Interstates
  Four Keys to Finishing On-Time and On-Budget  
     
 
Savings
 

Capital Projects
Energy & Operating Cost Savings
Flexibility
Project Delivery
Safety

Working with Your Utility

Value Engineering

Prove it

Resources Home

 

Energy and Operating Cost Savings
Back to Energy & Operating Cost Savings Resources

Taking the Bus
Jake Ten Haken, P.E. and Jeff White, CAP
September 2004, World Grain

In this article, you will learn how fieldbus control systems promise potential advantages in lower costs, ease of installation, greater flexibility, and improved diagnostics.

Fieldbus may not be for everyone. “The technology is still developing, and a fieldbus may be more complex to maintain. Getting the proper balance between design and installation is crucial,” explained David Krahling.

“Fieldbus” is a generic term for a digital, two-way, multi-drop (i.e. multiple devices connected to a single fieldbus cable system) communication link between intelligent control devices. The technology has become commonplace in the automotive, food and beverage and petro-chemical industries and holds potential advantages for the flour milling and grain handling industry as well.

Differences
Fieldbus differs from most conventional instruments, like valves, pressure transducers, and flow switches, which typically use analog or discrete signals to communicate; these systems allow only one-way information flow. A digital signal differs from the analog signal in that it is not a continuous signal; it is a series of “ons” and “offs,” much like the Morse code and provides two-way communication that allows the control system to respond to information received from the instrument.

With traditional analog and discrete devices, a separate cable needs to be run between the end device and the control system because only a single analog or discrete signal can be represented on the circuit. Fieldbus connects all sensors lo­cated in the same area to the same cable.

There are technologies currently used in the grain industry that are very similar to fieldbus applications. Some common uses of similar technology include various industrial busses that adhere to RS-485 or other serial communication appli­cations used on scales and flow metering equipment. These industrial busses can be applied with a multi-drop system to monitor and control numerous parameters on each scale on the system.

In addition, instruments such as continuous level monitor­ing devices may incorporate a remote I/O (Inputs/Outputs) communication standard as a method of communicating data to a control system. Rather than hard­wiring I/O from the devices individu­ally to the physical controller I/O rack, the device itself serves as a logical I/O rack.

Although these applications are not fieldbus technology, they pro­vide some insight to the potential benefits of fieldbus because they uti­lize some of the same characteristics that fieldbus technology utilizes.

Potential Applications
Fieldbus offers the grain industry an opportunity to take advantage of a technology that has the ability to reduce electrical installation costs, provide greater data accuracy and integrity and allow for greater future flexibility.

Applications that warrant consideration by the grain industry include:

Potential Benefits
The use of fieldbus I/O interface modules creates an op­portunity to utilize additional types of devices that may not be available as “smart” fieldbus devices (devices that have the ability to internally process data). This will allow a plant to utilize the same device types installed in other areas of the plant and therefore maintain a smaller spare parts inventory.

Some of the key benefits that may be realized with these applications in the grain handling industry are:

Not for Everyone
Recently, Interstates installed a fieldbus system in a soybean processing plant as part of an expan­sion at a plant they had built in 1995. The company was interested in seeing if fieldbus could offer the kind of installation savings and operational efficiency they had heard about, and Interstates was able to work with them to develop and install a system that would provide benefits for their operation.

But Fieldbus may not be for everyone. “The technology is still developing, and a fieldbus may be more complex to maintain. Getting the proper balance between design and installation is crucial,” explained David Krahling, director of business devel­opment for the Interstates Companies.

Krahling says that with Interstates’ control system design and electrical construction expertise, their role is to offer their customers the best approach to incorporating fieldbus technology—or perhaps, electing not to utilize it.


Back to Energy & Operating Cost Savings Resources