Book Image

PLC and HMI Development with Siemens TIA Portal

By : Liam Bee
Book Image

PLC and HMI Development with Siemens TIA Portal

By: Liam Bee

Overview of this book

With automation requirements on the rise, Siemens’ TIA Portal development environment is almost a necessity for any automation engineer. The Totally Integrated Automation (TIA) environment helps seamlessly integrate all things automation, from PLC hardware and software design to HMI development. This book helps you understand the tools available in the TIA toolbox and shows you how to write code effectively. The book begins by introducing you to the TIA environment, covering the layout and tools available. Once you’ve got to grips with the environment, you’ll find out how to create hardware to write programs against, including adding IO modules and assigning memory for input and output. Next, you'll develop logic in all of the languages that TIA Portal offers, such as Ladder, Function Block Diagram, and Structured Text (SCL) (note that Statement List is not covered as a deprecated language), as well as the newest language, Cause and Effect (CEM). You’ll also discover how to store standard code in libraries, creating a version control system that is easy to manage and aids standard design. Finally, following the PLC design chapters, you’ll learn how to develop HMI applications in TIA Portal’s latest unified hardware. By the end of the book, you'll be well equipped to use all of the features that TIA Portal V17 offers.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1 – The TIA Portal – Project Environment
5
Section 2 – TIA Portal – Languages, Structures, and Configurations
11
Section 3 – TIA Portal – HMI Development
16
Section 4 – TIA Portal – Deployment and Best Practices

Summary

This chapter has explored essential areas of HMI navigation and alarming. These aspects of HMI development are key to providing information to the end user and building a robust and easy-to-use system. Being able to create easy-to-use navigation systems and clear alarming systems can set a project apart from others, ensuring that end users have an easy experience when the overall system is in use.

Using PLC-driven alarming via the supervision tags can help reduce the amount of work required in the HMI by allowing the PLC to interact directly with the HMI's alarm control. The utilization of PLC-driven alarming ensures that function blocks will raise the same alarms no matter what project they are used in (subject to ProDiag supervisions being available), which can have large time-saving benefits as well as standardization.

Supervision tags use the ProDiag system that requires an additional license after the configuration of 25 supervisions. The license can be set...