- Industrial Ethernet
Industrial Ethernet is the name given to the use of the
Ethernet protocol in an industrial environment, forautomation and production machine control.Until recently, a PLC (Programmable logic controller) would communicate with a slave machine using one of several possible open or proprietary protocols, such as
Modbus ,Sinec H1 ,Profibus ,CANopen ,DeviceNet orFOUNDATION Fieldbus . However, there is now increasing interest in the use of Ethernet as the link-layer protocol, with one of the above protocols as the application-layer (seeOSI model ).Some of the advantages are:
* Increased speed, up from 9.6 kbit/s withRS-232 to 1 Gbit/s withIEEE 802 over Cat5e/Cat6 cables oroptical fiber
* Increased overall performance
* Increased distance
* Ability to use standardaccess point s,router s, switches, hubs,cable s andoptical fiber , which are immensely cheaper than the equivalent serial-port devices
* Ability to have more than two nodes on link, which was possible with RS-485 but not with RS-232
* Peer-to-peer architectures may replace master-slave ones
* Better interoperabilityThe difficulties of using industrial Ethernet are:
* Migrating existing systems to a new protocol (however many adapters are available)
* Real-time uses may suffer for protocols using TCP (but some use UDP andlayer 2 protocols for this reason)
* Managing a whole TCP/IP stack is more complex than just receiving serial data
* The minimum Fast Ethernet frame size including inter-frame spacing is about 80 bytes, while typical industrial communication data sizes can be closer to 1-8 bytes. This often results in a data transmission efficiency of less than 5%, negating any advantages of the higher bitrate.
** On Gigabit Ethernet the minimum frame size is 512Bytes, reducing the typical efficiency to less than 1%.
** Some of the Industrial Ethernet protocols introduce modifications to the Ethernet protocol to improve efficiency.Main protocols
"(Note the highly ambiguous name given the Ethernet version of DeviceNet. The "IP" in EtherNet/IP stands for Industrial Protocol.)"
References
*Arndt Lüder, Kai Lorentz (Editor), IAONA Handbook Industrial Ethernet, Industrial Automation Open Networking Alliance e.V., 150 S., Magdeburg (Germany), 2005, ISBN 3-00-016934-2, free copy at handbook(at)iaona.org.
External links
* http://www.industrial-ethernet.org
* [http://www.lammermann.eu/wb/pages/arbeiten/ethernet-as-a-real-time-technology.php Lammermann.eu: Ethernet as a Real-Time Technology]
* http://www.yr20.com - Expert Industrial Ethernet Problem Solving Professionals
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