Line Control for Beverage Line
Transcription
Line Control for Beverage Line
Advanced Container Flow Simulation for Beverage Lines Srinivas Kesari OEM Project Manager 16th June 2011 Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. Agenda Topics 1. Introduction to Beverage Lines 2. Key Packaging Machines 3. Beverage Line Operation and Control 4. Case Study : Line Balancing Simulation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 Agenda Topics 1. Introduction to Beverage Lines 2. Key Focus Areas 3. Beverage Line Operation and Control 4. Case Study : Line Balancing Simulation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 3 Typical Operations in Beverage Packaging Liquid product from upstream process plant Filling of the container then sealing it with a lid or cap Palletisation ready for transport Washing of the container Pallets of Empty Cans or Bottles to be Filled New or Used or direct feed from Blow molder Conveying System to control buffer stocks Packaging into Cases, 6pack, 24 pack etc. Labeling of the container Heating the product to kill off unwanted organisms Challenges Line Performance & Integration Reduced Downtime & Waste Governmental Regulations Extensive material tracking Effective usage of Labor in Shop floor Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 4 Typical Beverage Packaging Line Layouts Returnable Bottle line Depalletizer Uncaser Soaker Bottle Inspector Filler Crowner Fill control Pasteurizer Videojet Labeller Caser Palletizer Storage Filler Crowner Fill control Pasteurizer Videojet Labeller Caser Palletizer Storage Filler Seamer Fill control Pasteurizer Caser Palletizer Storage Filler Crowner Fill control Pasteurizer Videojet Labeller Caser Palletizer Storage Filler Capper Fill control Pasteurizer Videojet Labeller Caser Palletizer Storage Non returnable line Depalletizer Uncaser Rinser Can Line Depalletizer Riunser Videojet Returnable PET Line Depalletizer Uncaser Soaker Decapper Sniffer Blowmolder Rotary Rinser PET Line Preparation Filling Labeling Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. Packing 5 Typical Beverage Packaging Line Layouts Example High Capacity Returnable Bottle Line with Buffer Zones To avoid over dimensioning of equipment, buffer zones are introduced between units to assure filler efficiency and product quality New Glass Depall Decapper Buffer Uncaser Buffer Soaker Buffer Filler Crowner Buffer Fill control Buffer Buffer ffer Bu Bottle Inspector Pallet storage and inspection Empty case washer Buffer Depalletizer Buffer Bu ffer Bottle Inspector Empty case inspection Full case control Buffer Caser Buffer Videojet Buffer Pasteurizer fer Buffer B uf Palletizer Buffer Buffer Buffer r ffe Bu Stretch/ shrink wrap; Buffer Labeller Labeller Storage Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Categorization of Equipment Equipment at Pre-Filling Filling Station Equipment at Post-Filling Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. End of Line Packaging 7 Agenda Topics 1. Introduction to Beverage Lines 2. Key Packaging Machines 3. Beverage Line Operation and Control 4. Case Study : Line Balancing Simulation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 Impact of Automation in Beverage Machine Key Automation Products Application Filler Synch. Drives / Intelligent IO Solution / Wireless Synchronous Position Gearing 400-600 / min indigenous Conveyors Networked Drives – On Machine Buffers and Accumulation Control 600 / min indigenous Shrink wrappers Servo Motors – High Speed IO Advanced CAM Design 40-50 / min emerging Labelers / Sleevers High End Motion Dead time Compensation 800 / min indigenous Stretch-Molding Temperature Control / High Speed IO / Wireless High Speed IO Control 600 / min indigenous Case Packers / Un-Casers Motion ( Variant Sophistication ) Synchronized Path planning vs Container Size 8 – 12 Cases / min Palletizers / De-palletizers Motion Carton orientation and Positioning 10 – 12 Cases / min Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. Comments 9 Automation in Filling Technology Electronic Valve Control using Device Logix decentralized IO control Wireless IO Communication (all rotary machines) Prototype operating AC-Drive to AC-Drive Gearing Established Technology Wireless reducing Cost of Slip Rings / Replacing Proprietary Electronics with off-the-shelf components Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 10 Automation for Sleever Technology • Performance improvement 50%100% on the same or similar mechanical solutions High Speed Registration Sensor Label Index – Achieved through improved Cam Design and automatic time compensation mechanisms – Allows dynamic speed adaptation on an intermittent system Cutter Shooter Motor Bottle Sensor Side Belt Conveyor • Results are – Higher reliability – due to fewer stops, lower accelerations, – Higher Flexibility – due to more bottle shapes and sizes in the same machine – Smaller Layout – due to better dynamic speed adaptation Automation for OPP Labeler Technology • Minimizing mechanical linkages by replacing Soft cams thru Servo Operation – Achieved through improved Cam Design and automatic time compensation mechanisms – Allows dynamic speed adaptation on an intermittent system • Results are Feeder roll shear roll – Higher reliability – due to fewer stops, lower accelerations, – Higher Flexibility – due to more bottle shapes and sizes in the same machine – Smaller Layout – due to better dynamic speed adaptation Glue gun Bottle rotator Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Shrink wrapper Technology Ready made template Motor A Continuous 5 6 Sto p 3 Sto p 1 Star t Star t 4 Automatic Machine Resynchronization eliminates deadly downtime Full Recipe Management rather than Black box system Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 13 Agenda Topics 1. Introduction to Beverage Lines 2. Key Packaging Machine 3. Beverage Line Operation and Control 4. Case Study : Line Control Simulation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 14 Principles of Beverage Line Operation • Line should be “Balanced” around the Filler 125 120 115 110 105 er Tr uc k Fo rk Pa lle tis Ca se r La be lle r lle r Pa st eu ris er Fi So ak er Un Ca se r De pa lle t is er 100 Tr uc k – To prevent container damage – Bi-Directional accumulation tables up and downstream of Filler to keep line running 130 % of Filler Capacity • Conveying System Design Critical 135 Fo rk – Push empty containers “in” – Pull full containers “out” – Filler should run constant at 100% of its rated capacity Machine Type • Prerequisite factors for Good Line Design – Conveyor Section Length – Variable speed control for conveyors – Adequate buffer space for accumulation Proper calculation of buffer zones and control programming is critical for optimal line layout and operation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 15 General Perception of Beverage Line Performance and Control • Classic setup of a line will try to set every machine at the maximum rated speed possible – Resulting in frequent start/stop – Resulting in higher maintenance and frequent faults of the equipment • Modern considerations look at more efficient ways to configure the equipment – Adjusting equipment for optimal performance against the manufactured product – Adjusting conveyors for optimal capacity against the variant machine behaviors • Goals are – Continuous production – Maximum uptime until an upstream or downstream fault causes a filler stop – Minimum time until the line balances after any equipment stop Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, 16 Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Traditional Principle of Conveyor Control • Low End Lines: Machine – Most of low end beverage lines do not have any line control, they just rely on couple bottle sensors to detect bottle starved or bottle blocked, depends on these situations to start/stop the machines. – Conveyors will run at a fixed speed and can not be adjusted. – Operators are also exhausted by monitoring the line status all the day. Start ConditionBottle detected from Infeed and bottle empty from outfeed Stop ConditionBottle starved from infeed or bottle blocked from outfeed Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 17 Traditional Principle of Conveyor Control • High End Lines: Machine – Normally increase 1 or 2 sensors on the infeed conveyor to adjust machine running speed to Low/Mid/High speed. – Conveyor will be controlled. • Break down the line to several conveyor sections and handled by monitoring the status of each section. • The concept for this solution is actually filling up every section, make each section as full as possible. If gap been detected, the upstream section will try to moving faster to fill up the gap, ensure each machine can running continuously. Speed will increase to fill up next Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 18 Steps to accomplish Quality flow control • Stable, robust and efficient machine control – Allowing a machine to adapt to different line conditions – Defining a standard and simple interface to a machine • Understanding equipment capability and behavior – Frequency of stops – Sensitivity to pressure – Capability to accelerate and decelerate • Designing appropriate accumulation and transport sections – Transport conveyors are primarily used for machines to measure volumes and adapt their behavior – Accumulation conveyors are used to allow for typical machine downtimes • Developing appropriate line simulation and control algorithms Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, 19 Inc. All rights reserved. 19 Analyzing the Line Layout To solve the issues from the conventional solution, the best way is doing bottle flow control. Flow control is actually bottle volume management We also divide entire line to a couple of zones, and calculate the capacity of how many bottles can be load by each zone. Based on this capacity, we can easily understand whether the zone is currently full or not. Shrink Wrapper Filler Pasteurizer Combiner Sleever 1 Buffer Oven 1 Spliter Accumulator Pressureless table Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. Sleever 2 Oven 2 20 Concepts – Line Buffer Modeling Line Components Critical aspect of any form of Line Flow Control is estimating its fill volume as the fill volume in combination with the own, preceding and subsequent unit’s material speeds is the base of a decision to increase, decrease speed or even generate a stop. Our approach will be to program a geometrical buffer model for each Line Element that effectively passes counts of product (bottles) through the entire Line. For machines (Fillers, Labelers, Sleevers, wrappers) the physical production rate is easy to establish, while for bulk product conveyors this mechanism requires rate-relative estimates using ─ Length ─ Width ─ Physical Speed ─ Calculating Fill Volumes of the system ─ Understanding speeds and volumes of systems before and after Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 21 Line Balancing Technology An AOI is used to handle the flow control for each conveyor section, you input the parameters of conveyors including length/width/maximum volume/line speed etc. The instruction will calculate the actual volume of product (bottles) within each section, also adjusting the speed based on how many bottles are being delivered to the next section. We can link up each instruction, just like a soft line layout, and the programmer can easily identify the status of each section and aid in trouble shooting. Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 22 Modeling process Packaging Line Speed : 500 bpm Filler 2.5m Filler Outfeed Conveyor Speed (meter Enter the per minutes machine speed 6m Buffer Zone 1m Dosing Zone 6m 3m Pressureless Combiner Enter the Conveyor Parameter Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. Sleever Infeed Sleever 23 Agenda Topics 1. Introduction to Beverage Lines 2. Key Packaging Machine 3. Beverage Line Operation and Control 4. Case Study : Line Balancing Simulation Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 24 Line Simulation Model with HMI End Labeler Line Line of Production Running Start-Up Reload Material -Linemachines -All -Conveyors -Reduce PLC conveyor receive and conveyors operating speed end production to atare line ready to produce bottle speed accumulate - Stop conveyor - Stop when Conveyor Conveyors utilization conveyor will havebe turn on different upon reach reaching zero once utilization or the low High proceeding set Utilization% low value limit – Buffer, machine/conveyor Infeed, Outfeed, -Maximize -Stop machine Filler after has output Dosing, etcbottle Run time infeed conveyor has rate - Adjust conveyor stop - Progressive speed base onLine - Progressive Line Start utilization set value Stopping -Creating buffer space on conveyor DR07 reduce speed for product accumulation Infeed Conveyor Buffer Conveyor DR08 Stop when Utilization reach set value Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 25 Typical Machine interface to Line Controller • 4-8 Input Signals to the PLC that can be individually configured – – – – – – – – Do Nothing (default) Machine Low Production Speed Machine Run IN / Run OUT Speed Machine High Production Speed Machine Surge Speed Open Infeed Machine Start permissible Run by External Reference Speed • 4-8 Output Signals by the PLC that can be individually configured – – – – – – – – – – – Do nothing (default) Static High Signal Machine Faulted Machine Producing - Infeed Screw is running Pulse per 10 products Machine Running Automatic Speed Active Discharge Saturation Product Starvation Minimum Packaging Material Maintenance required Line Interface Line Controller Sleever Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 26 Line Control for Beverage Line Module Status Module Status Network Status Adapter Status NODE Module Status Network Status NODE Module Status Network Status NODE Module Status Network Status NODE Module Status Network Status NODE Network Status NODE DeviceNet Status PointBus Status 24VDC Sink Input 24VDC Sink Input 24VDC Sink Input 24VDC Sink Input 24VDC Sink Input 24VDC Sink Input 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 1734-ADN System Pow er Field Power 1734 IB4 1734 IB4 1734 IB4 1734 IB4 1734 IB4 1734 IB4 Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 27 Summary • RA domain expertise consultancy includes…. – Line Layout Modeling – Technical guidance to Optimize the size of Conveyors, interconnections between the various Equipments – Guiding the OEMs on how to use global programming standards such as Pack_ML – Provide tools and technologies in the form of templates and function blocks to help OEMs build higher speed and more flexible equipments; and assisting Integrators and Users in how to optimize Line layouts & Plant operations Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 28 Any questions ? Thank You Copyright © 2009 Rockwell Automation, Inc. All rights reserved. 29