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Building a Modular Machine Visualization Solution

Mespack innovated and modularized to best meet customer needs, including an equally flexible Emerson Movicon.NExT HMI/SCADA to standardize their products and support future advancements.

Figure 1: An HMI is a vital and highly visible way for operators to interact, so it must provide clear visualization, extensive connectivity, and scalable design flexibility.
Figure 1: An HMI is a vital and highly visible way for operators to interact, so it must provide clear visualization, extensive connectivity, and scalable design flexibility.

For many mass-produced products, standardization and modularity are great ways to improve overall efficiency. However, this approach is challenged when the products must incorporate many variations. Mespack, Barcelona, Spain, an international packaging machinery manufacturer of horizontal and vertical form-fill-seal, end-of-line, and water-soluble pods equipment for consumer-packaged goods (CPGs) serving the world’s leading brands, experienced the latter situation.

“Mespack offers a wide-ranging industry product portfolio. We may supply a single machine to a customer or a turn-key solution for entire production lines. While we offer standard products, there is great customer demand for various sizes, capabilities, and other customizations, so all equipment is tailor-made,” says Adrián Mora, automation and controls engineer at Mespack.

From a mechanical standpoint, Mora says Mespack made great strides over the years in designing machines featuring modular construction so they could rapidly offer a variety of solutions based on proven technology. Because the digital graphical human-machine interface (HMI) is the highly visible way that operators interact with the equipment, it plays a key role in the overall acceptance of any machine design (Figure 1). Figure 1: An HMI is a vital and highly visible way for operators to interact, so it must provide clear visualization, extensive connectivity, and scalable design flexibility.Figure 1: An HMI is a vital and highly visible way for operators to interact, so it must provide clear visualization, extensive connectivity, and scalable design flexibility.

Mespack’s design team needed to select an HMI software platform that would provide significant design flexibility, modern visualization, extensive connectivity, and the ability to scale and address future needs—just as modular as their mechanical approach.

Taking a closer look at the HMI

Over the years, the Mespack design team became well-acquainted with various HMIs. Some products were standalone, while others could be networked as larger supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems. They knew what worked and held some strong opinions about how an HMI/SCADA platform would need to support their efforts for current and future equipment.

A primary consideration for selecting a new standard HMI/SCADA was that it needed to use scalable vector graphics to deliver a modern look and feel like any contemporary web experience (Figure 2). However, any HMI/SCADA platform encompasses more than just a striking outward appearance, so the Mespack team created a list of other must-have features. Some of those requirements included graphical elements, objects, and library support—including both standard and user-developed objects—through an easy-to-use integrated development environment, promoting consistency and rapid configuration by developers.

Figure 2: By using clear and consistent graphical elements and options for viewing operations and configuring machine settings, the Emerson Movicon.NExT HMI/SCADA platform delivers a high-performance user interface experience.Figure 2: By using clear and consistent graphical elements and options for viewing operations and configuring machine settings, the Emerson Movicon.NExT HMI/SCADA platform delivers a high-performance user interface experience.“A user-centered interface readily adopted and understood by all levels of their customers’ staff. Support for creating configurations is based largely on the ISA101 human-machine interface standard, but with the ability to add new and specific functionalities to help users operate the machines. Comprehensive multi-driver communications so the platform could interact with any target OT-located PLC or intelligent device, and with any higher-level IT computing resources,” Mora says. “Advanced capabilities—such as scripting for sophisticated functions, and 21 CFR Part 11 electronic records/signatures compliance for regulated applications—and an application programming interface (API) so the developers could create their own internal automated methods for rapidly developing configurations.”

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