GarrettCom OSI manual Open Standard, Summary

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Profibus is supported by Siemens and has a large presence in Europe with three protocol variations. It supports various media and topologies at speeds up to 12Mbit/s. The PROFINET spin-off is discussed later.

Foundation Fieldbus is a special case that straddles proprietary and open standards. It uses OSI terminology to define its architecture and offers a wide range of topology and speed variations in its H1 definition, and uses high speed Ethernet (HSE) for its H2 definition. Using layer concepts permits a greater chance of integration because of the defined boundaries.

SUMMARY

Lower speeds and a variety of topologies characterize these networks, but Profibus, Modbus, and Foundation Fieldbus have also joined the Ethernet bandwagon. While each network is important in its own right, none can claim its physical and data link layer protocols are good interconnect strategies, and thus need some type of gateway to communicate with other industrial networks. Next up, a review of the most important open standard networks.

OPEN STANDARD

The following networks were either created to be Ethernet-based, or evolved to support Ethernet and some TCP/IP functionality.

Industrial Ethernet Protocol (Ethernet/IP) was developed by Rockwell. As the name suggests it supports Ethernet and TCP/IP. Ethernet/IP supports line, star, and tree topologies at speeds of 10Mbit/s to 1 Gbit/s.

EtherCAT was developed by Beckoff and uses a switched Ethernet protocol at 100Mbit/s over line, star, tree, and ring topologies.

FL-net(OPCN-2)is supported by JEMA (Japan Electrical Manufacturers Association) and operates at speeds of 10Mbit/s and 100Mbit/s

Modbus-IDA Ethernet TCP/IP is an implementation of Rockwell’s Modbus network that operates over Ethernet and TCP/IP. It operates at speeds of 10Mbit/s to 1 Gbit/s over star, tree, and line topologies.

Ethernet Powerlink was developed by B&R and supports TCP and UDP interfaces and runs at speeds of 10Mbit/s to 1 Gbit/s over star, bus, tree, and line topologies.

PROFINET runs over Ethernet and uses TCP for non-real-time applications at 100 Mbit/s over star, bus, tree, and line topologies.

Distributed with permission of author by ISA 2006

Presented at ISA EXPO 2006

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Contents Industrial Network Track Multi-Bus GarrettCom, Inc 47823 Westinghouse Drive Fremont, CAINDUSTRIAL NETWORKS AND BUSES Industrial Network Track Multi-BusAuthor Jim W. Hammond - Technical Consultant, GarrettCom, Inc Keywords Network integration, Ethernet, TCP/IP, field buses, topologyPage OPEN STANDARD SUMMARYINDUSTRIAL ETHERNET NETWORK INTEGRATION Integrated Substation NetworkGATEWAYS TOPOLOGY AND REDUNDANCY USING ETHERNET TO NETWORKSECURITY VIRTUAL LAN VLAN SUPPORT SUMMARY ON BUS STRATEGIES BIBLIOGRAPHY