Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/8939
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dc.contributor.authorJoaquim José Castro Ferreirapt
dc.contributor.authorJosé Alberto gouveia fonsecapt
dc.date.accessioned2012-09-03T14:53:17Zpt
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-16T15:28:51Z-
dc.date.available2012-09-03T14:53:17Zpt
dc.date.available2018-01-16T15:28:51Z-
dc.date.issued2011-02-28pt
dc.identifier.isbn1439802815pt
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10773/8939pt
dc.description.abstractController Area Network (CAN) is a popular and very well-known bus system, both in academia and in industry. CAN protocol was introduced in the mid eighties by Robert Bosch GmbH [7] and it was internationally standardized in 1993 as ISO 11898-1 [24]. It was initially designed to distributed automotive control systems, as a single digital bus to replace traditional point-to-point cables that were growing in complexity, weight and cost with the introduction of new electrical and electronic systems. Nowadays CAN is still used extensively in automotive applications, with an excess of 400 million CAN enabled microcontrollers manufactured each year [14]. The widespread and successful use of CAN in the automotive industry, the low cost asso- ciated with high volume production of controllers and CAN's inherent technical merit, have driven to CAN adoption in other application domains such as: industrial communications, medical equipment, machine tool, robotics and in distributed embedded systems in general. CAN provides two layers of the stack of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model: the physical layer and the data link layer. Optionally, it could also provide an additional application layer, not included on the CAN standard. Notice that CAN physical layer was not de􏳝ned in Bosch original speci􏳝cation, only the data link layer was de􏳝ned. However, the CAN ISO speci􏳝cation 􏳝lled this gap and the physical layer was then fully speci􏳝ed. CAN is a message-oriented transmission protocol, i.e., it de􏳝nes message contents rather than nodes and node addresses. Every message has an associated message identi􏳝er, which is unique within the whole network, de􏳝ning both the content and the priority of the message. Transmission rates are de􏳝ned up to 1 Mbps. The large installed base of CAN nodes with low failure rates over almost two decades, led to the use of CAN in some critical applications such as Anti-locking Brake Systems (ABS) and Electronic Stability Program (ESP) in cars. In parallel with the wide dissemination of CAN in industry, the academia also devoted a large e􏳜ort to CAN analysis and research, making CAN one of the must studied 􏳝eldbuses. That is why a large number of books or book chapters describing CAN were published. The 􏳝rst CAN book, written in French by D. Paret, was published in 1997 and presents the CAN basics [32]. More implementation oriented approaches, including CAN node implementation and application examples, can be found in Lorenz [28] and in Etschberger [16], while more compact descriptions of CAN can be found in [11] and in some chapters of [31]. Despite its success story, CAN application designers would be happier if CAN could be made faster, cover longer distances, be more deterministic and more dependable [34]. Over the years, several protocols based in CAN were presented, taking advantage of some CAN properties and trying to improve some known CAN drawbacks. This chapter, besides presenting an overview of CAN, describes also some other relevant higher level protocols based on CAN, such as CANopen [13], DeviceNet [6], FTT-CAN [1] and TTCAN [25].pt
dc.language.isoengpt
dc.publisherCRC Presspt
dc.rightsopenAccesspor
dc.subjectCAN, filedbus, FTT-CANpt
dc.titleController Area Networkpt
dc.typearticlept
degois.publication.firstPage31-1pt
degois.publication.issue31pt
degois.publication.lastPage32-1pt
degois.publication.titleIndustrial Electronics Handbook, Industrial Communication Systemspt
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