“The future of the process industry is clearly an open solution. We need the connectivity to the outside world; we need to leave the island in order to tap into new possibilities and potentials,” says Ronny Becker, testing engineer at Bilfinger Maintenance, which built the system under contract to Interessengemeinschaft Regelwerke Technik (IGR). The system consists of two containers, with pumps, valves and sensors, and is linked to two different cloud systems, with which the process data can be managed, structured and analyzed. By this means, IGR members can test current equipment technology, cybersecurity measures, uniform standards for transmitting device data and data processing and analysis within a cloud.
“Cavitation, pump tension or gas bubbles in pipelines – in the meantime, most device manufacturers have made appearances in the IGR demonstration system, have provided their devices and actively collaborate in projects,” says Elisabeth Wächter-Schäper, Manager of the Competence Center for Electrical, Measurement and Control Technology at IGR. The WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM 750 has a key function in the system. Twelve HART sensors linked to the system measure important process variables, like throughput, temperature and pressure. The WAGO PFC200 XTR Controller from the WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM collects the HART data from the wired HART sensors and transmits them both to Emerson’s Delta-V process control system and also to the cloud via a Hilscher Switch