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WirelessHART

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WirelessHART
International standardIEC 62591, IEEE 802.15.4
Developed byHART Communication Foundation
IntroducedSeptember 2007
IndustryIndustrial wireless sensor networks

WirelessHART within telecommunications and computing, is a wireless sensor networking technology. It is based on the Highway Addressable Remote Transducer Protocol (HART). Developed as a multi-vendor, interoperable wireless standard, WirelessHART was defined for the requirements of process field device networks.

Technical description

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The protocol utilizes a time synchronized, self-organizing, and self-healing mesh architecture. The protocol supports operation in the 2.4 GHz ISM band using IEEE 802.15.4 standard radios. The underlying wireless technology is based on the work of Dust Networks' TSMP technology.[1]

History

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The standard was initiated in early 2004 and developed by 37 HART Communications Foundation (HCF) companies that - amongst others - included ABB, Emerson, Endress+Hauser, Pepperl+Fuchs, Siemens, Freescale Semiconductor, Software Technologies Group (which developed the initial WirelessHART WiTECK stack), and AirSprite Technologies which went on to form WiTECK, an open non-profit membership organization whose mission is to provide a reliable, cost-effective, high-quality portfolio of core enabling system software for industrial wireless sensing applications, under a company and platform-neutral umbrella.

WirelessHART was approved by a vote of the 210 member general HCF membership, ratified by the HCF Board of Directors, and introduced to the market in September 2007.[2] On September 27, 2007, the Fieldbus Foundation, Profibus Nutzerorganisation, and HCF announced a wireless cooperation team to develop a specification for a common interface to a wireless gateway, further protecting users' investments in technology and work practices for leveraging these industry-pervasive networks. Following its completed work on the WirelessHART standard in September 2007, the HCF offered International Society of Automation (ISA) an unrestricted, royalty-free copyright license, allowing the ISA100 committee access to the WirelessHART standard.[3]

Backward compatibility with the HART “user layer” allows transparent adaptation of HART compatible control systems and configuration tools to integrate new wireless networks and their devices, as well as continued use of proven configuration and system-integration work practices. It is estimated that 25 million HART field devices are installed worldwide, and approximately 3 million new wired HART devices are shipping each year. In September 2008, Emerson became the first process automation supplier to begin production shipments for its WirelessHART enabled products.[4]

During the summer of 2009 NAMUR, an international user association in the chemical and pharmaceutical processing industries, conducted a field test of WirelessHART to verify alignment with the NAMUR requirements for wireless automation in process applications.[5]

WirelessHart was approved by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) in January 2009 with revision released in April 2010. The latest edition, version 2, was released in 2016 as IEC/PAS 62591:2016.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Process Automation Technologies | Control News from Europe | Control Global". Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  2. ^ Automation World
  3. ^ Devan, P. Arun Mozhi; Hussin, Fawnizu Azmadi; Ibrahim, Rosdiazli; Bingi, Kishore; Khanday, Farooq Ahmad (January 2021). "A Survey on the Application of WirelessHART for Industrial Process Monitoring and Control". Sensors. 21 (15): 4951. Bibcode:2021Senso..21.4951D. doi:10.3390/s21154951. PMC 8347440. PMID 34372210.
  4. ^ "Technology Market Research for Industry & Cities: ARC Advisory Group". www.arcweb.com. Retrieved 2021-11-26.
  5. ^ "NAMUR Confirms WirelessHART for Process Applications". News release. HART Communication Foundation. November 2009. Retrieved 30 June 2011.
  6. ^ "IEC 62591:2016 | IEC Webstore". webstore.iec.ch. Retrieved 2021-11-26.
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