Unit 5 SCADA
Unit 5 SCADA
Unit 5 SCADA
SCADA
SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data
Acquisition)
Supervisory
• Operator/s, engineer/s, supervisor/s, etc
Control
• Monitoring
• Limited
• Telemetry
• Remote/Local
Data acquisition
• Access and acquire information\data from the equipment
• Sends it to different sites through telemetry
• Analog / Digital
SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data
Acquisition)
• SCADA refers to a system that collects data from various sensors at a
factory, plant or in other remote locations and then sends this data
to a central computer which then manages and controls the data.
• SCADA systems are used not only in industrial processes: e.g. steel
making, power generation and distribution, chemistry, but also in
some experimental facilities such as nuclear fusion.
Actuators:
• Valves
• Pumps
• Motors
Applications
RTU (Remote Terminal Unit)
• RTU is a device installed at a remote location that collects data,
codes the data into a format that is transmittable and transmits
the data back to a central station, or master.
• The system must meet various timing and other constraints that are
imposed on it by the real-time behaviour of the external world to
which it is interfaced. Hence comes the name real time. Another
name for many of these systems is reactive systems, because their
primary purpose is to respond to or react to signals from their
environment.
49
HMI Computer
Human Machine Interface Computer
50
DCS
DCS – Distributed Control System
51
DCS
• DCSs, today are distributed computing platforms with sufficient performance
to support large-scale real-time process applications.
• Structurally DCSs traditionally are organized into five major subsystems,
namely (1) operations workstations that act as the MMI and provide
visualization capability, (2) controller subsystems that perform direct digital
control, (3) data collection subsystems, (4) process computing subsystems for
process optimization and supervision, and (5) communication networks.
• Open system communication standards are enabling DCSs to receive
information from a set of similar compatible computing platforms, including
business, laboratory information, maintenance, and other plant systems as
well as to provide information in support of applications, such as:
– Automated warehousing and packaging line systems so that a complete
order can be coordinated from the receipt of raw materials to the
shipment of the final product. Laboratory information management
systems (LIMs), which perform in-process analysis as well as quality
assurance inspections.
– Automated production scheduling for a plant accessing the business
system and tying into MRP II systems and finite-capacity scheduling
packages.