BSI PD IEC/TS 62832-1:2016:2017 Edition
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Industrial-process measurement, control and automation. Digital factory framework – General principles
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2017 | 52 |
This part of IEC 62832, which is a Technical Specification, defines the general principles of the Digital Factory framework (DF framework), which is a set of model elements (DF reference model) and rules for modelling production systems.
This DF framework defines:
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a model of production system assets;
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a model of relationships between different production system assets;
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the flow of information about production system assets.
The DF framework does not cover representation of building construction, input resources (such as raw production material, assembly parts), consumables, work pieces in process, nor end products.
It applies to the three types of production processes (continuous control, batch control or discrete control) in any industrial sector (for example aeronautic industries, automotive, chemicals, wood).
NOTE 1 This document does not provide an application scenario for descriptions based on ISO 15926, because ISO 15926 uses a different methodology for describing production systems.
NOTE 2 In order to support oil and gas production systems, other methodologies for describing the assets can be used (for example based on ISO 22745 or ISO 13584-42).
The representation of a production system according to this document is managed throughout all phases of the production system life cycle (for example design, construction, operation or maintenance). The requirements and specification of software tools supporting the DF framework are out of scope of this document.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
4 | CONTENTS |
7 | FOREWORD |
9 | INTRODUCTION |
12 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references |
13 | 3 Terms, definitions, abbreviated terms and conventions 3.1 Terms and definitions |
16 | 3.2 Abbreviated terms 3.3 Conventions 4 Overview of the DF framework 4.1 General |
17 | 4.2 DF reference model Figures Figure 1 – DF framework overview |
18 | 4.3 Use of the Digital Factory |
19 | 5 DF reference model 5.1 Concept identifier Figure 2 – Overview of the Digital Factory and example activities |
20 | 5.2 Concept dictionary entry 5.2.1 General Figure 3 – Identification standard |
21 | 5.2.2 Data element type 5.2.3 CDEL definition 5.2.4 DF asset class definition 5.3 Concept dictionary 5.3.1 General 5.3.2 DF dictionary |
22 | 5.4 Data element 5.5 Collection of data elements Figure 4 – Example of sourcing of a DF concept dictionary |
23 | 5.6 DF asset class 5.6.1 General 5.6.2 DF asset class header 5.6.3 DF asset class body |
24 | Figure 5 – Example of DF asset class Figure 6 – Example of composite DF asset class |
25 | 5.7 View element 5.8 Library 5.8.1 General |
26 | 5.8.2 Supplier library 5.8.3 DF library 5.9 DF asset 5.9.1 General 5.9.2 DF asset header 5.9.3 DF asset body |
27 | Figure 7 – Example of composite DF asset |
28 | 5.10 DF asset link 5.11 DF asset class association 5.12 Data element relationship |
29 | 5.13 Digital Factory Figure 8 – Example of data element relationships |
30 | 6 Rules of the DF framework 6.1 Example for representing a production system Figure 9 – Example of DF asset and DF asset class |
31 | 6.2 Rules for integration in the DF library 6.3 Rules for using DF assets in a Digital Factory Figure 10 – Integration with the DF library |
32 | 6.4 Reuse of a Digital Factory structure |
33 | Annex A (informative) UML Model A.1 Concept dictionary Figure A.1 – Concept dictionary and related class definitions and type |
34 | A.2 Library Figure A.2 – Types of relationship Figure A.3 – Library |
35 | Figure A.4 – DF asset class Figure A.5 – DF asset class showing origin of definitions |
36 | A.3 Digital Factory Figure A.6 – Composed DF asset class Figure A.7 – Digital Factory structure |
37 | Figure A.8 – Digital Factory Figure A.9 – Relationship between DF assets |
38 | Figure A.10 – Digital Factory with composed DF asset Figure A.11 – DF asset link and DER |
39 | Annex B (informative) Overview of model elements B.1 Model elements Tables Table B.1 – Model elements of the Digital Factory |
40 | Table B.2 – Model elements of libraries |
41 | B.2 Example DF asset description Table B.3 – Model elements of dictionaries |
42 | Figure B.1 – Example structure of a DF asset |
43 | Annex C (informative) UML notation C.1 General C.2 Class diagram Figure C.1 – Note Figure C.2 – Class Figure C.3 – Association |
44 | Figure C.4 – Composition Figure C.5 – Aggregation Figure C.6 – Containment Figure C.7 – Dependency |
45 | Figure C.8 – Abstract class, generalization and interface Figure C.9 – Multiplicity Figure C.10 – Association class |
46 | C.3 Object diagram Figure C.11 – Class Figure C.12 – Link Figure C.13 – Link instantiated from composition Figure C.14 – Link instantiated from aggregation |
47 | Bibliography |