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It is highly probable that machines or workstations on your production shop floor have a sticker or a symbol reading CE, UL, ATEX etc. Have you wondered what those symbols actually mean?
These acronyms represent standards that guarantee safe procedures for some or all the lifecycle of a machine or workstation, which means it fulfills certain requirements in design, installation, operation, maintenance and disposal (environmental aspects) of the equipment. In the following article we describe some of the most common and important certifications.
Directive 2006/42/EC is a mandatory certification required for machine manufacturers and distributors for their product to be commercialized in the European Union. While the CЄ mark is not officially a certification as there is no requirement for follow-up testing by an overseeing organization for all product types. However, the CЄ mark is required for sale in the European Union for the specified products and labeling a non-compliant product with the CЄ mark is illegal. While the CЄ mark is relevant for a great deal of products, such as all electrical devices, toys or food safe equipment, we only focus on shop floor machines in this article.
In the first steps of the CE directive, it distinguishes the equipment as dangerous or non-dangerous. For the first category, a third party is needed to certify the machine. An example for these entities is the TÜV SÜD. For the second category the proper OEM can do the certification by creating the proper documentation of production and testing.
Aspects considered in the CЄ mark:
Whenever these standards are fulfilled, the manufacturer can mark the equipment with the CЄ symbol. The symbol stands for “Conformité Européenne” which means “European conformity” in French. When the manufacturer sells a machine, it must be accompanied by the declaration of conformity signed.
In the United States of America there are no mandatory regulations that forces the OEMs or distributors to certify their machines or workstations. Nevertheless, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) created the ANSI B11.0-2020 regulation and is highly recommended for companies to demand this to machine manufacturers. Similar in scope to the previous directive in content, the ANSI B11 establishes requirements for design, construction, reconstruction, modification, installation, setup, operation and maintenance of machinery or machine systems.
Based on the ISO Type A-B-C structure for machinery standards, ANSI B11 uses the following framework for risk assessment and risk reduction:
Concepts, design principles, and general aspects that are applicable to machinery, e.g. risk assessment based on ANSI B11-2008, determining the high, medium, low and negligible risk of an event to happen.
Deals with single safety aspects which can be applied across a wide range of machinery. One example would be warnings of temperature of surfaces.
Detailed standards based on the type of machine. An example is the ISO 10218-1:2011 that considers safety of robots and robotic devices in particular.
Similar to the CЄ, organizations can provide services for certifying machines. A relevant and highly recognized company in the USA is UL Solutions. Generally they provide a mark in order to demonstrate that a machine or workstation has fulfilled the requirements of a particular standard.
Large corporates with plenty of experience in manufacturing processes can have extended checklists with safety requirements while also demanding particular hardware components. Bosch Production System is an example of the biggest automotive Supplier.
NEMA: An ANSI-accredited standards developing organization. Defines NEMA electrical enclosures(from the control cabinets) types:
IEC Enclosure Classification Designation
ATEX Zones: ATEX stands for Atmosphere Explosive and is a term used for the European Union 94/9/EC directive. Distinguishes between two types of explosive atmospheres: gas and dust. Although the zones characteristics are identical for both gas and dust, their numbering is different. Zone 0, 1 and 2 refer to gas and Zone 20, 21 and 22 refer to dust.
Other relevant organizations for the US market:
After reviewing the different certifications, the United Manufacturing Hub strongly encourages you to study the regulations that are applicable to the machine, workstation, or production process where you want to implement your IIoT project. Hoping that this article was helpful for you as a first dive in this topic, we strongly encourage you to continue advancing in our Knowledge documentation. The next chapter is all about operations management systems like MES, ERP and PLM.