CC-Link Open Automation Networks


The CC-Link Open Automation Networks Family are a group of open industrial networks that enable devices from numerous manufacturers to communicate. They are used in a wide variety of industrial automation applications at the machine, cell and line levels.

History

The CC-Link Partner Association offers a family of open-architecture networks. These originated with the CC-Link fieldbus in 1996, developed by Mitsubishi Electric Corporation. In 2000, this was released as an “Open” network so that independent automation equipment manufacturers could incorporate CLPA network compatibility into their products.
In the same year, the CC-Link Partner Association was formed to manage and oversee the network technology and support manufacturer members. In 2007, the CLPA was the first organisation to introduce open gigabit Ethernet for automation with CC-Link IE. In 2018, the CLPA was the first organisation to combine open gigabit Ethernet with Time-Sensitive Networking as CC-Link IE TSN. As of May 2020, over 2,100 CLPA compatible products from more than 340 automation manufacturers were available.
CLPA offers a variety of open automation network technologies. These are the CC-Link fieldbus, CC-Link Safety fieldbus, CC-Link IE and CC-Link IE TSN. Compatible products include industrial PCs, PLCs, robots, servos, drives, valve manifolds, digital & analogue I/O modules, temperature controllers, mass flow controllers and others. As of May 2020, there was approximately 30 million devices installed worldwide.

Structure of the CLPA

The CLPA is a global organisation with branches in 11 locations worldwide. The headquarters are in Nagoya, Japan. Some branches offer conformance testing facilities. The CLPA is controlled by a board of currently nine companies, which are 3M, Balluff, Cisco, Cognex Corporation, IDEC Corporation, Mitsubishi Electric, Molex, NEC and Pro-face. The board controls the strategic direction of the organisation and oversees its operations, including the activities of the technical and marketing task forces and the global branches.

Industry Cooperation

The CLPA has been involved in strategic cooperation with other open technology associations in the industrial automation space. These include PROFIBUS & PROFINET International, the OPC Foundation and AutomationML. The cooperation with PI resulted in a standard for interoperability between CC-Link IE and PROFINET. The OPC Foundation activity created an OPC UA companion specification for the CLPA's "CSP+ For Machine" technology. Cooperation with AutomationML involved the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding to incorporate the "CSP+" and "CSP+ For Machine" device profile technologies into AutomationML models.

Standardization

CLPA has obtained the following certifications for its open network technologies:
CC-Link :
CC-Link Safety:
CC-Link IE Control:
CC-Link IE Field:
CC-Link IE Field Basic:
CC-Link IE TSN:
Seamless Messaging Protocol
Control & Communication System Profile
All certification testing for CLPA networks is carried out by the CLPA and is compulsory in order to ensure that devices manufactured by suppliers meet the strict technical performance standards. These include noise resistance and correct communication functionality.
To declare a product as CLPA certified, a vendor needs to successfully test their product at one of the CLPA test laboratories situated in the USA, China, Korea, Japan or Germany.