This application claims priority to the German application No. 10344359.2, filed Sep. 24, 2003, and to the International Application No. PCT/EP2004/010641, filed Sep. 22, 2004 which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The invention relates to a method and a device for communication with a plant, in particular for the operation and monitoring of an automated plant in industrial manufacture.
Industrial automated plants need input or output devices connected to them in order to be able to be operated; this is known as process interfacing. Output devices or, in other words, monitoring devices are, for example, control lamps and alphanumeric or graphic displays which inform the plant operator about the current state of the plant. Input devices or, in other words, operator devices are e.g. switches, rotary knobs or keyboards for alphanumeric inputting, which enable the operator to interfere with the plant.
Conventionally, operator and monitoring devices, hereinafter called communication devices for short, are, for the purposes of communication between user and plant, permanently installed in the plant itself or e.g. in the manufacturing workshop in which the plant is located. A typical communication device has a handy housing on which input and output devices are arranged. Data is exchanged with the plant or with the control unit thereof via a permanently installed connecting line.
In the case of very large or difficult-to-access plants, cable-bound communication devices are no longer manageable. For this purpose, mobile, i.e. freely movable, communication devices, communicating wirelessly with the plant and being battery-operated, exist, which handle the exchange of data with the plant via a radio link.
The wirelessly operating communication devices must, in conformance with various industry standards, be equipped with safety functions, with the aid of which in the event of danger a safe state can be achieved for the plant. For radio-based communication devices, these generally involve the so-called stop function. The stop function is implemented as a rule in a safety key on the communication device. Pressing this key causes the immediate shutdown of the plant.
Consent functions can also be provided on the communication device. The consent function is triggered by means of a safe, two- or three-stage consent key, in order, with the key in the pressed or half-pressed position, to trigger safety-critical movements such as e.g. the displacement of a plant part or the movement of a robot arm. Releasing or depressing fully (panic function) the consent key causes the relevant movement to be immediately stopped, i.e. the consent to this movement is withdrawn, so to speak.
In communication devices operating wirelessly and being therefore battery-operated, the duration of use is naturally limited by the energy stored in the battery or the accumulator. A complete draining of the battery would result in communication between communication device and plant breaking down, and consequently no more information would be transmitted to the plant. The consent given at the communication device shortly before disconnection of the link could no longer be withdrawn or the stop function triggered. Solutions current today have, in addition, backup mechanisms on the plant side which e.g. upon disconnection of the radio link to the communication device result in the immediate shutdown of the plant and thus also the withdrawal of any consent.
In ongoing production, however, a plant shutdown must be avoided as far as possible, on cost and expenditure grounds. Consequently, the aim above all is to prevent the plant being brought to a halt simply on account of the battery in the mobile communication device being drained and not because of an actual hazardous situation.
Normally, the mobile communication device logs off from the plant in a controlled manner without the radio link being torn down, whereupon said plant is again operated and monitored via e.g. permanently installed cable-bound communication devices but continues to run normally, without the safety shutdown being triggered. Also, in known communication devices there are displays indicating the state of charge of the battery. From these, the operator has to draw the correct conclusions himself, e.g. terminate the operation and monitoring of the plant at the correct time with the aid of the mobile communication device and log off said communication device from the plant so as not to activate the plant's own safety functions.
An object of the invention is to indicate a method and a device so as to enable the operator to use full battery capacity where possible, and yet to avoid shutdown of the plant caused by the battery being drained.
The object is achieved in a method for communication with a plant, in particular for the operation and monitoring of an automated plant in industrial manufacture. In this method, a battery-operated communication device is available for the exchange of data with the plant. The state of charge of the battery is determined and the expected remaining operating time of the communication device determined from the state of charge. Depending on the remaining operating time determined, a measure is taken in the plant or in the communication device.
From the remaining operating time of the communication device determined, that is, the time which still remains to its user for communicating wirelessly with the plant, a useful variable is determined which can be further processed in the plant or in the communication device. The time, e.g. in minutes, provides substantially more useful information than knowledge about the state of charge of the battery e.g. in per cent.
Based upon the time determined, measures can be taken in the plant or in the communication device. This can consist e.g. in reducing the power consumption in the communication device by lowering the brightness of a display located therein. Or, as a measure where the remaining operating time is adequate, no information about the state of charge or remaining operating time is displayed to the user. He is not distracted by this since he does not at this time need to be concerned about the state of charge. Other measures can be the output of an acoustic, optical or mechanical alert to the user, e.g. through the communication device beeping, flashing or vibrating when the remaining operating time approaches zero.
It is particularly advantageous for a threshold value to be specified for the remaining operating time and for the measure to be taken when the threshold value is reached. The threshold value can in this case be individually set for each plant. If the operator needs e.g. only a little time in order to complete any work with the communication device, then the threshold value can be kept very low so that as a rule, i.e. for most states of charge of the battery, the operator is never confronted with measures. For remaining operating times above the threshold value, the user is e.g. not inconvenienced and the functionality of the communication device is fully available. The operator does not need to process any additional information.
An advantageous measure is to display the remaining operating time to the operator. The display can be provided permanently or only below a given threshold value for the remaining operating time.
The remaining operating time is displayed in minutes e.g. via an alphanumeric display in the communication device.
Where the remaining operating time is displayed instead of the state of charge of the battery, e.g. in per cent, the user can make a substantially better assessment of whether or of which works he can still complete properly in the remaining operating time that is left before the battery is completely drained. The user can in this way utilize as far as possible almost the full operating time of the communication device and yet still log off the communication device from the plant in good time, i.e. surrender control of the mobile communication device properly and thus avoid at the plant end the automatic safety shutdown of the entire plant.
As a measure in a preferred embodiment, the functionality of the communication device is changed depending on the remaining operating time. Changing the functionality makes it possible to guide the user selectively and to relieve him of having to make decisions. For example, the user can never initiate functions in the plant via the communication device which cannot be completed within the remaining operating time determined. This prevents the user initiating a process that takes too long, which would necessarily lead to the activation of safety functions at the plant end because of the radio contact being torn down after the battery had been drained. The user is also unable to activate such processes inadvertently.
In a preferred embodiment, multiple threshold values are predetermined and the functionality of the communication device gradually changed as each threshold value is reached. In this way, a selective user control can be implemented in the communication device whereby e.g. the functionality thereof is gradually increasingly restricted e.g. as the remaining operating time decreases. In this way, the operator has to restrict himself more and more when operating the plant as the remaining operating time decreases.
By this means, he can be guided toward constantly safe use of the communication device, thereby being relieved of much responsibility for incorrect operation of the communication device.
Gradually changing the functionality enables e.g. escalation levels to be implemented in the communication device, ranging from unrestricted normal operation via warnings and restricted functionality to automatic intervention in the functions that can be triggered by the communication device or the bringing of the plant to a halt.
In a preferred embodiment, the functionality is changed to the effect that a consent function which can be triggered in the plant by the communication device is compulsorily deactivated. Consequently, as of a defined remaining operating time, a consent function that has possibly been given by the user is automatically cancelled and moreover cannot be reactivated. This prevents the user, for example, from continuing to carry out safety-relevant displacement movements in a plant for which there is no longer sufficient time available to him on the communication device. Safe operation of a plant is constantly ensured by this means.
In a further preferred embodiment, the functionality is changed to the effect that a stop function which can be triggered in the plant by the communication device is compulsorily activated. This provides, for example, a final safety stage for triggering safe shutdown of the plant if the user, despite all warnings about the remaining operating time that is left, has, prior to the complete draining of the battery, and the tearing down of the radio link that is necessarily associated therewith, omitted to surrender control of the mobile communication device in a defined manner.
The object is furthermore achieved in a device for communication with a plant, in particular for the operation and monitoring of an automated plant in industrial manufacture. The device has a communication device, containing a battery, for the exchange of data with the plant. It also has a measuring device for determining the state of charge of the battery and the expected remaining operating time of the communication device. In addition, it has a control device, interacting with the measuring device, for taking measures in the plant or in the communication device.
The battery is as a rule a rechargeable accumulator. The measuring device can be e.g. a standard module for measuring the state of charge of the accumulator, which is nowadays sometimes integrated in the accumulator itself. In connection with e.g. a current sensor for determining the present current requirement of the communication device, possibly linked with a program module in the operating software of the communication device, the calculation of the remaining operating time can be made in this way. The control device is also implemented for example as a program module or else as a corresponding control IC which emits different electrical control signals depending on the state of charge.
Particularly advantageously, a threshold switch is contained in the device, which threshold switch interacts with the measuring device and the control device. This threshold switch is implemented e.g. as an electrical comparator or as a program module and, depending on the remaining operating time, triggers a measure by emitting a control signal.
It is also advantageous if the device has a display device for the remaining operating time. This can be a separate display in the form of a luminous bar inscribed with time indications, but also the overlaying of the time display in an alphanumeric display which is in any case present in the communication device.
Advantageously, a change-over switch is provided in the device, which change-over switch interacts with the measuring device and is thus coupled to the remaining operating time. The change-over switch can be e.g. a program module of the operating software located in the communication device in order to change the functionality of the communication device.
An advantageous embodiment of the device provides a consent switch which can be deactivated by the change-over switch. If, for example, deactivation of the consent switch is provided as a measure, then the consent switch can be deactivated by means of the change-over switch, i.e. the electrical contact in the consent switch is interrupted completely. Even pressing on the consent switch will thus no longer produce an electrical connection and the consent is withdrawn and moreover can no longer be activated.
It is also advantageous to provide a stop key which can be activated by the change-over switch. In this way, the contact in the stop key can be closed by the measure of activating the stop key without the switch actually being pressed by the user. This is equivalent to a forced pressing of the stop key.
In the description that follows, reference is made to the exemplary embodiment in the drawings, in which:
The communication device 4 has a rectangular display 14 arranged centrally on the upper side 12 of said device. Control knobs 16 are located to the left and right of the display 14, arranged parallel to the edge of the display, of which control knobs only the two on the left are visible in
Located in the interior of the communication device 4 is an accumulator 22 which supplies said communication device with electrical energy. A measuring device 26 for determining the state of charge of the accumulator 22 is connected to the accumulator 22 via a measuring line 24. The measuring device 26 is connected to a control device 28. The control device 28 is in turn connected via control lines 30 and 32 to the consent keys 18 and the stop key 20.
A change-over switch 33 is integrated in the control device 28, which change-over switch is also connected to the measuring device 26. The change-over switch 33 serves to influence the functionality of the communication device 4, that is, for example, to influence the display 14 and the function of the keys 16 and consent keys 18. The change-over switch 33 consequently influences the operating software running in the communication device 4 or the plant 2.
Pressing the stop key 20 causes an immediate plant shutdown in the plant 2. The functionality of the stop key 20 therefore corresponds to that of an industry-standard red/yellow emergency OFF key. However, the stop key 20 must not be fashioned red/yellow since it functions only battery-dependently and its tripping is transmitted to the plant 2 only via an unsafe radio link 6.
The control knobs 16 and consent keys 18 are assigned different functions, depending on the programming of the plant or of the communication device 4 and the respective status of the control program running in the communication device 4; they are so-called softkeys. The consent keys 18 are in this case assigned safety-relevant functions which are activated only when the consent keys 18 are held down. For example, pressing on the left-hand consent key 18 causes the displacement of a robot arm in the plant 2. Releasing the corresponding key 18 stops this movement immediately.
Via the control line 32 the stop key 20 can be activated, i.e. the plant 2 halted without said stop key actually being pressed mechanically. The control lines 30 by contrast cause withdrawal of the consent function in the consent keys 18, i.e. their deactivation, without said consent keys actually being released. Also pressing on the consent key 18 again does not bring about a new consent function.
The display 14 is a graphics-capable matrix display which is also freely programmable depending on the software program in the plant 2 or in the communication device 4. A charge indicator 34 which reflects the state of charge of the accumulator 22 in the communication device 4 is located in the top right-hand corner of the display 14. In
In
Although not displayed, the remaining operating time of the communication device 4 is constantly determined internally within the device and transmitted to the control device 28 and monitored, so to speak, by said control device. Calculation of the remaining operating time in the communication device 4 is made in the me assuring device 26 from the state of charge of the accumulator 22, the resulting final amount of energy in the accumulator 22 and the present current consumption of the communication device 4 per unit of time, either as a fixed empirical value or measured by an ammeter, not shown.
In
At the same time, an alert window 40 is overlaid on the display 14. In the alert window 40, the user is informed by means of the text message “Critical battery state reached” that the accumulator 22 has dropped to a critical state of charge, in this case the accumulator 22 has reached the half-drained state.
By this means, the user is also advised to note from this point onward the remaining operating time for which the communication device 4 will maximally remain operational. The alert window 40 which covers e.g. plant process information shown on the display 14 can be made to disappear by pressing on a control knob 16. The status bar 38 by contrast remains overlaid during the 30-minute-long remaining operating time of the communication device 4. The status bar 38 supplies the user from this time onward with more precise information about the operating time remaining than the charge indicator 34. If, on the other hand, the accumulator 22 is, as in
In
Where there is a linear decline in the state of charge of the accumulator 22 over time, one segment 36 of the charge indicator 34 disappears every seven-and-a-half minutes. In the status bar, by contrast, the remaining operating time is displayed with to-the-minute accuracy. In
When the eight-minute limit is reached, a further threshold value is filed in the communication device 4 in the control unit 28, in which case as a measure an alert window 40 again appears in the display 14. The alert message indicates that the consent keys 18 are deactivated with immediate effect. That is, a consent key 18 being pressed at this moment is deactivated, the consent function is therefore immediately withdrawn via the control line 30, which leads to an immediate halt of the movement caused by said consent key in the plant 2. Also, no further safety-critical function can be triggered via the other consent keys 18. In addition, the alert window 40 informs the operator of the fact that the stop key 20 is still operational, but that the stop function in the plant is not activated, that the plant therefore continues to be in a normal operating state. Pressing the stop key 20 would nonetheless bring about an immediate plant shutdown.
The operator now knows that he has another eight minutes to complete his work with the communication device 4 and to log off said communication device properly from the plant 2 or to switch off said communication device. Since this already constitutes a critical user alert in this case, the alert window 40 is shown flashing, accompanied by acoustic alarm tones from a loudspeaker, not shown, and by vibration of the communication device 4, that is, by vibration of the accumulator 22. This draws the attention of the user to the display 14, even if said user is not looking in that direction as he is monitoring e.g. the plant 2.
If the user does not carry out a defined log-off of the communication device 4 from the plant 2, then there is the risk that the accumulator 22 will be discharged fully, the radio contact 6 to the plant 2 torn down as a result and the plant 2 would enter a dangerous operating state which will, however, be intercepted by the plant's internal emergency shutdown (STOP).
In order not to have to resort to this final safety mechanism, in
The various stages of alert in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 44 359 | Sep 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/010641 | 9/22/2004 | WO | 00 | 3/15/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/031674 | 4/7/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 0249509 | Jun 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070078615 A1 | Apr 2007 | US |