Article | REF: AG3510 V1

Piloting architectures of industrial processes

Authors: Pascal BERRUET, Jean-François PETIN, Fabien RIGAUD, Armand TOGUYENI, Éric ZAMAÏ

Publication date: July 10, 2007

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ABSTRACT

The piloting of industrial processes allows enables the constant performance increase of the production tool and has thus become the main concern for industrialists. However, the complexity of the automation of the piloting system also presents drawbacks. The concept to piloting architectures is explained in this article via control/command architectures. The piloting system of the MES is then dealt with: definitions, objectives, functions, etc. To conclude, aspects of this type of automation such as reactivity to breakdowns and the implementation of the reconfiguration system are presented.

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AUTHORS

  • Pascal BERRUET: Senior Lecturer at the University of Southern Brittany

  • Jean-François PETIN: Senior Lecturer at the Centre de recherche en automatique de Nancy CRAN-UMR 7039 Nancy Université, CNRS

  • Fabien RIGAUD: Sales engineer – ARC Informatique

  • Armand TOGUYENI: University Professor at the École Centrale de Lille (EC Lille)

  • Éric ZAMAÏ: Senior Lecturer HDR at the Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble

 INTRODUCTION

Over the past thirty years, manufacturers have been focusing on the automation of industrial processes in order to constantly improve the performance of their production facilities. Taking advantage of technological advances in communications and industrial automation (interfaces or Web services embedded in PLCs), as well as in electronics and IT (RFID, sensor networks, embedded software components, etc.), these automated systems now incorporate an ever-increasing share of information and communication technologies distributed at the very heart of production processes and products. But this automation comes at a price, in terms of the complexity of the control system, both in terms of the heterogeneous hardware elements (dedicated computers, communication networks, action and sensing chains, etc.) that make it up, and in terms of the software functions (scheduling, control, monitoring, diagnostics, reconfiguration, supervision, etc.) that it houses. As a result, the need for methods, or at least feedback from experts, to bring all these elements together so that they can further contribute to improving business performance is becoming paramount.

To meet this need for integration of these industrial components, the concept of control architecture was proposed.

The first part of this dossier analyzes the very nature of industrial process control architectures. The second part describes the various functions at the heart of these architectures, which contribute to the overall real-time control process. The third part focuses on one of the facets of this control process, namely its ability to react to operating hazards. Finally, the fourth part gives an overview of the approaches proposed to date to give the control process the ability to reconfigure all or part of the physical and software control architecture.

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