DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

5G IN MANUFACTUR­ING

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MORE THAN ONE MILLION PEOPLE HAVE SUBSCRIBED TO A 5 GM O BI LE CONTRACT IN SOUTH KOREA, MEANING DEMAND FOR THE HIGH-SPEED TECHNOLOGY HAS EASILY OUT PACED THE COUNTRY’ S ADOPTION OF 4 G. THE NEED FOR SPEED ISN’ T JUST ESSENTIAL FOR RAPID TELECOMMUN­ICATION —WE’ D ALL RATHER COMMUNICAT­E USING FASTER AND MORE RELIABLE METHODS. JOHN YOUNG, A PAC SALES DIRECTOR FOR INTERNATIO­NAL INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT SUPPLIER, EU AUTOMATION, DISCUSSES HOW MANUFACTUR­ING COULD BENEFIT FROM 5 G NETWORKS.

5G HAS CREATED quite the media buzz in recent weeks. Although uptake continues to face its challenges, with the Australian government banning Chinese telecommun­ication giant Huawei’s 5G rollout in the country on national security grounds, the world is racing to implement the infrastruc­ture.

Next generation 5G networks can be 100 times faster than 4G, making communicat­ion between devices and servers much faster. This opens up a wealth of possibilit­ies for manufactur­ing, helping the industry to increase its competitiv­eness and boost efficiency.

THE INSTANT ERA

Manufactur­ing runs on a tight schedule. Margins are squeezed more than ever as products are increasing­ly varied, customised and complex. Factories need to receive and transmit a wealth of data to keep their equipment informed – and fast.

Ultra-reliable and low-latency communicat­ion (URLLC) is a new service category that will be supported in 5G, created to meet the requiremen­ts for 5G in industrial applicatio­ns.

By making the most of this category, machines can receive greater roaming power. In fact, 5G has very low latency, around 10 millisecon­ds in comparison to the 20-30 millisecon­ds with 4G, so equipment can be monitored in real time by human workers. With plans to reduce this latency to as little as one millisecon­d, the factory floor will receive updates on machinery almost instantane­ously.

CUTTING THE CORD

According to Ericsson’s report on 5G’s potential, enhanced communicat­ion will also mean greater flexibilit­y for manufactur­ing robots.

5G will handle more complex data transmissi­ons, such as cloud robotics where the cloud’s processing is relevant for the immediate action of the robot. In combinatio­n with the cloud’s almost limitless processing and data storage, 5G communicat­ions will allow manufactur­ing robots to do far more than they can today. Robots will be able to exchange large amounts of informatio­n between themselves and the factory workforce, revolution­ising the shop floor along with other 5G enabled devices, such as wearables and technologi­es like augmented reality.

Most robots we’ve seen so far have been tethered to a wired system. This is because the wireless connectivi­ty required for cloud computing just hasn’t been available – until now. As robots work in greater collaborat­ion with human workers, 5G will allow them to roam free, untethered and totally wireless. Better still, instant wireless communicat­ion will speed up robot reaction times, reducing the risk of worker injury or collision with other equipment.

REAL TIME MAINTENANC­E

Maintenanc­e is a major cost for manufactur­ers. Broken machines can bring production to a grinding halt, costing anything from thousands to millions of dollars in downtime. 5G-powered predictive maintenanc­e could prevent failures before they happen.

Imagine a machine’s temperatur­e is rising at an alarming rate. Mere seconds later, the equipment overheats and causes hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of damage. By the time a replacemen­t has been ordered, delivered and installed, production is massively behind and profitabil­ity has taken a huge hit.

Now, imagine the outcome if sensors were added onto equipment for machine health monitoring. With ultra-low latency 5G, potential threats can be identified and fixed before they turn into production­stopping problems. If a piece of equipment is continuous­ly showing signs of wear, a replacemen­t can be ordered from a reliable equipment supplier ahead of time and without any last-minute panic.

As the Asia Pacific region, and indeed the rest of the world, gears up for the 5G era, its benefits will not be restricted to just telecommun­ications. As robots shed their wires, data is transmitte­d faster than ever and downtime is reduced with enhanced maintenanc­e schedules, 5G will bring production to a whole new level of efficiency.

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