The invention relates to an arrangement of appliances with an information output. Appliances such as these are, for example, sensors or measurement devices which emit measurement values, or actuators which emit state data, in which case the output information can be passed on to another point.
This also applies to active elements such as actuators, which pass on information relating to their state or activity. For example, a valve regulator signals either the “open” state or the “closed” state, and, in the case of a control valve, the incremental position change is also signaled.
Since all the components for each measurement point and each actuator in a process control system are used to record, process and pass on measurement values, this results in unnecessary redundancy. Production costs and complexity could be reduced if only the actually required components were included.
The invention is thus based on the object of specifying an arrangement which results in a reduction in the overall complexity.
This object is achieved by an appliance arrangement which has the features specified in claim 1. Advantageous refinements are specified in further claims.
The invention accordingly proposes that the hardware complexity in an arrangement of instruments or actuators which are associated with a technical process and require data interchange with a central point be reduced by not allocating a transmitter or a transmitting/receiving state to all of these appliances, but by using only one jointly used transmitting/receiving device. In addition to the saving, the arrangement has the advantage that it provides a capability for information preprocessing, plausibility checking and diagnosis.
The invention and its advantages will be described further in the following text with reference to one exemplary embodiment, which is illustrated in the drawing figures, in which:
The transmitter/receiver 3 is connected to all of the appliances 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d and is designed to read the data from them either simultaneously or successively, to digitize the data if required, and to transmit it to the central point 4 using a suitable transmission protocol.
Since, in addition to instruments, actuators can also be connected to the transmitter/receiver 3, plausibility checks and diagnoses can be carried out without connection to a central point, in addition to preprocessing of so-called raw data. By way of example, a valve regulator can thus pass on information relating to the valve position to adjacent flowmeters, which themselves signal back whether the “valve closed” signal also actually results in “zero” flow.
The expressions “transmitter”, transmitter/receiver” as well as “send” as used above generally represent a “transmission unit” or “transmission”, that is to say they are used both for wire-free and wire-based data interchange. Examples of this are fieldbus systems, Ethernet or the HART protocol.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/01999 | 2/28/2004 | WO | 4/19/2007 |