Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

IEC 81346

IEC 81346 is an series jointly published by the (IEC) and the (ISO), providing a for the structuring principles and reference designations of industrial systems, installations, equipment, and industrial products. It establishes rules for organizing and identifying technical objects across disciplines such as , electrical, and , enabling unambiguous communication and documentation in complex projects. The series aims to create a common language for engineers and stakeholders, facilitating design, operation, maintenance, and information exchange while reducing errors from inconsistent labeling. The core of the series is defined in its foundational parts, with IEC 81346-1:2022 outlining basic rules for system structuring, including aspects like function, product, location, and type, along with guidelines for information models and metadata to support object relationships and documentation. This edition, a technical revision of the 2009 version, emphasizes general applicability to all technologies and aligns with horizontal standards per IEC Guide 108. Complementing it, IEC 81346-2:2019 introduces classification schemes using letter codes (e.g., A for assemblies, Q for ) to categorize objects systematically, applicable throughout the lifecycle of systems. These principles form the basis for domain-specific extensions, such as ISO 81346-10:2022 for systems (e.g., farms, plants) and ISO 81346-12:2018 for works (e.g., buildings, HVAC systems). Developed in response to growing complexity in multidisciplinary projects, the IEC 81346 series evolved from earlier and international efforts to standardize reference designations, with the modern framework emerging in the late and undergoing updates to incorporate software and aspects. Key benefits include enhanced , scalability for large-scale systems, and support for twins and ontologies, making it widely adopted in industries like , , and automotive for consistent project documentation and collaboration. Ongoing developments, such as parts for systems (IEC 81346-14) and systems (IEC 81346-20, expected 2027), continue to expand its scope to .

Background and History

Preceding Standards

The IEC 61346 series, published between 1996 and 2001, served as the primary preceding standard for reference designations in industrial systems, installations, and equipment. It comprised four parts: IEC 61346-1 (basic rules, 1996), which outlined general principles for structuring information and assigning reference designations; IEC 61346-2 (classification of objects, 2000), which provided schemes for classifying objects based on their purpose; IEC TR 61346-3 (application to power supply systems, 2001), focusing on sector-specific adaptations; and IEC TR 61346-4 (application to instruments, 1998), addressing instrumentation contexts. Despite its foundational role, IEC 61346 had key limitations, including a primary electrotechnical focus that restricted its adaptability to broader technical disciplines, limited coverage of non-electrical sectors, and inconsistencies in reference designation methods across different fields, which hindered uniform application. These issues arose from its IEC-centric development, lacking integrated international alignment, and assumptions about independent structures that overlooked interdependencies in complex systems. The transition to IEC 81346 occurred in 2009, when the entire IEC 61346 series was withdrawn and fully replaced by IEC 81346-1 and -2, developed jointly by IEC and ISO under a "double logo" framework to promote global adoption and harmonization. This shift addressed prior shortcomings through technical revisions, including expanded introductory material and new provisions for documentation and actions. IEC 61346's aspect-oriented approach—emphasizing (task-related views), (spatial organization), and product (physical components)—directly influenced IEC 81346 but was refined for greater flexibility, such as by introducing lifecycle-stable codes and broader applicability to all domains while maintaining compatibility with existing designations. For instance, the aspect's role in identifying operational roles evolved into more comprehensive object modeling in the successor standard, enhancing consistency without requiring wholesale redesigns. The Reference Designation System () in IEC 81346 thus represents a direct evolution from IEC 61346's designation rules, building on its core while resolving sectoral gaps.

Development and Evolution

The IEC 81346 series originated in 2009 with the joint publication of Parts 1 (basic rules) and 2 (classification of objects and codes), developed collaboratively by IEC Committee 3 on , , and interfaces, and ISO Technical Committee 10 Subcommittee 10 on process plant , under a dual IEC/ISO logo to ensure harmonized international application. This initiative replaced the preceding IEC 61346 series, which was withdrawn upon the release of the new standard. Subsequent milestones included the 2018 release of Part 12, establishing reference designations for construction works (RDS-CW) to address sector-specific needs in building and systems. In , Part 2 underwent revision to expand object classes and refine classification schemes for broader applicability across industrial products. The year 2022 marked further advancements with updates to Part 1, enhancing general structuring principles, and the first edition of Part 10, providing rules for power supply systems (RDS-PS). IEC TC 3 and ISO/TC 10 have played central roles in these developments, fostering alignment with complementary standards such as IEC 61131 for automation systems to support consistent identification in electrotechnical applications. The standard's evolution has increasingly incorporated ontological frameworks and digital twin concepts to facilitate data interoperability in Industry 4.0 environments, enabling structured information management for complex systems. By 2022, all major sector-specific parts had attained full international standard status, solidifying the series' global adoption. Ongoing efforts as of November 2025 include the draft for Part 14 on reference designations for manufacturing systems (RDS-MS), still under development, while ISO/TS 81346-101, offering application guidelines for power systems, was published in January 2025.

Core Concepts and Principles

Reference Designation System (RDS)

The Reference Designation System () is a multi-layered framework within the IEC 81346 series for assigning unique reference designations to objects in industrial systems, installations, and equipment, thereby enabling consistent and unambiguous communication across engineering disciplines such as , electrical, and . This system treats designations as identifiers that link descriptive information about an object's , , and physical realization, facilitating the of diverse elements without reliance on sector-specific jargon. At its core, RDS employs a hierarchical structure organized around three primary aspects: functions (denoted by "="), locations (denoted by "+"), and products (denoted by "-"), with breakdown levels that progress from high-level systems to detailed subsystems and components. For instance, a function aspect might identify what an does, a location aspect specifies where it is placed, and a product aspect describes its physical or logical construction, allowing for scalable decomposition such as main systems, technical subsystems, and individual components. These components ensure that designations can be built incrementally, supporting complex projects by maintaining clarity at each level of . The designation format follows a general syntax, such as "=[function code]-[number]+[location code]-[number]", where codes and sequential numbers create unique identifiers tailored to the system's structure. Rules for uniqueness require that each designation be distinct within its context, avoiding overlaps through hierarchical numbering (e.g., appending "-1", "-2" for siblings), while is achieved by allowing extensions for growing systems without redesignation. This format promotes , as classification schemes in IEC 81346-2 provide the letter codes to populate these elements. RDS offers significant benefits by reducing errors in technical documentation and drawings through standardized labeling, which minimizes misinterpretation in multidisciplinary teams. It supports full lifecycle management, from initial design and procurement to operation, maintenance, and decommissioning, by enabling of elements across phases. Additionally, it facilitates interdisciplinary integration, allowing engineers from different fields to reference the same system elements consistently, thereby streamlining collaboration and reducing production times. Historically, RDS evolved from the earlier IEC 61346 standard, which introduced foundational principles for object designation but faced challenges with ambiguities in increasingly complex, integrated projects. The transition to IEC 81346 refined these into a more robust, internationally harmonized system, now aligned with digital modeling tools like BIM and software to handle modern engineering demands.

Structuring and Classification Principles

The IEC 81346 standard establishes structuring principles that enable the organization of complex technical systems through a multi-viewpoint approach, allowing representations at various levels such as functional, locational, and product-oriented perspectives. This method decomposes systems into hierarchical structures, where objects are broken down into sub-objects using partitive relations, facilitating clear delineation of relationships across different scales of detail. By adopting multiple viewpoints, the standard supports activities and lifecycle management, ensuring that the same object can be viewed and documented from diverse angles without conflict. Central to these principles is the classification framework, which employs an object-oriented model to categorize elements of industrial systems. Objects are defined as entities performing activities with inputs and outputs, grouped into classes and subclasses based on their primary purpose, such as for provision or processes for , promoting unambiguous referencing through alphanumeric identifiers. This framework, detailed in IEC 81346-2, transcends specific technical disciplines by providing neutral schemes applicable to electrical, mechanical, and contexts, thereby enabling interdisciplinary collaboration. Key concepts include aspect designation, which differentiates viewpoints like functional (emphasizing purpose and behavior) from physical or product-oriented (focusing on tangible components), and hierarchical , which builds multi-level structures for comprehensive representation. Information modeling further integrates these elements via standardized schemas, such as EXPRESS-G diagrams, linking designations to artifacts like drawings and specifications for enhanced and maintenance. These mechanisms ensure that are modeled holistically, supporting that evolves with project phases. The principles align closely with modern systems engineering practices, particularly (MBSE), by providing a foundation for and integration with ontologies. This enables the creation of structures that facilitate automated querying and validation in digital twins or applications, as demonstrated in frameworks combining IEC 81346 with SysML for zero-defect . Unlike legacy designation systems, which often enforced discipline-specific silos, IEC 81346 introduces neutral, viewpoint-agnostic rules that promote mechatronic integration and avoid fragmentation in multidisciplinary projects.

Main Parts of the Standard

Part 1: Basic Rules

IEC 81346-1:2022 establishes general principles for the structuring of systems, including the structuring of information about systems, and provides rules and guidance for formulating unambiguous reference designations for objects in any system, applicable across technical areas such as , , , and . These principles support the modeling of complex industrial systems like plants and machines, enabling efficient creation, exchange, and retrieval of technical information throughout the object's lifecycle. As a horizontal standard per IEC Guide 108, it applies to multi-technology systems without sector-specific adaptations. Key rules in IEC 81346-1:2022 include requirements for reference models that define hierarchical structures, such as function-oriented, product-oriented, location-oriented, and type-oriented views, allowing multiple aspects or viewpoints of the same object to facilitate different perspectives in documentation. Designation formats specify single-level (e.g., identifying a basic object) and multi-level (e.g., hierarchical breakdowns like parent-child relations) reference designations, ensuring unambiguous identification through consistent syntax and integration with technical documents. Rules for creating and using identifiers emphasize top-node identifiers for overarching systems and sub-designations for components, promoting documentation integration where reference designations link directly to drawings, specifications, and databases. Classification codes from Part 2 may be used to populate these structures for object identification. The 2022 revision introduces enhancements such as the type aspect for categorizing similar objects, information models for representing system data, and recommendations to support advanced applications, while synchronizing with IEC 81346-2:2019 and ISO 81346-12:2018 for consistency. It improves with related standards like IEC 61355-1:2008 for and ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010:2011 for description, and provides clarified rules for complex systems, including support for digital twins through lifecycle management and structuring. This edition replaces IEC 81346-1:2009, incorporating new definitions and elevating previous informative notes to normative status. Application guidelines recommend applying these rules during design phases to break down systems hierarchically, for example, from enterprise-level structures (e.g., an entire facility) to component-level details (e.g., individual actuators in a plant), using structure trees to visualize relations. Normative annexes offer guidance on numbering schemes for sequential identification within hierarchies and strategies to avoid conflicts in multi-vendor environments, such as harmonizing designations across supplier interfaces. These elements ensure scalable and maintainable reference designation systems for industrial applications.

References

  1. [1]
    IEC 81346-1:2022 - Industrial systems, installations and ... - ISO
    In stock 2–5 day deliveryThis document establishes general principles for the structuring of systems including structuring of information about systems.
  2. [2]
    ISO/IEC 81346 Standard Series
    The ISO/IEC 81346 Standard Series is an international standard that provides you with the core rules for naming, structuring, and documenting objects and ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  3. [3]
    [PDF] IEC 81346-2 - iTeh Standards
    The aim of this document is to establish classification schemes for objects with assigned letter codes for the defined classes, which can be applied throughout ...
  4. [4]
    ISO 81346-10:2022 - Industrial systems, installations and equipment ...
    In stock 2–5 day deliveryThis document provides rules for structuring of systems in the domain of power supply systems, being supplementary to the general principles for the ...
  5. [5]
    Structuring and Identification - IEC TC 3
    The IEC 61346 series allows any object in a design to be unambiguous identified by one or more reference designations, and each object can be classified.
  6. [6]
  7. [7]
    The Concepts of IEC 61346 Applied to a Software Architecture for ...
    The IEC 61346 standard establishes general principles for structuring the information of technical systems. This paper discusses the ideas shown in the Standard ...
  8. [8]
    [PDF] The Concepts of IEC 61346 Applied to a Software Architecture for ...
    The IEC 61346 standard establishes general principles for structuring the information of technical systems. The present document discusses the ideas shown in ...
  9. [9]
    IEC 81346-1:2009(en), Industrial systems, installations and ... - ISO
    A list of all parts of the International Standard 81346 series, formerly IEC 61346 series, under the general title Industrial systems, installations and ...
  10. [10]
    [PDF] IEC 81346-1:2009 - iTeh Standards
    A list of all parts of the International Standard 81346 series, formerly IEC 61346 series, under the general title Industrial systems, installations and ...
  11. [11]
    Applying and Adapting the IEC 61346 Standard to Industrial ...
    Aug 6, 2025 · The structures used can be function oriented, product oriented or location oriented and these determine the initial character of the designator.
  12. [12]
    IEC Reference Designations - myElectrical
    Aug 26, 2009 · The IEC publishes a series of documents and rules governing the preparation of documents, drawings and the referencing of equipment.
  13. [13]
    IEC 81346-1:2009
    Jul 30, 2009 · IEC 81346-1:2009, published jointly by IEC and ISO, establishes general principles for the structuring of systems including structuring of the information ...Missing: initiation | Show results with:initiation
  14. [14]
  15. [15]
    ISO 81346-12:2018 - Industrial systems, installations and equipment ...
    2–5 day deliveryThis document establishes rules for structuring of systems and the formulation of reference designations and provides classes for systems in the field of ...
  16. [16]
    IEC 81346-2:2019
    Jun 18, 2019 · IEC 81346-2:2019 establishes classification schemes with defined object classes and their associated letter codes, and is primarily intended for use in ...Missing: preceding | Show results with:preceding
  17. [17]
    IEC 81346-1:2022
    Mar 30, 2022 · IEC 81346-1:2022 establishes general principles for the structuring of systems including structuring of information about systems.Missing: preceding | Show results with:preceding
  18. [18]
    [PDF] New ways of using standards for semantic interoperability towards in
    ISO/IEC 81346 offers the necessary and sufficient framework to support a systems' engineering methodology, to provide linked structures for the management of ...
  19. [19]
    Conceptual architecture of cognitive digital twins defined based on...
    The Asset Definition Model ensures standardized data representation based on IEC 81346-1:2022 and ISO 14224:2016, while the Asset Criticality Model prioritizes ...
  20. [20]
    IEC/DIS 81346-14 - Industrial systems, installations and ... - ISO
    This document encompasses the process of transforming, processing and maintaining material. The specifications in this document apply for processing, ...
  21. [21]
    ISO/TS 81346-101:2025 - Industrial systems, installations and ...
    2–5 day deliveryThis document gives guidelines to support the application of the ISO 81346 and IEC 81346 series to power supply systems.
  22. [22]
    The Reference Designation System (RDS) A common naming ...
    Sep 13, 2016 · RDS identifies systems and their elements. A reference designation (a TAG number) is the output of RDS. The TAG numbers act as labels for the ...
  23. [23]
    [PDF] IEC 81346-1:2022 - iTeh Standards
    Feb 15, 2022 · This edition constitutes a technical revision. This edition includes the following significant technical changes with respect to the previous.
  24. [24]
    [PDF] Iec-81346-2-2009.pdf
    Aug 1, 2009 · This part of International Standard 81346, published jointly by IEC and ISO defines classes and subclasses of objects based on a purpose- or ...
  25. [25]
    Common Language for Systems by the ISO/IEC 81346 Reference ...
    Aug 31, 2023 · The fundamental principles are defined by ISO/IEC 81346 standard series, which provides a common language for systems across all engineering ...
  26. [26]
    RDS 81346 Ontology | Enhance Interoperability Today — ISO/IEC ...
    Explore the RDS 81346 Ontology for ISO/IEC 81346 standards, improving systems engineering modeling and model integration across engineering domains.