From Steelmaking to Rolling: How Serial Device Server Supports 10ms-Level Latency Control Signal Transmission in the Entire Metallurgical Process
In the steelmaking workshop of a large iron and steel group, every fine adjustment of the converter tilting angle deeply concerns the engineers. When the temperature of molten steel in the furnace reaches the critical point of 1650°C, the lifting speed of the oxygen lance must be precisely controlled at 0.5m/s. Any delay of 0.1 second may lead to a deviation in the molten steel composition exceeding 0.02%. This ultimate pursuit of low latency is precisely the core challenge in the intelligent transformation of the metallurgical industry—how to achieve 10ms-level control signal transmission throughout the entire process from steelmaking to rolling under extreme conditions of high temperature and strong electromagnetic interference.
On the hot continuous rolling production line of a steel plant, engineers found that even with the most advanced PLC control system, there was still an 80-120ms delay in the adjustment of the rolling mill gap. After detailed testing, the root cause was found to be in the serial communication link: the traditional RS485 bus, over an 800-meter transmission distance, resulted in a signal attenuation that led to a retransmission rate as high as 15%, increasing the single data packet transmission latency by 45ms. More seriously, the strong electromagnetic pulses generated by the electric arc furnace caused the 485 transceiver chips to burn out at a rate of three times per month, with each fault recovery taking more than two hours.
Industry Data Support:
According to statistics from the China Metallurgical Society, 65% of domestic iron and steel enterprises have issues with excessive control latency, with latency caused by physical layer communication accounting for 42% of these cases. On average, annual production line downtime losses due to latency exceed 180 million yuan.
The converter control system of a special steel plant integrates equipment from seven manufacturers, involving five protocols such as Modbus RTU, Profinet, and OPC UA. During the data collection process, the protocol conversion process requires four steps: "serial data reception → protocol parsing → data encapsulation → network transmission," each of which introduces additional delays. Measurements show that from the generation of sensor data to its reception by the MES system, the entire process takes 230-350ms, far exceeding the 100ms control safety threshold.
Customer Psychology Insight:
"We've tried many solutions, but we always find ourselves in a dilemma: either sacrifice real-time performance for compatibility or sacrifice equipment diversity for speed." The frustration expressed by the director of the automation department of a steel plant reflects the deep-seated contradiction in the industry regarding protocol unification and real-time performance.
In the intelligent molten iron transportation project of Baotou Steel Group, a complex heterogeneous network is formed by 5G base stations, MEC edge computing nodes, and PLC control systems. When the unmanned locomotive needs to simultaneously receive positioning signals, scheduling instructions, and safety warnings, the clock synchronization error between different systems reaches 12ms, leading to a braking distance deviation of more than 0.5 meters for a 30-ton molten steel ladle car. This cumulative latency effect expands the actual positioning error of the system, originally designed for centimeter-level precision, to ±8cm.
Technical Principle Revealed:
The cumulative latency effect follows the amplification rule of "1+1>2": physical layer delay (5ms) + protocol conversion delay (15ms) + system synchronization delay (12ms) + network transmission delay (8ms) = 40ms total delay, which is eight times the maximum delay of a single link.
Facing the extreme demands of the metallurgical industry, the USR-N520 dual serial device server achieves latency breakthroughs through three core technologies:
|
指标 |
传统方案 |
USR-N520方案 |
|
协议转换延迟 |
15-25ms |
<2ms |
|
多主机支持能力 |
1-2台 |
8台 |
|
数据包丢失率 |
0.8% |
0.002% |
During the converter blowing process, the oxygen lance position control needs to simultaneously respond to:
Mold level control requires achieving:
On the hot continuous rolling production line, plate shape control requires coordinating:
With the in-depth development of the Industrial Internet, the next-generation product of the USR-N520 has laid out three cutting-edge directions:
When the USR-N520 connected the last old instrument to the MES system, loud applause broke out in the control room of a steel plant. These devices, which had been in service for more than ten years, finally found their place in the digital wave. From steelmaking to rolling, from 1650°C molten steel to 0.05mm plate shape control, every breakthrough in latency control proves that in the steel industry, true intelligence is not a simple superposition of devices but a continuous challenge to the limits of the physical world.
As the director of a steel plant said at the project acceptance meeting: "These serial device servers are like invisible magicians, making our old equipment suddenly become 'smart.' This transformation approach is the true digital transformation path that conforms to the current situation of China's manufacturing industry."—This may be the best interpretation of the value of latency control: it is not just a technical parameter but the "time code" for the steel industry to move towards high-quality development.