I.S. EN 61512-3:2008
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
BATCH CONTROL - PART 3: GENERAL AND SITE RECIPE MODELS AND REPRESENTATION
Hardcopy , PDF
English
01-01-2008
For Harmonized Standards, check the EU site to confirm that the Standard is cited in the Official Journal.
Only cited Standards give presumption of conformance to New Approach Directives/Regulations.
Dates of withdrawal of national standards are available from NSAI.
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Terms and definitions
3.2 Abbreviation
4 Recipe description
4.1 Recipe types
4.2 General and site recipe description
4.2.1 Manufacturing information
4.2.2 Multiple site definitions
4.2.3 Expansion and collapsing of the recipe type
hierarchy
4.3 Equipment-independent recipes
4.3.1 Equipment-independent recipe subtypes
4.3.2 Activities of equipment-independent recipes
4.3.3 Input to trial or pilot production
4.3.4 Output from trial or pilot production
4.3.5 Control of equipment-independent recipes
4.3.6 Equipment-independent recipe definition
4.3.7 Equipment-independent recipe variants
4.3.8 Source of scheduling information
4.3.9 Equipment-independent recipes and business
information
4.3.10 Equipment-independent recipes for capability
comparison
4.3.11 Equipment-independent recipes as facility design
specifications
4.4 General recipes
4.4.1 Enterprise-wide definition
4.4.2 Purpose of a general recipe
4.4.3 General recipe information
4.5 Site recipes
4.5.1 Site-specific recipes
4.5.2 Site recipe definition
4.5.3 Site recipe policies
4.6 Product families and product grades
4.6.1 Product definition
4.6.2 Product families
4.6.3 Product grades
5 Equipment-independent recipe contents
5.1 Recipe information
5.2 Recipe life cycle states
5.3 Recipe header
5.4 Recipe formula
5.5 Recipe procedure
5.5.1 Process model
5.5.2 Process hierarchy
5.5.3 Ideal procedure for manufacture
5.5.4 Process stage
5.5.5 Process operation
5.5.6 Process action
5.5.7 Definition of equipment requirements
5.5.8 Process stage guidelines
5.5.9 Process operation guidelines
5.5.10 Process action guidelines
5.5.11 Process action types
5.6 Equipment requirements
5.6.1 Requirements of final manufacturing equipment
5.6.2 Equipment selection
5.6.3 Constraining target equipment
5.6.4 Managing equipment requirement definitions
5.7 Other information
5.8 Life cycle states
6 Equipment-independent recipe object model
6.1 General
6.2 Modelling techniques
6.3 Object model
6.4 Object relationships
6.5 Object model elements
6.5.1 Attributes
6.5.2 Equipment-independent recipe
6.5.3 Equipment requirement
6.5.4 Equipment requirement element
6.5.5 Equipment requirement library
6.5.6 General recipe
6.5.7 Material definition
6.5.8 Material definition library
6.5.9 Other information
6.5.10 Percent input
6.5.11 Percent output
6.5.12 Process procedure
6.5.13 Process action
6.5.14 Process element
6.5.15 Process element library
6.5.16 Process element link
6.5.17 Process element specification
6.5.18 Process input
6.5.19 Process operation
6.5.20 Process output
6.5.21 Process parameter
6.5.22 Process stage
6.5.23 Site recipe
7 Equipment-independent recipe representation
7.1 Process procedure chart
7.2 Process procedure chart notation
7.2.1 Symbols and links
7.2.2 Process procedure chart symbols
7.2.3 Link types
7.2.4 Rules for valid PPCs
7.3 Process hierarchy
7.3.1 Process operation and process action depiction
7.3.2 Table representation
7.3.3 Graphical and table view equivalence
7.3.4 Non-procedural equipment-independent recipe
information
7.3.5 Equipment-independent recipe formula
7.3.6 Material balance
7.3.7 Equipment requirements
7.3.8 Header and other information
8 Transformation of equipment-independent recipes to
master recipes
8.1 Source of information for master recipes
8.2 Element mapping
8.3 Stage-to-unit procedure mapping
8.4 Transform components
8.4.1 Master recipe component
8.4.2 Transform components for material transfers
8.4.3 Unit startup and shutdown components
8.4.4 Alternate master recipe transform components
8.5 Transformation tasks
8.5.1 Equipment determination
8.5.2 Using non-procedural information in transformation
8.5.3 Creating the master recipe
8.6 Transformation mapping
8.6.1 Multiple possible mapping levels
8.6.2 Process action to master recipe phase mapping
8.6.3 Process action to master recipe operation mapping
8.6.4 Process action to master recipe unit procedure
mapping
8.6.5 Transformation through process operations
8.6.6 Transformation through process stages
Annex A (informative) General and site recipe benefits
Annex B (informative) General and site recipes in the
enterprise
Annex C (informative) Usage questions
Annex ZA (normative) Normative references to international
publications with their corresponding European
publications
Bibliography
Defines a model for general and site recipes; the activities that describe the use of general and site recipes within a company and across companies; a representation of general and site recipes; and a data model of general and site recipes.
DevelopmentNote |
For CENELEC adoptions of IEC publications, please check www.iec.ch to be sure that you have any corrigenda that may apply. (01/2017)
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
144
|
PublisherName |
National Standards Authority of Ireland
|
Status |
Current
|
Standards | Relationship |
EN 61512-3:2008 | Identical |
IEC 61512-3:2008 | Identical |
IEC 60050-351:2013 | International Electrotechnical Vocabulary (IEV) - Part 351: Control technology |
IEC 61512-2:2001 | Batch control - Part 2: Data structures and guidelines for languages |
NAMUR NE 033 : 2003 | REQUIREMENTS TO BE MET BY SYSTEMS FOR RECIPE-BASED OPERATIONS |
IEC 62264-2:2013 | Enterprise-control system integration - Part 2: Object and attributes for enterprise-control system integration |
ISO/IEC 19501:2005 | Information technology — Open Distributed Processing — Unified Modeling Language (UML) Version 1.4.2 |
IEC 61512-1:1997 | Batch control - Part 1: Models and terminology |
EN 62264-1:2013 | Enterprise-control system integration - Part 1: Models and terminology |
EN 61512-2:2002 | Batch control - Part 2: Data structures and guidelines for languages |
IEC 62264-1:2013 | Enterprise-control system integration - Part 1: Models and terminology |
EN 61512-1:1999 | Batch control - Part 1: Models and terminology |
EN 62264-2:2013 | Enterprise-control system integration - Part 2: Objects and attributes for enterprise-control system integration |
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