Industry 4.0

Industrial revolutions and future vision

Industry 4.0, or Industrie 4.0, is the current trend of automation and data exchange in manufacturing technologies. It includes cyber-physical systems, the Internet of things and cloud computing.[1][2][3]

Industry 4.0 creates what has been called a "smart factory". Within the modular structured smart factories, cyber-physical systems monitor physical processes, create a virtual copy of the physical world and make decentralized decisions. Over the Internet of Things, cyber-physical systems communicate and cooperate with each other and with humans in real time, and via the Internet of Services, both internal and cross-organizational services are offered and used by participants of the value chain.[1]

Name

The term "Industrie 4.0" originates from a project in the high-tech strategy of the German government, which promotes the computerization of manufacturing.[4]

Some have compared Industrie 4.0 with the Fourth Industrial Revolution, however, the latter refers to a systemic transformation that includes impact on civil society, governance structures, and human identity in addition to solely economic/manufacturing ramifications. The first industrial revolution mobilised the mechanization of production using water and steam power; the second industrial revolution then introduced mass production with the help of electric power, followed by the digital revolution and the use of electronics and IT to further automate production.[5] The term "fourth industrial revolution" has been applied to significant technological developments several times over the last 75 years, and is up for academic debate. [6][7][8] Industrie 4.0, on the other hand, focuses on manufacturing specifically in the current context, and thus is separate from the fourth industrial revolution in terms of scope.

The term "Industrie 4.0" was revived in 2011 at the Hannover Fair.[9] In October 2012 the Working Group on Industry 4.0 presented a set of Industry 4.0 implementation recommendations to the German federal government. The Industry 4.0 workgroup members are recognized as the founding fathers and driving force behind Industry 4.0.

Industry 4.0 Workgroups [10]

Co-Chair Henning Kagermann and Siegfired Dais
WG 1 – The Smart Factory: Manfred Wittenstein
WG 2 – The Real Environment: Siegfried Russwurm
WG 3 – The Economic Environment: Stephan Fische
WG 4 – Human Beings and Work: Wolfgang Wahlster
WG 5 – The Technology Factor: Heinz Derenbach

Industry 4.0 Workgroup members
Reinhold Achatz, Heinrich Arnold, Klaus Träger, Johannes Helbig, Wolfram Jost, Peter Leibinger, Reinhard Floss, Volker Smid, Thomas Weber, Eberhard Veit, Christian Zeidler, Reiner Anderl, de:Thomas Bauernhansl, Michael Beigl, Manfred Brot, Werner Damm, Jürgen Gausemeier, Otthein Herzog, Fritz Klicke, Gunther Reinhart, Bernd Scholz-Reiter, Bernhard Diener, Rainer Platz, Gisela Lanza, Karsten Ortenberg, August Wilhelm Scheer, Henrik von Scheel, Dieter Schwer, Ingrid Sehrbrock, Dieter Spatz, Ursula M. Staudinger, Andreas Geerdeter, Wolf-Dieter Lukas, Ingo Rühmann, Alexander Kettenborn and Clemens Zielinka.

On 8 April 2013 at the Hannover Fair, the final report of the Working Group Industry 4.0 was presented.[11]

Design principles

There are four design principles in Industry 4.0. These principles support companies in identifying and implementing Industry 4.0 scenarios.[1]

Meaning

Current usage of the term has been criticised as essentially meaningless, in particular on the grounds that technological innovation is continuous and the concept of a "revolution" in technology innovation is based on a lack of knowledge of the details.[12]

The characteristics given for the German government's Industry 4.0 strategy are: the strong customization of products under the conditions of highly flexibilized (mass-) production. The required automation technology is improved by the introduction of methods of self-optimization, self-configuration,[13] self-diagnosis, cognition and intelligent support of workers in their increasingly complex work.[14] The largest project in Industry 4.0 at the present time (July 2013) is the BMBF leading-edge cluster "Intelligent Technical Systems OstWestfalenLippe (it's OWL)". Another major project is the BMBF project RES-COM,[15] as well as the Cluster of Excellence "Integrative Production Technology for High-Wage Countries".[16] In 2015, the European Commission started the international Horizon 2020 research project CREMA[17] (Providing Cloud-based Rapid Elastic Manufacturing based on the XaaS and Cloud model) as a major initiative to foster the Industry 4.0 topic.

Effects

In June 2013, consultancy firm McKinsey [18] released an interview featuring an expert discussion between executives at Robert Bosch - Siegfried Dais (Partner of the Robert Bosch Industrietreuhand KG) and Heinz Derenbach (CEO of Bosch Software Innovations GmbH) - and McKinsey experts. This interview addressed the prevalence of the Internet of Things in manufacturing and the consequent technology-driven changes which promise to trigger a new industrial revolution. At Bosch, and generally in Germany, this phenomenon is referred to as Industry 4.0. The basic principle of Industry 4.0 is that by connecting machines, work pieces and systems, businesses are creating intelligent networks along the entire value chain that can control each other autonomously.

Some examples for Industry 4.0 are machines which can predict failures and trigger maintenance processes autonomously or self-organized logistics which react to unexpected changes in production.

According to Dais, "it is highly likely that the world of production will become more and more networked until everything is interlinked with everything else". While this sounds like a fair assumption and the driving force behind the Internet of Things, it also means that the complexity of production and supplier networks will grow enormously. Networks and processes have so far been limited to one factory. But in an Industry 4.0 scenario, these boundaries of individual factories will most likely no longer exist. Instead, they will be lifted in order to interconnect multiple factories or even geographical regions.

There are differences between a typical traditional factory and an Industry 4.0 factory. In the current industry environment, providing high-end quality service or product with the least cost is the key to success and industrial factories are trying to achieve as much performance as possible to increase their profit as well as their reputation. In this way, various data sources are available to provide worthwhile information about different aspects of the factory. In this stage, the utilization of data for understanding current operating conditions and detecting faults and failures is an important topic to research. e.g. in production, there are various commercial tools available to provide Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) information to factory management in order to highlight the root causes of problems and possible faults in the system. In contrast, in an Industry 4.0 factory, in addition to condition monitoring and fault diagnosis, components and systems are able to gain self-awareness and self-predictiveness, which will provide management with more insight on the status of the factory. Furthermore, peer-to-peer comparison and fusion of health information from various components provides a precise health prediction in component and system levels and force factory management to trigger required maintenance at the best possible time to reach just-in time maintenance and gain near zero downtime.[19]

Challenges

Challenges which have been identified include

Role of big data and analytics

Modern information and communication technologies like Cyber-Physical Systems, big data or cloud computing will help predict the possibility to increase productivity, quality and flexibility within the manufacturing industry and thus to understand advantages within the competition.

Big Data Analytics consists of 6Cs in the integrated Industry 4.0 and Cyber Physical Systems environment. The 6C system comprises:

  1. Connection (sensor and networks)
  2. Cloud (computing and data on demand)
  3. Cyber (model & memory)
  4. Content/context (meaning and correlation)
  5. Community (sharing & collaboration)
  6. Customization (personalization and value)

In this scenario and in order to provide useful insight to the factory management and gain correct content, data has to be processed with advanced tools (analytics and algorithms) to generate meaningful information. Considering the presence of visible and invisible issues in an industrial factory, the information generation algorithm has to be capable of detecting and addressing invisible issues such as machine degradation, component wear, etc. in the factory floor.[21][22]

Impact of Industry 4.0

Proponents of the term claim the fourth industrial revolution will affect many areas, most notably:

  1. Services and business models
  2. Reliability and continuous productivity
  3. IT security
  4. Machine safety
  5. Product lifecycles
  6. Industry value chain
  7. Workers' education and skills
  8. Socio-economic factors
  9. Industry Demonstration: To help industry understand the impact of Industry 4.0, Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley, signed a proclamation to state "Cincinnati to be Industry 4.0 Demonstration City".[23]
  10. A article published in February 2016 suggests that Industry 4.0 may have a beneficial effects for emerging economies such as India.[24]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Hermann, Pentek, Otto, 2016: Design Principles for Industrie 4.0 Scenarios, accessed on 4 May 2016
  2. Jürgen Jasperneite:Was hinter Begriffen wie Industrie 4.0 steckt in Computer & Automation, 19 Dezember 2012 accessed on 23 December 2012
  3. Kagermann, H., W. Wahlster and J. Helbig, eds., 2013: Recommendations for implementing the strategic initiative Industrie 4.0: Final report of the Industrie 4.0 Working Group
  4. BMBF-Internetredaktion (2016-01-21). "Zukunftsprojekt Industrie 4.0 - BMBF". Bmbf.de. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  5. Die Evolution zur Industrie 4.0 in der Produktion Last download on 14. April 2013
  6. "With the coming of intra-atomic energy and supersonic stratosphere aviation we face an even more staggering fourth Industrial Revolution." Harry Elmer Barnes, Historical Sociology: Its Origins and Development: Theories of Social Evolution from Cave Life to Atomic Bombing (New York, 1948), 145.
  7. "After World War II, we entered a fourth industrial revolution, with great advancement in electronics." Rose, Arnold M. "Automation and the Future Society." Commentary 21 (1956): 274.
  8. "Now in the l970’s, we are well into the throes of a fourth industrial revolution, one phase of which is guided by electronic computers, and a coming phase fueled by atomic energy." Proceedings of the First World Congress of Comparative Education Societies on the Role and Rationale for Educational Aid to Developing Countries During International Education Year, Ottawa, Canada, August, 1970
  9. "Industrie 4.0: Mit dem Internet der Dinge auf dem Weg zur 4. industriellen Revolution". Vdi-nachrichten.com (in (German)). 2011-04-01. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  10. "Securing the future of German manufacturing industry : Recommendations for implementing the strategic initiative INDUSTRIE 4.0 : Final report of the Industrie 4.0 Working Group" (PDF). Acatech.de. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  11. Industrie 4.0 Plattform Last download on 15. Juli 2013
  12. "You Have Reached a 404 Page". 22 September 2013 via Slate.
  13. Selbstkonfiguierende Automation für Intelligente Technische Systeme, Video, last download on 27. Dezember 2012
  14. Jürgen Jasperneite; Oliver, Niggemann: Intelligente Assistenzsysteme zur Beherrschung der Systemkomplexität in der Automation. In: ATP edition - Automatisierungstechnische Praxis, 9/2012, Oldenbourg Verlag, München, September 2012
  15. "Herzlich willkommen auf den Internetseiten des Projekts RES-COM - RES-COM Webseite". Res-com-projekt.de. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  16. "RWTH AACHEN UNIVERSITY Cluster of Excellence „Integrative Production Technology for High-Wage Countries" - English". Production-research.de. 2016-10-19. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  17. "H2020 CREMA - Cloud-based Rapid Elastic MAnufacturing". Crema-project.eu. 2016-11-21. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  18. Markus Liffler; Andreas Tschiesner (2013-01-06). "The Internet of Things and the future of manufacturing | McKinsey & Company". Mckinsey.com. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  19. "Tec.News : 26" (PDF). Harting.com. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  20. "BIBB : Industrie 4.0 und die Folgen für Arbeitsmarkt und Wirtschaft" (PDF). Doku.iab.de. August 2015. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  21. Lee, Jay; Bagheri, Behrad; Kao, Hung-An (2014). "Recent Advances and Trends of Cyber-Physical Systems and Big Data Analytics in Industrial Informatics". IEEE Int. Conference on Industrial Informatics (INDIN) 2014.
  22. Lee, Jay; Lapira, Edzel; Bagheri, Behrad; Kao, Hung-an. "Recent advances and trends in predictive manufacturing systems in big data environment". Manufacturing Letters. 1 (1): 38–41. doi:10.1016/j.mfglet.2013.09.005.
  23. "Cincinnati Mayor Proclaimed "Cincinnati to be Industry 4.0 Demonstration City"". Imscenter.net. Retrieved 2016-07-30.
  24. Anil K Rajvanshi (2016-02-24). "India Can Gain By Leapfrogging Into Fourth Industrial Revolution". The Quint. Retrieved 2016-11-30.

External links

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