Exponential Industry Goes Vertical
Each manufacturing vertical is adopting Industry 4.0 technologies differently. Now with Exponential Industry you can explore the ebbs and flows of digital transformation within each industry vertical.
In the first six months of Exponential Industry we’ve covered a wide array of manufacturing technologies across a number of verticals. Part of the motivation for creating this newsletter was creating a living document of the bleeding edge of industrial technology deployment and easily compare and benchmark progress across verticals, functional purposes, and technology areas. Today, every article posted so far has been indexed by their most applicable vertical and is now possible to click-through and explore.
The top verticals we’ve discussed so far include (count):
Machinery (17) - Similarly, the machinery vertical mostly consists of 3D printing, additive manufacturing machines, and next generation robotics which are cornerstones of Industry 4.0 factory automation.
Automotive (6) - The first actual manufacturing vertical faces extreme competition, which accelerates the need to innovate to drive down costs and improve margin.
Pharmaceutical (5) - Given the COVID-19 pandemic, manufacturing innovation has been forced onto the pharmaceutical industry to mass produce and distribute a novel vaccine.
Agriculture (5) and Food (4) - COVID-19 adversely affected the food and agriculture industries due to a variety of manufacturing challenges. As a consequence, the industry has leveraged Industry 4.0 technologies to improve yield, efficiency, and safety of workers.
Computer and Electronic (5) and Semiconductor (4) - The need for semiconductors and electronic components surged due to people being isolated at home and working remotely. Add in the wrinkles of geographically dispersed semiconductor value-chain and the push for AI within the data center and the edge, there is insatiable demand to produce chips with unique specifications and at greater yield.
Acoustic Monitoring
The All Things Ansys Podcast hosts AMP Robotics to discuss Design for Autonomous Robotics.
Assembly Line
Getting specific – how discrete manufacturers can build greater resilience
Date: May 13, 2021
Author: Yuji Nakajima
Vertical: Computer and Electronic
We’ll see how Mixed Reality (MR) makes it easier for shopfloor operators to work on complex, customized products – without the lengthy, face-to-face training plus the travel this often involves. This also enables discrete manufacturers to respond to flexible product configurations with instant updating of product documentation across entire engineering and supply chains.
We’ll also look at how cloud-based Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) and Asset Management systems connects multiple facilities and customers vendors and all stakeholders in an ecosystem.
Read more at Fujitsu Blog
Cloud-based app for micro-breweries
Date: May 31, 2021
Vertical: Beverage
When the yeast consumes the sugar to produce alcohol: That’s when the flavour is developed. It’s when beer becomes beer. Australian craft brewers are passionate about brewing, not industrial operational technology, yet Leonie Wong and Rex Chen from the MindSphere team still managed to make the data work for them; they want to always land the perfect brew and waste not a single drop.
In this market, Deacam, an Australian original equipment manufacturer (OEM), which provides automated brewing equipment and solutions to microbreweries, was looking to differentiate itself. Leonie Wong, responsible for Vertical Sales for Food & Beverage for Siemens Australia, and Solution Architect Rex Chen met with Deacam and their customers, the microbreweries themselves.
Read more at Siemens Blog
Tilling AI: Startup Digs into Autonomous Electric Tractors for Organics
Date: June 7, 2021
Author: Scott Martin
Vertical: Agriculture
Ztractor offers tractors that can be configured to work on 135 different types of crops. They rely on the NVIDIA Jetson edge AI platform for computer vision tasks to help farms improve plant conditions, increase crop yields and achieve higher efficiency.
Read more at NVIDIA Blog
From Logs to Logging On: Paper Machines Built With Digital Manufacturing
Date: June 8, 2021
Author: Harald Henkel
Vertical: Pulp and Paper
ANDRITZ, an Austrian company that manufactures machinery for pulp and paper mills, is using digital manufacturing and artificial-intelligence (AI) processes to save millions of dollars. Skilled workers and engineers on ANDRITZ production lines are now able to take advantage of data-driven support as standard. 3D modeling and digital twins also give ANDRITZ a competitive advantage by guiding operators safely through maintenance and repairs and ensuring transparent access to data.
Read more at Redshift by Autodesk
Vaccine production: Marburg has the right stuff
Date: June 8, 2021
Vertical: Pharmaceutical
BioNTech manufactures BNT162b2 in collaboration with US pharmaceutical specialist Pfizer. The company has started manufacturing at the production site in Marburg, in the German state of Hesse. The plant there comes with an ultramodern production facility for recombinant proteins. The relevant expertise is also available, since BioNTech also acquired a highly qualified employee base along with the production facility, all of whom are experienced in developing new technologies.
The facility in Marburg had been producing influenza vaccines based on flu cell culture, then changed over to recombinant proteins for cancer treatments and now manufactures mRNA vaccine.
All the improvements at the Marburg plant are Industry 4.0-compatible. One of the challenges with the conversion was the fact that it involved switching from rigid to mobile production with many single-use components. At the same time, working with mRNA meant a higher clean room class than was previously required in the facility. Paper is now an avoidable “contamination factor” that doesn’t arise with digital production. That was the basis for opting for the Opcenter Execution Pharma solution from Siemens as the new MES. This solution enables complete paperless manufacturing and fully electronic batch recording.
Read more at Siemens Blog
Digital Twins at Olympic Scale
Date: June 9, 2021
Author: Rehana Begg
Vertical: Construction, Data Processing and Hosting
Not unlike its steel competitors, the Xuanhua facility, a subsidiary of China’s second-biggest steelmaker, HBIS Group Co., is gunning to reorganize on the basis of new demands for competition and efficiency. Relocating the 89-year-old factory to the Leting Economic Development Zone in Tangshan City in China’s Hebei province includes plans to develop a digital model for the factory.
Read more at Machine Design
How 3D Printing Impacts The Maritime Industry
Date: June 9, 2021
Author: Doug Walker
Vertical: Ship and Boat
3D printing has penetrated a range of sectors and industries to a point where it is being adopted by mainstream organizations in their manufacturing processes. However, one sector that has been left behind in this adoption is the maritime industry.
There are a stream of applications for 3D printing in the maritime industry, such as product innovation and customization, spare part manufacturing, on-demand manufacturing, and much more.
Read more at Fabbaloo
3D Printing Technologies in Aerospace and Defense Industries
Date: June 9, 2021
Author: Dick Slansky
Vertical: Aerospace, Defense
Currently, AI is an integral part of the design process for AM in aerospace. In designing parts for aircraft, achieving the optimal weight-to-strength ratio is a primary objective, since reducing weight is an important factor in air-frame structures design. Today’s PLM solutions offer function-driven generative design using AI-based algorithms to capture the functional specifications and generate and validate conceptual shapes best suited for AM fabrication. Using this generative functional design method produces the optimal lightweight design within the functional specifications.
Read more at AutomationWorld
What is an Additive Manufacturing Execution System?
Date: June 10, 2021
Vertical: Data Processing and Hosting
Additive manufacturing (AM) is the industrial production name for 3D printing. Using computer aided design (CAD) or 3D object scanners, additive manufacturing allows for the creation of three-dimensional objects by depositing materials, usually in layers. As production continues to grow and additive manufacturing industrializes, manufacturers require effective strategies to help them manage their additive manufacturing workflows.
Read more at Plex
MacroFab: Driving The Cloud-Based Transformation Of Electronics Manufacturing
Date: June 10, 2021
Author: Marco Annunziata
Vertical: Semiconductor, Computer and Electronic
The company brings cloud-based, manufacturing-as-a-service (MaaS) solutions to the electronics industry. On its platform, companies can upload component designs, obtain quotes, place orders and follow the progress towards delivery. Companies can price and order a wide range of parts and products, from printed circuit boards (PCB) to fully assembled and packaged electronics products.
Read more at Forbes
Five companies make a quarter of world’s single use plastics
Date: June 11, 2021
Author: Camilla Hodgson
Vertical: Chemical, Plastics and Rubber
The top 5 companies created roughly 26 million metric tones of plastic waste fueled by demand of the United States and China.
Read more at Financial Times