IHS Inc. The Source for Critical Information and Insight
Electronics |  Change  

Go
 
 

NIST Measures Challenges for Wireless Factories

December 13, 2007 // Published as a news service by IHS

 
Electronics & Telecom Docs
IHS sells a full selection of standards documents & collections from the industry's top organizations.
To learn more, and for a free quote, please complete the form below.
TIA Collection
NEMA Collection
CEA Collection
EIA Collection
ITU Collections
IEEE Collections
EU EMC Collections
IEC Collections
First Name:

Last Name:

Email address:
According to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), factories have much to gain from wireless technology, such as robot control, radio frequency identification (RFID) tag monitoring and local area network (LAN) communications.

Wireless systems can also cost less and offer more flexibility than cabled systems. But factories, such as auto production plants, are challenging environments for wireless systems, as verified by recent NIST tests.

Heavy industrial plants can be highly reflective environments, experts said, scattering radio waves erratically and interfering with or blocking wireless transmissions.

Electromagnetic interference may hinder the auto industry and other manufacturing sectors from taking full advantage of wireless networking.

In partnership with the U.S. Council for Automotive Research (USCAR), NIST plans to develop a statistical representation of the radio propagation environment of a production floor as a basis for developing standards to prequalify wireless devices for factories.

NIST researchers conducted initial tests at an auto assembly plant in August 2006, and completed additional tests in September at an engine plant and a metal stamping plant.

The manufacturing plants that NIST tested were crowded with stationary and mobile metal structures, such as fabrication and testing machinery, platforms, fences, beams, conveyors, mobile forklifts, maintenance vehicles and automobiles in various stages of production.

NIST monitored frequencies below 6 GHz for 24-hour periods to understand the background ambient radio environment. This spectrum survey showed that interference from heavy equipment ("machine noise") can impair signals for low-frequency applications, such as those used in some controllers on the production floor.

A detailed analysis of a common wireless LAN frequency band (channels from 2.4 to 2.5 GHz) found heavy, constant traffic by data transmitting nodes, wireless scanners and industrial equipment. Signal-scattering tests showed the potential for high levels of "multipath" interference, where radio signals travel in multiple complicated paths from transmitter to receiver, arriving at slightly different times.

NIST researchers will use this information in studies aimed at pre-qualifying wireless devices for use in industrial environments. In the meantime, NIST researchers identified a number of steps that can be taken to minimize radio interference on the factory floor, including use of licensed frequency bands where possible, and restrictions on use of personal electronics in high-traffic frequency bands, such as 2.4 GHz.

Other suggestions include installing absorbing material in key locations, use of wireless systems with high immunity to electromagnetic interference, use of equipment that emits little machine noise and use of directional antennas to help mitigate multipath interference when transmitter and receiver are close together.

This work is part of a larger NIST/USCAR collaboration established in 2004.

Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

ELECTRONICS AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS STANDARDS NEWS
November 18, 2009
Internet Directory Moves Toward Internationalized Domain Names
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which manages the Internet's core address directory, announced on Nov. 16 that ... more
November 13, 2009
Canada, U.S., Mexico Publish Compact Fluorescent Lamp Standard
The Canadian Standards Association (CSA) teamed with Underwriters Laboratories (UL) Inc. and Mexico's National Association of Standardization ... more
November 9, 2009
Agreement Reached on Far-Reaching EU Telecoms Reform Package
The European Parliament (EP) and European Council of Ministers reached agreement on Nov. 5 regarding the long-anticipated telecoms reform legislation ... more
November 5, 2009
ITU Approves G.hn Standard for Wired Home Networks
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) approved G.hn, a technical standard for home networking systems and applications. ... more
October 30, 2009
EC Proposes New Uses for Spectrum Freed Up by Digital TV Switch
On Oct. 28, the European Commission (EC) set out plans for a coordinated distribution of newly available radio spectrum to encourage investment ... more
Show All..