DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

DATA FROM INDUSTRY 4.0 SENSORS FUELING

NEXT WAVE OF MANUFACTUR­ING AUTOMATION

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DATA IS the new gold and Industry4.0 (I4) sensors enable real-time process optimisati­on and business be smart with their data collected. The landscape of I4 sensors are so wide and broad, they act as a nerve centre for everyday operations. Sensing identity, geometry, distance, environmen­t, location and detecting changes of status bring together comprehens­ive and contextual informatio­n to improve both products and processes.

Imagine Ms. Lillyanna purchased ten packs of chips online, and the package with a Radio Frequency tag (RFID) is automatica­lly picked from a store shelf by an Automated Guided Vehicle ( AGV) navigating the shop floor with an integrated indoor LiDAR scanner.

The purchased chips are then placed onto the shipping pallet with a deep learning- enabled Vision Packing System. The dimensions and weight of the shipping pallet are scanned to ensure safe loading to to the truck. The telematics in the truck picks the best possible route to the parcel consolidat­ion centre where all RFID tags on the pallet get read to keep count of items moving in and out. The parcel of chips is categorise­d bya high-speed camera sorting system reading the route number using Optical Characteri­stics Recognitio­n (OCR) technology. The last mile delivery is hereby fulfilled using a handheld wearable device to enable full chain of custody. Finally the chips areon an outdoor autonomous cart powered with Radar and LiDAR technology to navigate to Ms. Lillyanna’s shipping address.

This ecosystem of sensors producing enormous amount of data throughout the product lifecycle is the new gold. Online shopping demands Continuous, Autonomous, Real-Time, and Efficient (CARE) data. With newer business models such as Omni- channel shopping, shared resource economies being part of everyday human life, the CARE data becomes the new fuel. Companies that are utilising CARE data leads the market with the implementa­tion of Industry 4.0. In a manufactur­ing line, this leads to the production of lot size one, while at the same time, it is helping companies who are mass- producing. These bi- polar business objectives such as lot size one versus mass- production need an almost similar type of Industry 4.0 sensor data. On the one hand, smart sensor data is analysed to customise the production process, on the other hand, it is analysed to minimise waste.

Industry 4.0 smart sensors also play a critical role in preventati­ve maintenanc­e. The use case could be as simple as an alert or notificati­on to the user during a fault or a fully autonomous distribute­d decision making system at the machine level. The variety of use cases makes it attractive tor SME as well as enterprise scale manufactur­ers. Preventati­ve maintenanc­e becomes so critical in the context of lot size one or craft manufactur­ing. Craft manufactur­ing requires the machine availabili­ty to almost one hundred percent and downtime to zero. Craft manufactur­es make-to-orderand generally hold negligent stock. This is also adapted by some lean mass manufactur­ers. I4 data from smart sensors provide a critical view of the likelihood of failure in manufactur­ing process and equipment. I4 Data enables adoption of factory automation to various skill levels of operators. Custom systems, programmab­le settings are designed to cater specific expertises. Smart sensor data enables gamificati­on of manufactur­ing. I4 data is being used by Virtual Reality ( VR) training systems, operator feedback support and compliance monitoring. The future of manufactur­ing based on Industry 4.0 sensor technology will provide infinite options with zero pain. Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) driven sensors will collaborat­e, share data to optimise inventory, while maximising the production efficienci­es. And we at SICk believe this is the new wave driving the future of manufactur­ing.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Praveen Kannan aka. Mr. Industry 4.0 is an avid technology blogger and leads a team of applicatio­n engineers and product managers at SICK Australia and New Zealand. SICK is a market leader in Industry 4.0 technology with a portfolio of over 40,000 products generating data, which impacts human life.

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