Book Image

Industrial Automation from Scratch

By : Olushola Akande
Book Image

Industrial Automation from Scratch

By: Olushola Akande

Overview of this book

Industrial automation has become a popular solution for various industries looking to reduce manual labor inputs and costs by automating processes. This book helps you discover the abilities necessary for excelling in this field. The book starts with the basics of industrial automation before progressing to the application of switches, sensors, actuators, and motors, and a direct on-line (DOL) starter and its components, such as circuit breakers, contactors, and overload relay. Next, you'll explore VFDs, their parameter settings, and how they can be wired and programmed for induction motor control. As you advance, you'll learn the wiring and programming of major industrial automation tools – PLCs, HMIs, and SCADA. You’ll also get to grips with process control and measurements (temperature, pressure, level, and flow), along with analog signal processing with hands-on experience in connecting a 4–20 mA transmitter to a PLC. The concluding chapters will help you grasp various industrial network protocols such as FOUNDATION Fieldbus, Modbus, PROFIBUS, PROFINET, and HART, as well as emerging trends in manufacturing (Industry 4.0) and its empowering technologies (such as IoT, AI, and robotics). By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a practical understanding of industrial automation concepts for machine automation and control.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Learning the Concepts and Skills Required to Get Started
8
Part 2: Understanding PLC, HMI, and SCADA
14
Part 3: Process Control, Industrial Network, and Smart Factory

Understanding PLC Hardware and Wiring

Industrial automation has been in existence since before the programmable logic controller (PLC) was developed in the late 1960s. Relays and timers were used for automating manufacturing processes prior to the introduction of PLCs but they had so many challenges. Some of these challenges included the large space occupied by relays and timers, the amount of time required to troubleshoot the system, and making changes to the system was very difficult due to the fact that so many relays were hardwired together in a specific order for the machine to operate. A PLC provides a solution to all these challenges by needing less space, being easy to troubleshoot, and changes can easily be made to a control system that uses a PLC. The following photograph shows a relay room with so many relays that take up much space, are not easy to troubleshoot, and changes are not easy to make on the control system:

Figure 7.1 – Relays in a relay room (Sergeev Pavel, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

Figure 7.1 – Relays...