<p><p>WirelessHART: Real-Time Mesh Network for Industrial Automation presents the WirelessHART Standard in detail and wireless industrial automation in general. This book strives to facilitate the adoption of wireless technology in industrial automation, and introduces the research potential of the
WirelessHART™: Real-Time Mesh Network for Industrial Automation
✍ Scribed by Deji Chen, Mark Nixon, Aloysius Mok
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 282
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The process control industry has seen generations of technology advancement, from pneumatic communication to electrical communication to electronic c- munication, from centralized control to distributed control. At the center of today’s distributed control systems are operator workstations. These operator wo- stations provide the connection between those overseeing and running plant operations to the process itself. With each new generation of products the operator workstation has become increasingly more intelligent. Newer applications provide advanced alarming, control, and diagnostics. Behind all of these applications are smarter devices. These smart devices provide greater process insight, reduce en- neering costs, and contribute to improving the overall operational performance of the plant. Smart devices include advanced diagnostics that can report the health of the device and in many cases, the health of the process that the device is connected to. It is not uncommon for smart devices to include diagnostics that can detect plugged lines, burner flame instability, agitator loss, wet gas, orifice wear, leaks, and cavitations. These devices tell the user how well they are operating and when they need maintenance. Improvements in sensor technology and diagnostics have lead to a large variety of smart devices. So how do users connect the capabilities of these smart devices to their existing control system infrastructures? The answer is wireless. Wireless technology has matured to the point that it now can be safely applied in industrial control, monitor, and asset management applications.
✦ Table of Contents
WirelessHART™
Acknowledgements
Table of Contents
Table of Figures
List of Tables
Introduction
PART I WirelessHART in a Nutshell
Chapter 1 Overview
Chapter 2 Physical Layer
Chapter 3 Data Link Layer
Chapter 4 Network Layer and Transport Layer
Chapter 5 Application Layer
Chapter 6 WirelessHART Network
PART II WirelessHART in Depth
Chapter 7 An Example
Chapter 8 Discourses on the Stack
Chapter 9 Discourses on the Mesh Network
Chapter 10 Discourses in General
PART III WirelessHART in Practice
Chapter 11 Test and Diagnostic Tools
Chapter 12 A Fast Approach to Equip a HART Device with WirelessHART Capability
Chapter 13 Development Recommendations
Chapter 14 Deployment Recommendations
PART IV WirelessHART in the Bigger Picture
Chapter 15 Why WirelessHART
Chapter 16 Wireless and Real-Time Industrial Process Control
Chapter 17 Research in Real-Time WirelessMesh Networks
Chapter 18 Future of Wireless and theWirelessHART Standard
PART V Appendices
Chapter 19 Attribute and Field Values
Chapter 20 Symbols and Abbreviations
Chapter 21 Definitions
Chapter 22 References
Index
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This dissertation proposes and investigates an isochronous wireless network for industrial control applications with guaranteed latencies and jitter. Based on a requirements analysis of real industrial applications and the characterisation of the wireless channel, the solution approach is deve
<P>This book presents a guideline for EWMA filter design for industrial wireless networked control system, both theoretically and practically. The filter’s key advantages are simple, effective, low computational overhead. This book also provides a guideline for practical implementation of EWMA filte
This digital edition includes the increasingly popular wireless application Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) and also provides a clear, unbiased view of the emerging wireless communications market. The author explores wireless communications from the factory and process automation viewpoint to