Python driver and command-line tool for Brooks Instrument mass flow controllers.
pip install brooks-mfc
This driver uses an undocumented REST API in the devices's web interface for communication. The compatibility and stability of this interface with all Brooks controllers is not guaranteed.
To test your connection and stream real-time data, use the command-line interface. You can read the flow rate with:
$ brooks-mfc 192.168.1.200
{
"Customer Flow Totalizer": 0.0,
"Flow": -0.3,
"Flow Hours": 1.0,
"Flow Totalizer": 0.0,
"Live Setpoint": 0.0,
"Operational Hours": 50.0,
"Setpoint": 0.0,
"Supply Voltage": 22.93,
"Temperature": 27.11,
"Valve Position": 0.0
}
Note the "Live Setpoint" is in the configured units (which could be percent of full scale or engineering units). "Setpoint" is always in % of full scale.
You can optionally specify a setpoint flow with the set flag:
brooks-mfc 192.168.1.150 --set 7.5.
The units of the setpoint and return are
specified using the --units
flag, or the currently configured units if no flag
is passed. See brooks-mfc --help
for more.
This uses Python ≥3.5's async/await syntax to asynchronously communicate with the mass flow controller. For example:
import asyncio
from brooks_mfc import FlowController
async def get():
async with FlowController('the-mfc-ip-address') as fc:
print(await fc.get())
asyncio.run(get())
The API that matters is get
, set
. Optionally, units can be passed with
either command. If no units are specified the existing units configured for
the device are used.
>>> await fc.get()
>>> await fc.get('%')
{
"Customer Flow Totalizer": 0.0,
"Flow": -0.3,
"Flow Hours": 1.0,
"Flow Totalizer": 0.0,
"Live Setpoint": 0.0,
"Operational Hours": 50.0,
"Setpoint": 0.0,
"Supply Voltage": 22.93,
"Temperature": 27.11,
"Valve Position": 0.0
}
>>> await fc.set(10)
>>> await fc.set(10, 'SCCM')
There's much more that could be set or returned from the flow controllers but I haven't had a reason to flesh all the the options out. Feel free to submit an issue with requests or a PR.