Sensors perform condition monitoring efficiently, analyzing and reporting data to support human decision-making. Global tech analysts predict that more than 20 billion devices will be connected by 2020, and that the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) will be a $200 billion market by 2021. In the simplest terms, the IoT is real-time data connection, driven by processing and transmitting data at faster speeds, on progressively smarter and smaller machines.
The ultimate value of the IIoT, however, goes beyond data collection and transmission. It encompasses the complete visibility and control of virtually all electromechanical factors in the manufacturing process, empowering companies to move beyond descriptive and diagnostic analysis to predictive intelligence and preventive action. Quantifiable benefits include the ability to identify disruptions, such as product or process variance, and circumvent or redesign to avoid these issues. Plant operators can discover unused capacity, reduce maintenance costs and downtime, improve safety, and maximize overall equipment effectiveness (OEE).
A comprehensive view of the manufacturing process or assembly line is accomplished by placing networked sensors on physical equipment to collect data. These sensors perform condition monitoring, analyzing constant input like temperature, vibration, or sound frequencies. This data is transmitted back to a central location or cloud where decision makers can access it. This process requires reliable high-speed connections, often in environments that include dust, noise, temperature changes, and vibration; in the food and beverage industry, it also includes the challenge of frequent washdowns.
Connectors act as the vital link between the cables carrying data and the devices that record and communicate information. The demand for faster data transmissions that can accommodate visuals has driven the development of connectors able to support the gigabit data requirements for the latest sensors. To add to the complexity, machines are getting smaller, putting pressure on component makers to deliver greater speed, power, and capacity in an ever-shrinking footprint.
The ABCs of M12 connectors: coding, pins and locking systems
As applications require higher-speed connections, X-coded connectors will likely replace D-coded connectors. (Pictured: binder M12 X-coded female connectors)
Introduced in 1985, the M12 connector has built a decades-long track record as one of the most reliable connectors for industrial applications. Once used primarily by automobile manufacturers, the M12 has become the industry standard in factory automation, autonomous robotics, communication, measurement and control, and many other applications.
Coding
On the plant floor, personnel need to be able to disconnect existing connectors for maintenance and install new connectors on newly-laid cables quickly, especially where connections must remain dust- or water-tight. M12 connectors are easily installable and clearly coded to reduce the chance of accidental mis-mating.
For signal and data transmission:
M12 coding for power supplies:
Pins
M12 connectors are available with 3, 4, 5, 8, or 12 pins. The ideal pin count depends on the application. For example, most sensors and power applications use 3 or 4 pins, where Profinet and Ethernet use 4- and 8-pin counts.
Locking systems
There are three basic types of locking systems on an M12 connector:
• Push-pull: Locks easily and securely, with an audible click indicating that the proper connection has been established.
• Threaded coupling: A threaded nut on the plug is mated with a corresponding set of threads on the receptacle.
• Bayonet: An interconnect mating design that uses pins on the receptacle and ramps on the plug for quick-connect and disconnect coupling.
Additional M12 features and options
The connector choice for a specific application can be further customized by selecting options such as those below:
Three reasons M12 connectors are the smart choice for Industry 4.0.
Though M12 connectors were available decades before the IIoT was even a concept, they have become the preferred connector for industrial Ethernet. For data transmission, they are used on the device side — pulling data from devices and transmitting it to the application where data is aggregated to provide useful information to the user. They are also used to transmit high levels of power supplies for extended time periods in applications such as ac motors and drives, motor control switches, and low-voltage applications like fieldbus Ethernet components and network devices.
1. Unrivaled ruggedness
Compared to the RJ45, the other most commonly used industrial connector, M12 connectors offer superior performance in harsh conditions due to:
2. EMI shielding
Hard-wired connections offer some intrinsic advantages over wireless connections, primarily the security of physical connections and the avoidance of wireless interference. This is especially important because the new IIoT-enabled factory is often filled with electromagnetic interference (EMI), also called radio frequency interference (RFI). Unseen and unheard by people, this electronic noise pollution frequently interferes with high-precision sensors already taxed by physical noise and vibrations of a busy factory floor.
The increasing pervasiveness of EMI places an additional burden on manufacturers to design equipment that both generates as little EMI as possible, and ensures that their equipment has reasonable resistance against EMI so that operation isn’t affected when it is a factor.
To satisfy these requirements, manufacturers must use connectors and connecting cables with sufficient shielding properties. Good shielding is achieved when the following conditions are met:
3. Compact size
The Industry 4.0 trend towards miniaturization requires more compact components and connectivity solutions, even as power and data transmission needs grow. Increasingly-smaller devices and sensors are transmitting more data, which requires more connection points, which means that connectors have to deliver the same (or more) power density in a smaller footprint.
Today’s factories create significant EMI challenges. Advanced sensors exist alongside miles of old cabling, wireless phones, and network devices.
Originally designed to reduce the size of the ⅞ in. connector, which was standard at the time for sensors, the M12 connector has an outside diameter locking thread of just 12 mm. Its small footprint makes it well suited for applications with little free space such as automation control systems, telemetry modules, compact LED lighting fixtures, and value actuators.
M12 technology continues to evolve
Machine designers and OEMs are incorporating M12 connectors into new machines, as well as updating existing infrastructure. With backwards compatibility, replacing older and less robust technology like RJ45 connectors is relatively simple and cost effective. Manufacturers of M12 connectors continue to innovate, adding new features to meet the quickly-changing needs of the robotics, automation, food and beverage, alternative energy, and cellular communication industries. Positionable, lockable, field wireable connectors, capable of transmitting impressive amounts of data and power, ensure that the M12 will continue to be an essential component of Industry 4.0 and beyond.