As a standards organization with 20 years dedicated to smart device integration and lifecycle management, FDT can provide open standardized solutions to help address P&G’s use case questions for lifecycle management of smarter devices. The solutions are adaptable to suit any networking topology including newer, streamlined Ethernet architectures.

FDT is a globally adopted standard (IEC 62453) designed for the integration, configuration and monitoring of networks and devices for enterprise-wide connectivity in brownfield and greenfield applications. The FDT standard serves software-based hosting (desktop/FRAME or Server) environments and device type management (DTM) solutions that open and unite the architecture independent of the mixed network topology, device/type or vendor.

The embedded FDT host environment, which acts like a device manager, runs communication to the connected devices via DTMs in the background much like a PC’s device manager would for peripheral devices like a mouse or printer. The end result: an open architecture giving the user freedom and flexibility to pick device/type/driver/vendor for their application, while providing a unified environment for device management. This simplifies intelligent device management, including design, integration, configuration, monitoring and replacement, for any connected device on the networks.

Specific to P&G’s upgraded brownfield application, an FDT Server can provide a distributed control environment to handle device/process lifecycle management via the second channel that is recommended by the International User Association of Automation Technology in Process Industries (NAMUR) Open Architecture (NOA) – specifically NOA-175.

Two solutions

There are two possible solutions to help solve intelligent device management complexity and protect the integrity of the installed base with modern ways to manage and monitor devices and data. Both are based on applying the FDT Server according to the NOA second channel solution.

Deploying the FDT Server on-premise gives the user direct access to field devices to gain real-time, OT data access, optimizing monitoring and maintenance practices via browsers or mobile devices. Additionally, the solution allows data mapping according to OPC UA information modeling so OT data can permeate the IT world (on-premise or cloud) allowing higher-level systems/clients, HMI server, historian, batch server, engineering and maintenance servers authenticated access. The optional FDThub™ (DTM repository), deployable in the cloud or on-premise, allows automatic device detection and configuration and is a valued service focused on maintaining device software drivers, updates and apps.

The FDThub assists the FDT Server with device replacement. In the event of adding newer, smarter or different devices, the FDThub connected to the FDT Server will auto-detect a new device on the network and notify the user to configure the device (offline if needed). The Server will remember the device’s old parameters, assuming that some parameters may cross over to the new device and implement new configuration parameters custom to that new device.

Figure 4: SPC Future Networks and Architectures shows a possible architecture to leverage the NOA second channel using the FDT Server on-premise with online cloud access to the FDThub. The Solution allows monitoring and optimization of all field devices via OT and IT clients with all services hosted in the cloud. Courtesy: FDT Group

Figure 4: SPC Future Networks and Architectures shows a possible architecture to leverage the NOA second channel using the FDT Server on-premise with online cloud access to the FDThub. The Solution allows monitoring and optimization of all field devices via OT and IT clients with all services hosted in the cloud. Courtesy: FDT Group

The answer is in the standard

FDT is the internationally recognized, widely deployed, universal integration standard that allows devices to connect and communicate by seamlessly integrating all industrial networks into one project view.

That’s important because future networks and architectures will only become more complicated with smarter and more capable devices. New technologies based on standards deliver elegant solutions built on functionality and simplicity, rather than imposing a technology burden. The solutions put the end users who will troubleshoot these systems front and center when creating and managing standards.

“Smart devices are complicating our world, so it’s critical for us to have standards that allow them to work with each other and our automation systems,” Maurath said. “The market will decide which standards succeed, but we still need simple, functional technologies that are easier to implement, maintain and migrate over time.”

– This originally appeared on FDT Group’s website. FDT Group is a CFE Media and Technology content partner.