Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 3 - Serial Communication Standards

We've already introduced the concept of serial communications, the placing of one bit
after another on a single media channel. It is the most prevalent form of data communications.
However, there are many differences between transmitting a text file by modem to a
bulletin board and sending data to the server over a 100-Mbps network. Both are serial,
but they differ in many ways. This chapter focuses on three EIA/TIA serial standards for
232, 422, and 485 as well as the ancillary 423 and 530 standards. Since the United States
now sits on the international standards committees, the EIA/TIA standards have their equivalency
in ISO standards, and indeed most have been changed to meet the ISO standards.
Serial interface to the PC is being accomplished by newer and much faster technologies, so
we will also focus on four PC-based standards, USB 2.0, Firewire (IEEE 1394), SATA, and
PCIe, that will impact industrial use and applications.

Definitions
Understanding how data circuit-terminating equipment (DCE) and data terminal equipment
(DTE) are defined is essential to any discussion of data communications. From the hardware
device dominant in the 1960s to today's software interfaces these terms are used
throughout data communications applications (and not always correctly).

Data termination equipment (DTE) means the end device (either data source or destination) that
originates data to or receives data from a piece of data communications equipment (a printer,
computer, multiplexer), where the data transmitted is native (that is, as stored and operated on
the equipment) and intended for transmission to another device. Figure 3-1 illustrates a DTE.

Data circuit-terminating equipment (DCE) is the point that is nearest the communications
line external to the equipment. Examples are modems, line drivers, multiplexer composite
output, and so on. Usually, the DCE is connected to a DTE, forming a complete data
station. The DTE is farthest from the communications line; the DCE is the closest to the
outside line. Figure 3-1 illustrates a typical DCE-to-DTE arrangement.

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Category: RS-232, RS-422, and RS-485 Interfaces
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