FDT
Technology
Why
do we need FDT?
Many
automaton devices are complex and need parameterization
before operation can start. This is particularly
the case within process industry (valves, flow meters,
actuators etc), but lately also within discrete factory
automation (motor starters, frequency inverters,
etc.). Historically this parameterization was made
locally on the device, with a keypad or a serial
cable and a laptop, and this is, in spite of, the
fact that the device was communicating with a fieldbus
for process control. FDT enables this configuration
to be made remotely over the existing fieldbus
connection. The device manufacturer makes tailor-made
graphical user interfaces for their devices and
includes functions like Asset Management for device
maintenance and database for parameter management
of their devices. FDT gives the plant owner a uniform
way to organize and maintain the plant automation
assets, the automation devices.
How FDT works
FDT technology comprises three key components:
the Frame Application, Device DTMs, and Communication DTMs. To better
understand the functionality of these components, consider the analogy
of the Internet -- a standard web browser allows users to view countless
web pages created by many content providers. The host system supplier
typically creates the Frame Application, just as Microsoft supplies the
Internet Explorer web browser. Just as a web browser opens a web page
that contains code from the company that makes the web page, an FDT frame
opens the Device DTM, which is the plug-in software from the device vendor.
Similar to a web browser, the Frame Application
has menu bars, toolbars, and a navigation tree.
Visually, the frame application surrounds the device vendor’s DTM. Like opening a web page from a ‘favorites’ navigation
tree, a user can navigate down a tree that lists the field device tags,
click on one, and open the device vendor’s DTM inside the frame.
And, like web pages that let users interact with a reservation system
or a shopping service, the Device DTMs let the user interact with the
field device in a wide variety of ways. The Device DTM vendor can create
a graphically rich user interface that does virtually anything possible
in an advanced Windows PC-type interface. The third part of the technology,
the Communication DTM, provides a standardized communication Application
Process Interface (API) inside the PC, interfacing between the Device
Vendor’s DTM and the host system’s specific driver that
handles passthrough communications from the PC
down to the fieldbus interface card.
The host system vendor supplies a Communication
DTM (comDTM) for each supported fieldbus protocol. This ensures that
the details of the PC, network, interface cards, and passthrough protocols
of the host system, are transparent to the device vendor’s DTM. This correlates back
to the internet analogy where: the web page is transparent to the PC
it’s running in, the brand of the network interface card in the
PC, or whether communication is DSL or broadband
cable.
Typical frame applications are
Pactware
from The PACTware Consortium
e.V. (freeware)
FieldCare
from Endress & Hauser
Field
Control from ABB
HMS is supplying the Anybus comDTM and the hardware
to access the fieldbus data and its devices.
Click
here to read about Anybus comDTM