ISA101, Human
Machine Interfaces
Applying ISA101 Concepts to
Existing HMI Applications
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Celebrating our first 25 years in 2016
Siemens Solution Partner for both PA and FA
25 year history in the process control industry
80+ engineers and 110+ total staff
Seven offices located in:
Houston, TX
Pittsburgh, PA
Newark, DE
Taunton, MA
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Danbury, CT
Owings Mills, MD
Quakertown, PA
Presenter
Michael A. Lennon, P.E.
Earned his Bachelor of Chemical Engineering degree in
1995 from the University of Delaware
Joined Applied Control Engineering, Inc. (ACE) in 2001
Based in ACEs Newark, DE headquarters but has also
worked in ACEs Houston, TX and Taunton, MA offices
Certified ISA 99 / IEC 62443 Cybersecurity
Fundamentals Specialist
Licensed Professional Engineer
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Standard Overview
What is published?
ANSI/ISA-101.01-2015, Human Machine
Interfaces for Process Automation Systems
Technical Report Workgroups are just starting as
of October 2015. The workgroups are:
HMI Philosophy, Style Guide & Design Guide
HMI Usability and Performance
HMI for Mobile Platforms
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Presentation Overview
Intended targets
System implementers
System end users
Both groups work together throughout the HMI
lifecycle
Design
Implementation
Operation
Continuous improvement
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Presentation Overview
Purpose of todays talk
Discuss how to use the ISA standard and HMI
concepts with your existing systems
This presentation is not intended to define
How your HMI should be designed, what colors to
use, what furniture to use in your control room, etc.
How to administer your HMI change control process,
including management of change and training
How to implement HMI changes and best practices
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Our Challenge
Existing HMI systems may
Not be designed to a common style guide
Not use common graphic toolkits
Be configured by multiple system implementers
Be designed with a P&ID set as the lone design
criteria
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Our Challenge
Desired HMI guidelines
You know and/or want your HMI to use
Consistent colors
Process objects from a common toolkit
Embedded trends and contextual information
Etc.
Your desired updated graphics may not be
simple representations of P&IDs
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Our Challenge
How to improve existing HMI systems
Discover opportunities for the continuous
improvement of HMI systems
Interview operations, maintenance, and other users
Review process and safety incidents
Present opportunities and solutions to
System owners and end users
Plant management
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Our Challenge
Existing HMIs are not carved in stone
ISA101 discusses an HMI life cycle
System owners and end users should be familiar
with similar life cycles
Safety system life cycle (ISA84)
Alarm management life cycle (ISA18.2)
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
HMI Life Cycle
from Section 4 of ANSI/ISA-101.01-2015
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
HMI Life Cycle
Starting an HMI upgrade
Begin process by defining your
Philosophy
Style guide
Toolkits
Focus on how a new HMI would operate
Engage system users and owners
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
HMI Life Cycle
Continuous improvement
Two sources for improvement concepts
System designers and implementers
System end users
End users may be more focused on the style
guide
Implementers may be more focused on the
toolkits
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Style Guide
Implementation into existing HMI systems
Improvements can be incremental
Focus on small changes that increase HMI
effectiveness
Color usage
Navigation
Object animation
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Existing HMI Upgrades
Use of color
Gray backgrounds are used to minimize glare
and provide a low-contrast depiction
Bright colors should only be used to highlight
alarms and abnormal situations
Colors that are used for alarms should not be
used elsewhere
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Use of Color, Example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Use of Color, Example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Existing HMI Upgrades
Navigation
Techniques are employed to facilitate quick and
efficient navigation
Consistent navigation techniques are used
throughout the system
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Navigation, Example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Navigation, example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Existing HMI Upgrades
Object animation
Highlight only abnormal situations
E.g. change color when in alarm
Gratuitous animation should be avoided
Refrain from having
Spinning motors
Moving conveyors
Splashing liquids
Fire breathing burners
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Object Animation, example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Object Animation, Example
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Existing HMI Upgrades
Low hanging fruit
Provide HMI improvement with minimal under
the hood changes
Provide a basis for further improvements with
the use of
Process object toolkits
Embedded trends
Human factors engineering
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Process Object Toolkits
Toolkits for common equipment types
Designed to meet philosophy and style guide
standards
Configured for specific technologies
Implemented for
Dynamic objects
Faceplates
Static objects
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Contextual Information
Operators need information
Current values do not tell a story
Analog bars can show
Process contextual information (e.g. at SP)
Trends can show where a value
Has been
Is likely going
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Is This Process Happy?
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Situation Awareness
What does situation awareness mean?
Being aware of what is happening in the process
Understanding the process state now
Understanding the likely process state in the
future
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Imbedded Trend Example
What is the direction of the tank level?
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Where Do We Begin?
Upgrading existing HMIs
Know your system
Interview users and owners
Do they like this system?
Where does the system need improvement?
Produce results
Start small
Show value
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
What To Do After We Start
from Section 4 of ANSI/ISA-101.01-2015
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
Upgrading Notes
Test and review
What works well at your site?
Style guide and philosophy
What needs to be created?
What needs to be added?
Toolkits
What objects need to be created?
What technologies need to be address?
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
References
ANSI/ISA-101.01-2015, Human Machine
Interfaces for Process Automation Systems.
Hollifield, Bill; Oliver, Dana; Nimmo, Ian; Habibi,
Eddie. The High Performance HMI Handbook,
First Edition. Houston: PAS, 2008. Print.
Bullemer, Peter. Effective Operator Display
Design 2008. Phoenix: ASM Joint R&D
Consortium, 2008. Print.
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.
ISA101, Human
Machine Interfaces
Applying ISA101 Concepts to
Existing HMI Applications
2016 Applied Control Engineering, Inc.