field devices can be installed and commissioned in a fraction
COMMISSIONING of the time required for a traditional analog-only system. Operators who
use HART digital communications can easily identify a field device by its
tag and verify that operational parameters are correct. Configurations of
similar devices can be copied to streamline the commissioning process. A
loop integrity check is readily accomplished by commanding the field
transmitter to set the analog output to a preset value.
COST SAVINGS IN The HART protocol supports the networking of several devices on a single
INSTALLATION twisted wire pair. This configuration can provide significant savings in
wiring, especially for applications such as tank monitoring.
Use HART multidrop mode to connect multiple instruments to
a single cable and reduce installation costs.
Some HART field devices store historical information in the form of trend
logs and summary data. These logs and statistical calculations (e.g., high
and low values and averages) can be uploaded into a software application
for further processing or record keeping.
Operational Flexibility
The HART protocol allows two masters (primary and secondary) to
communicate with slave devices and provide additional operational
flexibility. A permanently connected host system can be used
simultaneously, while a handheld terminal or PC controller is
communicating with a field device (Figure 5).
Analog
HART Interface
Digital Data
(2–3 updates
per second)
COMPATIBILITY OF As HART field devices are upgraded, new functions may be added. A basic
HART REVISIONS premise of the HART Protocol is that new HART instruments must behave
in precisely the same manner as older versions when interfaced with an
earlier revision host system.
Digital Communication
A digital instrument that uses a microprocessor provides many benefits.
These benefits are found in all smart devices regardless of the type of
communication used. A digital device provides advantages such as
improved accuracy and stability. The HART protocol enhances the
capabilities of digital instruments by providing communication access and
networking (Table 2).
CABLE LENGTH Most installations are well within the 3,000 meter (10,000 ft) theoretical
limit for HART communication. However, the electrical characteristics of
the cable (mostly capacitance) and the combination of connected devices
can affect the maximum allowable cable length of a HART network. Table
3 shows the affect of cable capacitance and the number of network devices
on cable length. The table is based on typical installations of HART
devices in non-IS environments, i.e. no miscellaneous series impedance.
Detailed information for determining the maximum cable length for any
HART network configuration can be found in the HART Physical Layer
Specifications.
Intrinsic Safety
Intrinsic safety (IS) is a method of providing safe operation of electronic
process-control instrumentation in hazardous areas. IS systems keep the
available electrical energy in the system low enough that ignition of the
hazardous atmosphere cannot occur. No single field device or wiring is
intrinsically safe by itself (except for battery-operated, self-contained
devices), but is intrinsically safe only when employed in a properly
designed IS system.
Zener Barrier
Power Supply
1–5 V Output
Transmitter Signal
Intrinsic Safety
HAZARDOUS SIDE SAFE SIDE
Power
Isolator Supply
1–5 V Output
4–20 mA Signal
Transmitter
Intrinsic Safety
While it is difficult to meet the two requirements noted above for a network
using shunt-diode barriers, it can be done. Following are two possible
solutions to the problem:
1. Shunt the load resistor with a large inductor so that the load resistor
impedance is still high (and mainly resistive) at HART signal
frequencies, but much lower at direct current. This solution, while it
does work, is physically somewhat inconvenient.
2. Use an IS isolator rather than a shunt-diode barrier. The output voltage
on the hazardous side is usually specified as greater than X Vdc at
20 mA (typically 14–17 V). This value already includes the voltage
drop due to the internal safety resistor, so the only extra voltage drop is
that due to cable resistance. System operation at 22 mA requires
reducing the 20 mA voltage by 0.7 V (340 Ω × 2 mA).
Intrinsic Safety
MULTIDROP IS HART multidrop networks are particularly suitable for intrinsically safe
NETWORKS installations. With a multidrop configuration, fewer barriers or isolators are
required. In addition, because each field device takes only 4 mA (for a total
of 16 mA in a four-device loop), plain zener barriers can be used. With a
250 Ω load, 25 V – (340 + 250 Ω) × 16 mA = 15.5 V, which is well above
the transmitter lift-off voltage and leaves a margin for cable resistance.
IS OUTPUT LOOPS For output devices such as valve positioners, direct-current voltage
considerations will vary depending on the drive requirements of the device.
Zener barriers may be possible. If not, modern HART-compatible output
isolators are appropriate.
IS NETWORK The cable length calculation must include the resistance of both the zener
CABLE LENGTH barrier and the load resistor.
CALCULATIONS
Master Device
Modem
Auxiliary Power
Supply
Transmitters
Handheld
Terminal Computer or
DCS
Power HART Interface
Supply Power Supply
Impedance
4–20 mA
+ – + – + – + – + – + –
HART
Transmitter
Control Valve
CONFIGURING Using the polling address structure of the HART protocol, up to 15 devices
DEVICES FOR can be connected in a multidrop network. The analog current of a HART
device can be fixed by setting its polling address to a number other than
MULTIDROP zero. With the HART protocol, each field instrument should be configured
OPERATION with different polling addresses or tag numbers before being connected to a
multidrop network—otherwise, the master will not be able to establish
communication with the slave devices.
HART I/O Many HART-compatible I/O subsystems have multiple analog channels on
SUBSYSTEMS each I/O card. Suppliers choose whether to provide one HART interface per
channel or to share one HART interface among several channels. The
number of shared channels per HART interface impacts the frequency of
data updates from a HART field device and the HART functionality that is
supported.
HART I/O FOR For the best performance and flexibility, one HART interface should be
MULTIDROP dedicated to each I/O channel. Systems that share only one HART interface
among several I/O channels may not support multidrop networks. The
SUPPORT effective update rate of a multiplexed interface is slow enough that the
performance of multiplexed multidrop networks would not be practical.
Some suppliers enable multidrop support by fixing the HART interface to
one specific I/O channel. However, the other channels on that card may
then not be available for HART communications.
HART I/O FOR Burst mode is an optional implementation in a field device. Receiving burst
BURST MODE mode messages is optional in a host as well. To take full advantage of burst
mode, the I/O system should have one HART interface for each channel. If
SUPPORT the HART interface is shared by more than one channel, messages sent by
the field device may not be detected by the control system. If the system
does not have the ability to configure burst mode in the field device, a
handheld terminal or other configuration tool is required.
GATEWAYS Gateways can be used to bring HART digital data into control systems that
do not support HART-capable I/O. Some systems support HART gateways
with communication protocols such as Modbus, PROFIBUS DP, or TCP/IP
Ethernet. The typical HART gateway supports all universal commands and
a subset of the common practice commands. Support varies depending on
the gateway supplier. Some gateways support access to device-specific
information.
Multiplexers
HART-compatible multiplexers are ideal for users who want to interface
with a large number of HART devices. Multiplexers can be modular and are
capable of supporting both point-to-point and all-digital (multidrop) HART
communication modes. Communication between a multiplexer and a host
application depends on the multiplexer capabilities (e.g., RS232C, RS485,
Modbus, and TCP/IP Ethernet).
When installing HART multiplexer systems, the following capabilities
should be considered:
T Number of HART channels supported
T Number of HART channels that share a HART modem
T Burst mode support
T Multidrop support
T Method of communication with the host computer or control system
MULTIPLEXER AS HART multiplexers can be used as the primary I/O front end for a
THE PRIMARY I/O HART-based control or monitoring system (Figure 10). Typically, a PC acts
as the host, providing the human-machine interface and performing other
SYSTEM high-level functions. The multiplexer continuously monitors the field
devices, reports the current readings and instrument status to the host, and
passes HART commands from the host computer to the field devices.
Multiplexer
Field
Devices
SCADA
Field Device
PARALLEL When a traditional 4–20 mA control system is using the analog signals for
MONITORING WITH measurement and control outputs, a HART multiplexer can be added to the
network to gain access to the digital HART signal. Using a multiplexer
A MULTIPLEXER enables a supervisory computer to monitor diagnostics and device status,
access configuration information, and read any additional process inputs or
calculations not provided by the 4–20 mA signal.
Multiplexers
Use a HART multiplexer to gain access to the digital
HART signal.
Automation and
Display System
Supervisory
Controllers Computer
I/O
Transmitter Multiplexer
Control Valves
Controller
I/O
HART The Tri-Loop module monitors a HART loop for a bursting message and
DATA-CONVERSION converts three of the four possible variables in HART command number
three to analog outputs (Figure 13). The conversion enables the field device
PRODUCTS to provide a total of four analog signals over a single pair of wires run from
the field.
.
Channel 1
4–20 mA
Channel 2 Signals for
Secondary
Channel 3 Variables
Field Terminals
Rail-Mounted
Tri-Loop Module Control System
Control
System
Process
and
Diagnostic
Data
Annunciator
Event
Recorder
PC Configuration Software
Many instrument manufacturers, as well as some independent software
developers, offer HART communication software for PCs with capabilities
similar to and beyond those offered by a HART handheld communicator.
Use special software applications to continuously
monitor the status of connected field devices and log
status changes as they occur, which may help reduce
the costs of regulatory compliance.
DEVICE Before installation, manufacturers usually enter device tags and other
VERIFICATION identification and configuration data into each field instrument. After
installation, the instrument identification (tag and descriptor) can be
verified in the control room using a configurator (handheld terminal or PC).
Some field devices provide information on their physical configuration
(e.g., wetted materials)—these and other configuration data can also be
verified in the control room. The verification process can be important in
conforming to governmental regulations and ISO quality requirements.
The commissioning process can be further streamlined by connecting a PC
configurator to each HART loop online, either by integration with the
control system or by using one of the many available HART multiplexing
I/O systems (see Multiplexers on page 26). With this centralized approach,
there is no need to move the configuration device from one termination
point to the next while commissioning all devices on the network.
LOOP INTEGRITY Once a field instrument has been identified and its configuration data
CHECK confirmed, the analog loop integrity can be checked using the loop test
feature, which is supported by many HART devices. The loop test feature
enables the analog signal from a HART transmitter to be fixed at a specific
value to verify loop integrity and ensure proper connection to support
devices such as indicators, recorders, and DCS displays.
Use the HART protocol loop test feature to check
analog loop integrity and ensure a proper physical
connection among all network devices.
PC/Host
Application
RS232 HART
Interface Handheld Terminal
Field
Device
Power
Supply
PC-Based Operator
Interface
Modbus Link
(RS232) Muiltiplexer (HART Master)
4–20 mA to
Position Valve
Bypass
Capacitor
+ Smart
Power Transmitter
Supply
Control
Resistor Valve
Industry Applications
Many companies in a wide variety of industries have already realized the
advantages of using the HART communication protocol. This section
describes some applications in detail and outlines the tangible benefits that
result. The applications have been grouped into the following sections:
T Inventory-management applications
T Cost-saving applications
T Remote-operation applications
T Open-architecture applications
Inventory-Management Applications
Accurate measurements for inventory management are essential in all
industries. The HART communication protocol enables companies to make
sure inventory management is as efficient, accurate, and low cost as
possible.
HART MULTIDROP Tank level and inventory management is an ideal application for a HART
NETWORK FOR multidrop network (Figure 19). The HART network digital update rate of
two PVs per second is sufficient for many tank-level applications. A
TANK LEVEL AND multidrop network provides significant installation savings by reducing the
INVENTORY amount of wiring from the field to the control room as well as the number
MANAGEMENT of I/O channels required. In addition, many inexpensive
process-monitoring applications are commercially available to further cut
costs.
Transmitters
Storage
Tanks
HART Field
Multiplexer
One company uses a HART multiplexer to digitally scan field devices for
level-measurement and status information. The information is forwarded to
the host application using the Modbus communication standard.
Multivariable instruments further reduce costs by providing multiple
process measurements, such as level and temperature, which reduces the
wiring and number of process penetrations required.
Inventory-Management Applications
MULTIDROP FOR In one tank farm application, 84 settlement tanks and filter beds on a very
TANK FARM large site (over 300,000 m2) are monitored using HART multidrop
networks and HART RTUs (see SCADA/RTU Systems on page 25). The
MONITORING HART architecture required just eight cable runs for 84 tanks, with 10–11
devices per run (Figure 20). Over 70 individual runs of over 500 m each
were eliminated. Cable savings were estimated at over $40,000 when
compared to a conventional installation. RTU I/O was also reduced, which
resulted in additional hardware and installation savings. The total installed
cost was approximately 50% of a traditional 4–20 mA installation.
Storage
Storage Tanks
Tanks
Inventory-Management Applications
UNDERGROUND Underground salt caverns are frequently used for crude oil storage. One
PETROLEUM customer pumps oil from barges into the storage caverns. An ultrasonic
flowmeter records the total flow. To get the oil out of the caverns, a brine
STORAGE WITH solution is pumped into the cavern through a magnetic flowmeter. Brine
HART and crude oil flowing in both directions are measured and reported to the
COMMUNICATION DCS using the HART communication protocol for accuracy. The DCS
tracks flow rate and total quantity to maintain a certain pressure inside the
FOR ACCURACY
caverns (Figure 21).
HART Transmitter
Interface
HART Transmitter
Interface
Cost-Saving Applications
Use HART multidrop networking to reduce
installation and maintenance costs.
Cost-Saving Applications
APPLIANCE A consumer appliance manufacturer used the networking capability of the
MANUFACTURING HART protocol to measure level, flow, and pressure. HART multidrop
provided substantial wiring and installation savings as well as digital
WITH MULTIDROP accuracy with the elimination of the analog to digital (A/D) and digital to
analog (D/A) conversions of the instrument and PLC I/O. Figure 22 shows
pressure transmitters connected to a PLC via smart transmitter interface
multiplexers.
Storage
Tanks
Highway
PLC
Communication
Module
Cost-Saving Applications
REMOTE The benefits of remote monitoring and rezeroing of smart transmitters
REZEROING IN A using the HART protocol are dramatically illustrated in this example of two
smart transmitters that control the fluid level in lauter tubs in a brewhouse
BREWERY application. Similar benefits would be realized in any application involving
a closed vessel.
Two smart transmitters are installed on each lauter tub—one on the bottom
of the tank and the other about nine inches from the bottom. The bottom
transmitter is ranged ±40 inH2O; the upper transmitter is ranged
0–30 inH2O. As the lauter tub is filled, the bottom transmitter senses level
based on pressure. When the level reaches the upper transmitter, that point
is marked as the new zero-level point, and the upper transmitter becomes
the primary sensing instrument for the lauter-tub level. The nine-inch
zero-level offset from the bottom of the tank is necessary to accommodate
loose grain that settles in the bottom of the tank.
Transmitters that are coordinated and working together control fluid level
in each lauter tub to within a few barrels. However, the upper transmitter
requires periodic maintenance or replacement and rezeroing. An undetected
false upper-transmitter level reading can cause a tank level error of up to
40 gallons.
The usual procedure for transmitter rezeroing takes about 95 minutes and
has been required as frequently as twice a day. Rezeroing a transmitter
using configuration software and PLC interface modules eliminates the
need to locate and identify the problem at the site as well as the need for
verification by control-room personnel and greatly reduces the chance for
inadvertent errors. Estimated total time to rezero each transmitter is
reduced to 15 minutes.
Through the configuration software’s instrument-status and diagnostic
capabilities, a false level indication can be automatically detected while a
lauter tub fill is in progress. The affected transmitter can then be
automatically rezeroed by programming logic in the programmable
controller to issue the appropriate command to the instrument.
Cost-Saving Applications
WATER HART transmitters and a control system with HART capability were
TREATMENT chosen to upgrade a water treatment facility. The completed installation
reduced capital, engineering, and installation costs. The process dynamics
FACILITY of the water treatment facility allowed the HART instruments to be used in
UPGRADE all-digital mode without compromising plant performance.
The water treatment plant is divided into two areas, each with 14 filters.
Each area is controlled by a separate control system for complete
autonomy. A HART network monitors each filter for filter level, filter bed
differential, and filter outlet flow. The multidrop installation used a
three-wire system in order to accommodate both the two-wire and the
four-wire devices (magnetic flowmeters) in use (Figure 23)
(see Multidrop on page 6).
4 mA Pressure
Transmitters
12 mA Main
Power
Magnetic
Flowmeter
4 mA
Cost-Saving Applications
IMPROVED A cleaning materials supplier required periodic checkup of the instrument
DIAGNOSTICS condition and configuration information as compared to the initial
installation. The field transmitters provided a historical record of status
changes along with current configuration information. Periodic download
of this information was made possible using PLC ladder logic developed
for HART instruments.
Remote-Operation Applications
UNMANNED Choosing the HART communication protocol for all-digital communication
OFFSHORE GAS in a wide-area network enabled one company to have real-time monitoring
and control, access to diagnostics, and maintenance capabilities—all from a
PRODUCTION WITH remote location.
HART NETWORKS
Over half of the 500 transmitters on 15 platforms could be multidropped
with update rates of three seconds (six devices), which resulted in
substantial savings in wiring, I/O, and installation. The remaining devices
(flowmeters) required a faster response and were wired point to point using
digital HART communications to transmit the process data. The flowmeters
used the optional burst mode, which provided an update rate of 3.7 times
per second. All-digital communications provided maximum accuracy and
eliminated potential errors from input scaling, conversion, and drift (see
Multidrop on page 6).
Radio Antennae
Modbus Link
HART
Multiplexers
Transmitters
Transmitters
Remote-Operation Applications
VENEZUELA In a Venezuela gas-lift project, HART multidrop technology was used for
GAS-LIFT PROJECT remote operation of offshore gas-lift production wells at considerable
savings (Figure 25):
T 30% decrease in installation costs
T 16:1 reduction of input modules
T Reduced cost of I/O cards in the RTU
T Remote reranging
T Remote access to the transmitter status for improved process uptime
Configuration
and
Maintenance
Tools
Control
Room
Electric Valve HART Transmitters
Open-Architecture Applications
OIL REFINERY The best way to judge the openness of a communication protocol is by the
EXPANSION number of products supported. By this standard, the HART protocol is
perhaps the most open of any field-communication protocol available
today.
In a major refinery expansion, an oil company weighed the advantages of
using either a proprietary system or a HART-based system. The results
indicated that the company could use HART digital instruments in 92% of
their applications, compared to only 33% with the proprietary system.
Choosing HART products resulted in an incremental $23,000 in savings
due to commissioning efficiencies and ongoing maintenance and diagnostic
capabilities.
The oil company used a traditional control system with analog I/O and
supplemented the control capability with an online maintenance and
monitoring system. All of the HART field devices were monitored from a
central location (Figure 26).
Controller
HART
Transmitter Control Valve
Fisher
Fisher
Open-Architecture Applications
HART WITHIN A HART field devices can be seamlessly integrated with PROFIBUS DP
PROFIBUS networks using the HART/DP Link, which enables the connection of four
HART devices and facilitates the passthrough of HART commands to host
NETWORK applications on the DP network (Figure 27). The HART/DP Link supports
IS installations.
PLC
PROFIBUS
DP
Profibus
PA
HART
Instruments
Open-Architecture Applications
HART/DDE Cost-effective level- and temperature-monitoring systems can be designed
SERVER using HART multidrop networks and commercially available HART/DDE
interface software. HART/DDE interface software allows any compliant
application (e.g., spreadsheet) to directly read the process data and status
information available in HART field devices. A HART interface module
connected to the PC’s serial port is needed for this HART monitoring
application (Figure 28).
Spreadsheet
Data Logging
RS232 HART
Interface
Power Supply
Transmitter
By Phone
Call 512-794-0369.
By Fax
Send correspondence to 512-794-3904.
By E-mail
Send correspondence to <hcfadmin@hartcomm.org>.
Online
Visit the HCF website at <http://www.hartcomm.org>.
Glossary
275 HART A handheld master device that uses the HART communication protocol and
Communicator DDL to configure or communicate with any HART smart device
Bell 202 A U.S. telephone standard that uses 1,200 Hz and 2,200 Hz as 1 and 0,
respectively, at 1,200 baud; a full duplex communication standard using a
different pair of frequencies for its reverse channel; HART uses Bell 202
signals but is a half-duplex system, so the reverse channel frequencies are
not used
Burst (Broadcast) Mode A HART communication mode in which a master device instructs a slave
device to continuously broadcast a standard HART reply message
(e.g., value of a process variable) until the master instructs it to stop
bursting
Cable Capacitance Per The capacitance from one conductor to all other conductors (including the
Unit of Length shield if present) in the network; measured in feet or meters
Cable Resistance Per The resistance for a single wire; meausred in feet or meters
Unit of Length
Closed-Loop Control A system in which no operator intervention is necessary for process control
Communication Rate The rate at which data are sent from a slave device to a master device;
usually expressed in data updates per second
Device Description A program file written in the HART Device Description Language (DDL)
that contains an electronic description of all of a device’s parameters and
functions needed by a host application to communicate with the device
Glossary
Field The area of a process plant outside the control room where measurements
are made, and to and from which communication is provided; a part of a
message devoted to a particular function (e.g., the address field or the
command field)
Field Device A device generally not found in the control room; field devices may
generate or receive an analog signal in addition to the HART digital
communication signal
Frequency Shift Keying Method of modulating digital information for transmission over paths with
poor propagation characteristics; can be transmitted successfully over
telephone systems
HART Command Set A series of commands that provide uniform and consistent communication
for all master and slave devices; includes universal, common practice, and
device-specific commands
HART Loop A communication network in which the master and slave devices are
HART smart or HART compatible
Host Application A software program used by the control center to translate information
received from field devices into a format that can be used by the operator
Intrinsic Safety Barrier A network or device designed to limit the amount of energy available to the
protected circuit in a hazardous location
Glossary
Master Device A device in a master-slave system that initiates all transactions and
commands (e.g., central controller)
Master-Slave Protocol Communication system in which all transactions are initiated by a master
device and are received and responded to by a slave device
Miscellaneous Series The summation of the maximum impedance (500 Hz–10 kHz) of all
Impedance devices connected in series between two communicating devices; a typical
nonintrinsically safe loop will have no miscellaneous series impedance
Multidrop Network HART communication system that allows more than two devices to be
connected together on a single cable; usually refers to a network with more
than one slave device
Multimaster Multimaster refers to a communication system that has more than one
master device. The HART protocol is a simple multimaster system
allowing two masters; after receiving a message from a slave device, the
master waits for a short time before beginning another transmission, which
gives the second master time to initiate a message
Multiplexer A device that connects to several HART loops and allows communication
to and from a host application
Multivariable Instrument A field device that can measure or calculate more than one process
parameter (e.g., flow and temperature)
Parallel Device The summation of the capacitance values of all connected devices in a
Capacitance network
Parallel Device The parallel combination of the resistance values of all connected devices
Resistance in the network; typically, there is only one low-impedance device in the
network, which dominates the parallel device-resistance value
PID Proportional-integral-derivative
Glossary
Point to Point A HART protocol communication mode that uses the conventional
4–20 mA signal for analog transmission, while measurement, adjustment,
and equipment data are transferred digitally; only two communicating
devices are connected together
Polling Address Every HART device has a polling address; address 0 is used for
point-to-point networks; addresses 1–15 are used in multidrop networks
Process Variable A process parameter that is being measured or controlled (e.g., level, flow,
temperature, mass, density, etc.)
Remote Terminal Unit A self-contained control unit that is part of a SCADA system
Slave Device A device (e.g., transmitter or valve) in a master-slave system that receives
commands from a master device; a slave device cannot initiate a transaction
Supervisory Control and A control system using communications such as phone lines, microwaves,
Data Acquisition radios, or satellites to link RTUs with a central control system