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Issue > Jan 2007 > Industry Focus
 
 
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Ethernet and AS-Interface: Ideal partners for industrial automation


( 01 Jan 2007 )

by Helge Hornis, PhD, Pepperl+Fuchs





Networking of industrial systems is a common practice today. Reliable networks allow machine builders and end users to construct powerful manufacturing and logistics systems while limiting the number of cables running between PLCs, drives, HMIs, and RFID systems. The lowest level of automation, however, where sensors, simple binary actuator and safety inputs like light curtains, door interlocks and e-stops reside, is frequently overlooked. At this level, the number of wire leads that have to be routed, stripped and terminated is staggering.



Using a suitable low-level network in conjunction with an upper-level network results in higher performance, reliability and lowest possible total cost of ownership. In a sense, the low-level network can be viewed as an intelligent, standardized wiring technology and AS-Interface has been the de-facto standard for networking simple actuators and sensors for over one decade.




Ethernet-based, upper-level devices used on Modbus/TCP, and more recently EtherNet/IP and PROFINET, have received a lot of attention. While the strength of Ethernet in conjunction with a suitable protocol is undisputed, it is also clear that it cannot satisfy every requirement necessary to be used down to the "sensor level." But combining Ethernet-based devices with AS-Interface results in a system with unparalleled performance, simplicity, and reliability.



IT TAKES TWO TO NETWORK

Ultimately, networks have one and one task only: the reliable transmission of data between networked devices. Upper level networks designed to transmit larger data packets show the following behavior.



Given random plant noise, it is clear that longer messages have a higher likelihood of being corrupted than short messages. Consequently, whenever possible a messaging protocol using many short messages is preferred over a protocol transmitting a few extremely large packets. Of course, the error detection and correction procedures built into any industrial network worth considering take over, and retransmissions will finally get a correct message to the target. Unfortunately, these retransmissions reduce the effective data throughput and have a negative impact on the possible performance.



With this in mind, it is clear that the shortness of the AS-Interface message — a message reply from an AS-Interface node is only 7bits long — results in fewer retransmissions and, thus, increases the net data throughput. On the other hand, once the I/O data is safely collected at the sensor level, combining this data for further transmission via Ethernet makes sense. The reasons are as follows:

• In contrast to Ethernet, ASInterface was designed to operate in noisy plant environments. The closer the network cable is to drives and other machine components, the higher the possible noise level. High noise immunity combined with the noise-resistant, short-message based data transmission makes AS-Interface the ideal network for sensors and actuators.

• Keeping the Ethernet cable away from the high-noise environment results in a reduced number of message repeats. Since AS-Interface is used to consolidate the data from a large number of I/O points, the inherent overhead of Ethernet is becoming less of an issue. Industrial Ethernet protocols possess very strong data verification methods, either based on the TCP part of the protocol or a secondary method used directly on the data. Combining Ethernet with AS-Interface allows users to keep the Ethernet cable away from the truly bad noise sources, thus relying less and less on message repeats.

• AS-Interface is not only a network but also a complete electromechanical installation option. As such, routing cables and connecting I/O devices could not get any simpler. ASInterface makes extensive use of insulation displacement technology, making expensive and inflexible preconfigured cables a thing of the past. And since I/O nodes are IP67 field mountable, expensive enclosures are not needed.

• Ethernet is a very fast network limited to the star topology. By including a miniature switch in each device, it is possible to construct a linear network. Both star and linear topologies are ideally suited to connect groups of systems or machines to a PLC. The star topology, and to a lesser degree the linear topology, are not ideal for collecting distributed I/O data from sensors placed on a typical automated system. Here, a more flexible network is needed and available. AS-Interface does not limit how cable can be routed. Branching off is possible at any point, and branches themselves can contain more branches that can still hold other branches.

• One of the most vulnerable cable sections in any automated system is the length connecting the sensors to the I/O nodes. This simple On/Off signal does not have any protection in terms of checksums or parity bits, so a well-designed machine uses short sensor cables, handing the data off to the network as soon as possible. This calls for a highly distributed approach where typical I/O nodes have only a few inputs. Using I/O nodes with two to four inputs makes economical sense only if those I/O nodes can be built inexpensively — a requirement that AS-Interface I/O nodes satisfies.

• AS-Interface is a deterministic system, and the I/O update time can be calculated easily.

• Highly engineered networks must be "future-proof." By combining AS-Interface at the I/O level with Ethernet at the PLC level, any enhancements to Ethernet can be quickly used. Only the gateway between AS-Interface and Ethernet must be updated; the I/O system remains unchanged.

• The total cost of an installation is always very important. With time-saving installation hardware, reduced wiring/labeling effort, a significant reduction of expensive wire, and power and data over the same cable, installation of an AS-Interface-based I/O device is extremely cost competitive.



COMBINING MAKES SENSE

Taking these factors into consideration, it is clear that AS-Interface is ideal to handle field-level I/O. While the basic principles of AS-Interface have not changed since its introduction 15 years ago, significant advancements have steadily been made, including maintaining full backward compatibility to the I/O infrastructure. Another important advancement was the introduction of AS-Interface safety at work, in 2001. Since then, e-stops, light curtains, interlock switches and many other safety devices can be part of the AS-Interface network. The solution has been approved up to Category 4 according to EN 954 and SIL3 according to IEC 61508. Combining AS-Interface with Ethernet, the safety information can now be shared across several control levels, allowing Ethernet-based control to use safety information — just another example why the two networking concepts are ideal automation partners.



About the author

Helge Hornis, PhD, is Intelligent Systems Manager at Pepperl+Fuchs,

1600 Enterprise Pkwy., Twinsburg, OH 44087; (330) 486-0001;

www.am.pepperl-fuchs.com.

 

 
 
 
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