ABSTRACT

Instrument Engineers' Handbook – Volume 3: Process Software and Digital Networks, Fourth Edition is the latest addition to an enduring collection that industrial automation (AT) professionals often refer to as the "bible." First published in 1970, the entire handbook is approximately 5,000 pages, designed as standalone volumes that cover the measurement (Volume 1), control (Volume 2), and software (Volume 3) aspects of automation.

This fourth edition of the third volume provides an in-depth, state-of-the-art review of control software packages used in plant optimization, control, maintenance, and safety. Each updated volume of this renowned reference requires about ten years to prepare, so revised installments have been issued every decade, taking into account the numerous developments that occur from one publication to the next.

Assessing the rapid evolution of automation and optimization in control systems used in all types of industrial plants, this book details the wired/wireless communications and software used. This includes the ever-increasing number of applications for intelligent instruments, enhanced networks, Internet use, virtual private networks, and integration of control systems with the main networks used by management, all of which operate in a linked global environment.

Topics covered include:

  • Advances in new displays, which help operators to more quickly assess and respond to plant conditions
  • Software and networks that help monitor, control, and optimize industrial processes, to determine the efficiency, energy consumption, and profitability of operations
  • Strategies to counteract changes in market conditions and energy and raw material costs
  • Techniques to fortify the safety of plant operations and the security of digital communications systems

This volume explores why the holistic approach to integrating process and enterprise networks is convenient and efficient, despite associated problems involving cyber and local network security, energy conservation, and other issues. It shows how firewalls must separate the business (IT) and the operation (automation technology, or AT) domains to guarantee the safe function of all industrial plants. This book illustrates how these concerns must be addressed using effective technical solutions and proper management policies and practices. Reinforcing the fact that all industrial control systems are, in general, critically interdependent, this handbook provides a wide range of software application examples from industries including: automotive, mining, renewable energy, steel, dairy, pharmaceutical, mineral processing, oil, gas, electric power, utility, and nuclear power.

chapter 4|40 pages

Programmable Logic Controllers

chapter 7|9 pages

Calibrations in Process Control

chapter 9|14 pages

Automation and Robotics in Processes

chapter 10|28 pages

Batch-Process Automation

chapter 11|28 pages

Plant-Wide Controller Performance Monitoring

chapter 12|26 pages

Plant Optimization

chapter 13|11 pages

Neural Networks in Process and Automation

chapter 19|12 pages

Data Acquisition Fundamentals

chapter 23|6 pages

Software Fundamentals

chapter 26|23 pages

Model-Free Adaptive Control Software

chapter 28|11 pages

Data Historian

chapter 32|8 pages

VPN, CCN, and IT Support

chapter 33|21 pages

Fiber-Optic Network Components

chapter 34|19 pages

Fiber-Optic Communications and Networks

chapter 35|6 pages

Network Access Protection

chapter 37|9 pages

Fieldbuses

chapter 38|11 pages

HART Networks

chapter 40|20 pages

PROFIBUS Networks

chapter 41|18 pages

Industrial Ethernet and TCP/IP-Based Systems

chapter 42|20 pages

Niche Fieldbus Networks

chapter 44|9 pages

Manufacturing Execution Systems

chapter 48|10 pages

Reliability, Redundancy, and Voting Systems

chapter 52|6 pages

Processes and Automation in Dairy Industry

chapter 53|6 pages

Software for Pharmaceutical Automation

chapter 55|19 pages

Mine-Wide SCADA System

chapter 60|23 pages

Power Network Security

chapter 64|13 pages

Alternative Energy III—Wind Energy