Communication Protocols & Hazardous Areas
HART, Fieldbus, Modbus, Profibus, intrinsic safety, zener barriers, hazardous area classification, and field communicators.
- Compare Foundation Fieldbus, Modbus, and Profibus protocols
- Explain I/P transducer function and signal conversion
- Classify hazardous areas by Class, Division, and Zone
- Describe intrinsic safety and the role of zener barriers
Leçon 1
Foundation Fieldbus, Modbus & Profibus
Foundation Fieldbus
Foundation Fieldbus is a digital industrial network protocol that replaces individual 4-20 mA wiring with a shared digital bus. Multiple devices communicate on the same pair of wires, and control functions can execute within field devices themselves. Fieldbus supports block-oriented function execution, meaning a transmitter and valve can communicate directly without going through the controller.
Modbus
Modbus is one of the oldest and most widely used industrial communication protocols. It operates in master-slave mode where the master polls slave devices for data. The function code for reading holding registers is 03. Modbus RTU uses serial communication (RS-485) while Modbus TCP uses Ethernet.
Profibus
Profibus is a European-originated protocol with two main variants: Profibus DP (Decentralized Peripherals) for fast I/O communication and Profibus PA (Process Automation) for intrinsically safe field devices. Profibus PA is similar to Foundation Fieldbus in that it provides bus-powered communication in hazardous areas.
Foundation Fieldbus
Control in the field
Bus-powered devices
Block-oriented execution
Modbus
Master-slave polling
Function code 03 = read registers
RS-485 or Ethernet
Profibus
DP for fast I/O, PA for process
European standard (IEC 61158)
PA supports IS applications
Foundation Fieldbus is a digital protocol enabling control in the field. Modbus uses master-slave polling with function code 03 for reading holding registers. Both replace traditional point-to-point wiring.