Smart Safety Solutions Help to Overcome Operational Challenges
Smart safety solutions are also critical to help companies solve a variety of operational challenges. For example, smart safety solutions are designed to require employees to follow standard operating procedures, account for any procedural anomalies, and prevent anyone from bypassing these systems and putting themselves and others in possible danger. This is especially critical with a workforce that is both evolving and becoming more remote, with older workers leaving or nearing retirement, and younger workers more susceptible to injury due to inexperience. Worker injury is often caused by trying to repair machinery or process downtimes caused by, for example, jams, misfeeds, and product changeovers.
Smart safety solutions increase the visibility of downtime information, providing context of the cause of downtime to the workers, such as a machinery fault, and then offering remedies to resolve these issues. Another area where smart safety solutions can provide help with operational challenges is with data management, ensuring that data collection and reports are based on the latest data and information.
Also, smart safety solutions minimize the practice of manually entering safety data for inspections, compliance logs, and incident reports since these solutions are connected to the plant floor systems, which helps to eliminate errors.
Regulatory compliance is also strengthened with smart safety solutions, helping to overcome the challenges of working with industry standards regarding documentation and reporting. Smart safety solutions can also be easier to install and maintain.
Usually, safety solutions require more complex wiring to obtain additional diagnostic data. However, an integrated smart safety solution can access critical diagnostic data with traditional wiring, thus saving time and costs, and helping to create a complete picture of the health and status of a machine or production line.
To address the market demand for smart safety solutions that increase both productivity and operational resilience in this new normal market that was driven by the pandemic, Rockwell Automation has been adding smart capabilities to its broad portfolio of safety solutions.
These solutions are designed to simultaneously improve safety compliance and production performance by analyzing and diagnosing data, and then converting it into meaningful information that can be used to increase productivity and decrease unscheduled downtime while maintaining safety integrity and compliance, all as our Connected Enterprise® strategy.
Smart Safety Designed for Both Onsite and Remote Workforces
The traditional value of safety solutions was to protect onsite workforces and increase productivity. But workforces today are a combination of onsite and remote and seek smart safety solutions that leverage the technology required for digital transformation.
This has led Rockwell Automation to design a number of remote monitoring and control capabilities into its smart safety solution portfolio. For example, to perform remote troubleshooting, smart safety device performance can be communicated over its EtherNet/IP network, which allows both standard and safety data to be captured on individual device operation and then visualized by workers from any location. Setup and monitoring of smart safety devices and access to device profiles can be performed from any location utilizing the Studio 5000®.
The EtherNet/IP network also enables predictive maintenance routines established from historical data to be sent from the historian to the smart safety devices, with the data collected from device operation, then being time stamped and sent back to the historian. It is also possible for remote workers to request safe access to smart safety devices over an EtherNet/IP network, such as indication of guard door position and guard lock status. Historical data access request can also be used for application adjustments. This is possible because of the safety over EtherNet/IP simplified network architecture, designed for standard and safety control managed over standard unmodified Ethernet.
Our smart safety devices provide data access into a specific asset or machine through individually identified access points, which allows data to be captured on individual device operations. Having smart and safety on one device helps to simplify wiring and system complexity. In addition, smart safety devices can also be used with existing safety devices on assets and machines to leverage the existing installed base and help prevent the need for rip-and-replace. Smart safety devices also allow predictive maintenance procedures to be adopted based on device usage or age.
CIP Safety Enhances Operational Resilience and Productivity
One of Rockwell Automation’s smart safety device differentiators is the use of CIP Safety over its EtherNet/IP network. CIP Safety is an extension to the Common Industrial Protocol (CIP), the application-layer protocol for EtherNet/IP. This capability also provides workers, regardless of their onsite or remote location, with greater access to the critical data needed to create a more comprehensive picture of machine or production line status.
The combination of smart safety devices connected to a CIP Safety over EtherNet/IP network helps to create machines or production assets that can provide meaningful information, so workers from any location can better monitor machine health, decrease unscheduled downtime, improve flexibility, and enhance safety, while helping to lower total cost of ownership and increasing the company’s operational resilience.
These devices connected to CIP Safety over EtherNet/IP network provide diagnostic information that can deliver more valuable insights, such as where safety-related failures are occurring or if workers are following standard operating procedures.
Processors and manufacturers can put these insights to work to help improve the productivity and sustainability of their production equipment. These capabilities can help to improve productivity, such as by notifying workers with an alarm if they are nearing a hazard to help prevent a machine from slowing down or stopping. In addition, the CIP Safety capability expands available diagnostic data to alert workers of common failures, such as the presence of dust on the scanner’s lens.
Smart Safety Fully Integrated into The New Normal
Adding smart capabilities to safety enables manufacturers and processors to gain new efficiencies, improve product quality and make operations more responsive and safer for what is often a smaller number of onsite workers.
Smart safety solutions help to standardize process, machinery, and safety control, making systems less susceptible to unscheduled downtime and helping to improve productivity and profitability.