DIT07M6-SP Fundamentals of DNP3 Protocols

DIT07M6-SP Fundamentals of DNP3 Protocols

  • Duration:
  • Investment: US$ 179.00
Certificate:

Must complete all lessons

Content

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Description

Distributed Network Protocol has become more popular in recent times, and it is now being implemented in various industrial applications such as electric and water companies. DNP3 is an open and public protocol that uses an object model which reduces the bit mapping of data. When compared to other protocols, DNP3 is more powerful and efficient.
This course is designed in such a way that it helps students to know about the latest protocols. This course covers the fundamentals and operation of Distributed Network Protocol (DNP3).
After completion of this course, students will come to know about the fundamentals of DNP3, subsets, polling and operation of DNP3 and also about IEC 60870-5.

 

WHO SHOULD COMPLETE THIS COURSE?

  • Networking Technicians
  • Systems Engineers
  • Computer science & Networking Engineers
  • Telecommunication Engineers
  • Electronics Engineers
  • IT Engineers

 

COURSE OUTLINE

DNP3

  • What is DNP3
  • Build-up of DNP message

 

DATA LINK LAYER

  • Data link layer
  • Build-up of DNP message
  • FT3 frame format
  • Frame control byte
  • Data link function codes
  • Data link transmission procedure

 

TRANSPORT AND APPLICATION LAYER

  • Transport protocol data unit
  • Build-up of DNP message
  • Transport header byte
  • Application message format
  • Application control field
  • Message transactions 
  • Application function codes
  • Data object library

 

FUNDAMENTALS OF DNP3

  • Object header
  • Object field
  • Qualifier and data types
  • Binary input objects & counter objects
  • Packet decoding examples

 

DNP SUBSETS AND DEVICE DESCRIPTIONS

  • DNP subnet definitions
  • Implementation levels
  • Level one subset
  • Level two subnet
  • Level three subnet
  • Data classes and events
  • Device profile documentation 

 

DNP POLLING & CONFIGURATION OVER SERIAL LINKS

  • Confirming interoperability
  • DNP polling options

 

DNP3 OPERATION OVER LAN & WAN

  • DNP over LAN
  • Network Topology
  • Build-up of DNP message
  • DNP over TCP/IP
  • Time synchronization over LAN
  • Record current time (FC 24)
  • Adjusting clock over LAN
  • Confirmations & retries
  • Time synchronisation
  • Secure authentication & overview

 

OVERVIEW OF IEC 60870-5

  • What is IEC 60870-5
  • IEC 60870 standards

 

QUALITY BITS

  • Quality bits
  • Variable structure qualifier
  • Application layer – ASDU
  • Function codes – Balanced
  • Function codes – Unbalanced
  • Architectures for T101 & T104
  • Interoperability
  • Networked version

Investment

Plan Name Investment
Unlimited Access for 2 Years: US$ 179.00

Instructor

Robert Holm

Robert Holm, PhD, MIEEE

 

After completing his studies in Electrical and Electronic Engineering (MEng) and applied mathematics (BSc Hons) in 1997, Robert worked in industry as a power electronics design engineer. The design of electrical machines was his next pursuit, and he completed a PhD at TU Delft in the Netherlands on this subject. His thesis project was not only an academic study, but very practical: a high-speed permanent-magnet synchronous machine (PMSM) was built from his design and mounted as part of a flywheel in a passenger bus in Eindhoven, where it was in active service for several years. Upon his return to South Africa, Robert worked in teaching and research at two universities: University of Johannesburg (UJ) and North-West University (NWU). While at NWU, he designed three more high-speed PMSMs for industrial and research applications. He was also involved with solar, wind and hydrogen energy systems. Next, Robert ventured into the gold mining industry by working for Gold Fields Mining Innovations as electrical engineer, where he completed novel electromechanical and power electronics designs for mining robots. His experience in mining robotics then led him to the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), where he worked in field robotics software development. Since late 2014, Robert moved back into his previous field of electrical machine design via an internal transfer to the CSIR Landward Sciences competency area. Several high- and low-speed machines are being designed for military and civil applications (particularly the rail industry). His current activities include electrical machine design, power electronics, drives and power systems, control systems and PLC/SCADA applications. Robert's previous career experience includes: software engineering, mathematical modeling, computer vision, robotics, sensors, systems engineering, transformers, switchgear, power systems and other high-power electrical engineering, embedded design, industrial power systems and renewable energy.

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