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Isa 88

The document summarizes the ISA-88 standard for batch control, which was established in 1988 to address needs in the batch control industry. It provides a standard terminology and concepts for batch manufacturing to improve communication. The standard covers physical models of plants, recipes for processes, equipment logic, and how to combine these elements. It aims to reduce engineering time and costs for batch automation. The standard is modular and technology-agnostic to promote reusability across different systems.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views29 pages

Isa 88

The document summarizes the ISA-88 standard for batch control, which was established in 1988 to address needs in the batch control industry. It provides a standard terminology and concepts for batch manufacturing to improve communication. The standard covers physical models of plants, recipes for processes, equipment logic, and how to combine these elements. It aims to reduce engineering time and costs for batch automation. The standard is modular and technology-agnostic to promote reusability across different systems.

Uploaded by

re_289
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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V Established by ISA in October P to

address the following needs of industry:


 6o universal model for batch control systems
 Difficult for users to communicate batch
control requirements
 Batch control is difficult to configure
 Integration of different vendorsǯ equipment is
difficult
V ÷his standard provides a standard terminology and
a consistent set of concepts and models for batch
manufacturing plants and batch control that will
improve communications between all parties
involved.
V educe the user's time to reach full production
levels for new products
V Enable vendors to supply appropriate tools for
implementing batch control
V Enable users to better identify their needs
V Make recipe development straightforward
enough to be accomplished without the services
of a control systems engineer
V educe the cost of automating batch
processes
V educe life-cycle engineering efforts.
V ÷he 88 number was assigned not due to the
year that the committee was established but
rather sequentially (next number available for
an ISA standard)
V A6SI/ISA-PP  - Batch Control Part
1: Models and ÷erminology
V A6SI/ISA-P - Batch Control
Part 2: Data Structures and Guidelines for
Languages
V A6SI/ISA- - Batch Control
Part 3: General and Site ecipe Models and
epresentation
V Standard covers four basic concepts:
 uow to depict what you have in the plant (physical
model)
 uow to define what you would like to accomplish
in the plant (recipe)
 Implementation of what you can do in the plant
(equipment logic)
 uow to put the three pieces mentioned above
together in an intelligent, reusable and successful
way
V ¦niversal terminology and models -
applicable to all types of control systems
V Modular structure - breaks up complex
concepts into smaller elements; promotes
reusability
V 6on-excluding/binding - not suggesting
that there is only one way to do batch
control nor to force users to abandon
current methods
V Collapsible model - elements which are not
applicable to particular users needs can be
omitted (except for unit, master recipe and
control recipe entities)
V Expandable model - elements may be
added to meet specific needs (as long as
the integrity of the original relationship is
maintained)
V 6ot a cookbook for designing batch
control systems - Provides a framework;
still requires experienced control systems
engineers
V Great for Functional Specifications -
Models and terminology can be used to
define requirements for batch control



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