In 2017, a French international automaker was confronted with shifts in demand that required the company to boost production of a specific engine, quickly and without changing capacity requirements. At the time, the team had no way to generate a holistic view of their production process in order to meet this new shift in demand.
After reviewing multiple options, the team knew they needed to integrate cutting-edge, Industry 4.0 technology that would allow them to anticipate the effect of bottlenecks on the whole organization – something their current software and processes didn’t allow them to do. The team saw the advantage of using a digital twin in manufacturing. They saw the opportunity to run tens of thousands of simulations in a matter of minutes and knew they had their answer to ensure that the production of assembled engines met customer demand, every week, over a fifty-two week period.
Today, the company uses a realistic and exhaustive Simulation Digital Twin to create a virtual reality of their whole engine production system. The production planning team credits their Simulation Digital Twin for improving their operational efficiency by 10%. And, in practical terms, the solution allowed the production planning manager to identify crucial bottlenecks on two heat treatment machines.
Thanks to Cosmo Tech, our entire network is modeled. When the S&OP process gives a new direction, we can modify the digital twin to quickly get the best production scenario. Every month, we adapt it according to the gap observed between forecasts of customer demand and reality.
Supply Chain Expert at a leading automobile manufacturer
The key to the manufacturer’s success is simple: the company embraced the power of their data and fed it to an Simulation Digital Twin in manufacturing to dramatically change the way they conceived their production process.
That understanding allows their production planning team to build a stronger connection with their supply chain and production processes, and engage with them in a way that’s the most impactful and efficient for their business.
Digital twins are more than just pure data. They include algorithms, which not only allow you to visualize their physical counterpart in the current state, but at its core, a Simulation Digital Twin puts the power of simulation in your hands. That simulation can then be used in a nearly endless number of ways to forecast and optimize the behavior of a supply chain or production system at each life cycle phase in real time.
Companies with multiple data sources and needs — sensors across a production line, inputs within a supply chain, alerts from the factory floor — know that unifying data across these sources can be a struggle. Especially with the marked increase of data sources through the adoption of IIoT and Industry 4.0 technologies. Unifying that data and making it actionable is just one reason a company might use a digital twin in manufacturing. With that unified data, companies can take steps toward seeing a holistic view of their full supply chain and production planning across all of their digital touch points.
The automotive client mentioned above experienced this benefit firsthand when they implemented a Simulation Digital Twin to help them understand their whole engine production system. They were able to increase their technology ROI by not limiting themselves to traditional models and simulations that would only give them a siloed view of their system.
With a Simulation Digital Twin, manufacturers can now reimagine their operations, services, and products at the interconnection of physical and digital assets. This choice enables an unprecedented jump in productivity combined with a more sustainable and resilient organization.
Michel Morvan & Hugues De Bantel – Co Founders – Cosmo Tech
Digital twins in manufacturing aren’t only for the production planning team; they can help every department involved in the production process and asset maintenance. Supply chain teams, operations teams, the product management department, finance team, and others will also benefit from your digital twin for three reasons.
Rather than having data sprinkled across multiple systems and tools, a manufacturing digital twin gives you a central place to understand your supply chain, production planning, and asset maintenance analytics. This single view helps your entire organization understand your production planning in the same way.
A holistic view prevents your Sales & Operations team from having one view of your production capability and your supply chain team having another. This can help you provide a consistent internal and external experience no matter which part of your company teams are working in.
This is one of the main reasons that our automaker and aerospace manufacturing clients use a digital twin. They saw that communicating customer deliverables could be disjointed when a customer was promised products within a certain timeframe. If the changes to an order were not properly relayed from the sales team to the shop floor, production lines would be focused on incorrect deliverables and costly to change at the last minute. This created confusion and delays in delivering a customer’s order. Fortunately for manufacturers, a Simulation Digital Twin is able to solve that problem.
Part of using a digital twin in manufacturing is to transform your data so your team can be more agile and proactive by running a multitude of scenarios on a virtual model. This simulation, fed by your data, gives you an executable model of a physical product or a system.
The majority of digital twins today are based on a simple concept — take real data and run it through a manufacturing simulation software to create a virtual reality. That virtual model, whether it’s a virtual version of a product or a full system, can then be used to test actual expected behavior along with the impact of a vast array of unknowns without ever having to touch the physical version.
Take for example, the COVID-19 crisis that impacted 94% of manufacturers across the globe. Teams are faced with challenges from fluctuating customer demand, insecure supply chains, to dramatic shifts in their workforce. Just one of those challenges alone is enough stress to break a production plan. But by multiplying the complexity, more manufacturers are unable to plan beyond one month, let alone the next quarter or year.
However, with your data powering a Simulation Digital Twin, a full simulation of all of your manufacturing processes, we can run what-if scenarios to understand if shifting production lines or supply chains would improve manufacturing by:
Engineers could even design the manufacturing process to analyze asset health, putting the highest-performing machines in the places they’re needed most.
The objective of the digital twin isn’t to completely overhaul your existing resources and assets. Instead, the digital twin is there to optimize what you currently have and get even more value out of it to help you meet your business objectives with minimal disruption and cost.
When your manufacturing data is organized, it’s more usable. Usable data is the foundation of insightful and powerful analytics.
But to keep up with internal and external demands, manufacturers need a way to have their data organized not just once, but continually updating and refreshing to create a powerful connection between your physical and virtual worlds.
The reality is, with the plethora of manufacturing simulation software, there are varying levels of simulation out there – the main difference is whether that simulation creates a partial exchange of information or a true feedback loop.
Often used in a silo by a supply chain or product team, simulations like a digital mirror or a digital shadow create either a static version or one-way transfer of data between your virtual vs physical model. These simulations are easier to set up, but their basic nature comes with limitations when it comes to truly reaching business objectives.
Data Flow in a Digital Model – Manual Data Flow Only
Data Flow in a Digital Shadow – Automatic Data Flow from Physical to Digital Object
But a digital twin is the only type of simulation that allows an automatic data flow between the physical and digital objects. While there is certainly a place for digital mirrors and digital shadows, particularly when it comes to needing an isolated view of a product’s functionality, these two simulation types and related software fall short when it comes to improving business and manufacturing processes.
Two-Way Data Flow between Physical and Digital Objects
Here’s a handy comparison of the different types of digital simulations we typically see in the manufacturing world:
Simulation Type | Data Flow | Possible Use Cases |
---|---|---|
Digital Mirror | Manual data flow only | Models of new products |
Models of a single physical object | ||
Simulations of planned factories | ||
Digital Shadow | Automatic data flow from physical object to digital object | All of the use cases from a Digital Mirror, but a change in state of the physical object leads to a change of state in the digital object, but not vice versa. |
No data flow from digital to physical object | ||
Digital Twin | Continuous feedback loop between physical and digital objects with automatic data flow | All of the above uses cases but a change in state of the physical object directly changes the virtual model, and vice versa. |
Production planning and control | ||
Asset maintenance strategy | ||
Layout planning |
When most teams start their journey using manufacturing simulation, they often start by thinking about their data. They look at their sources, the current state of their data, and how it needs to be organized in order to create a digital model.
And this made sense in the more rudimentary world of simulation where teams were trying to build a virtual model of one product or a portion of their supply chain.
However, in the case of a digital twin, the power to simulate an entire process and system shifts the focus immediately. The focus is no longer on using data to build something that is simply a sum of its parts. Instead, the conversation starts at a higher level and begins with what you need and want to accomplish as a business – knowing that a digital twin will help you find a path forward.
And that therein is the beauty of a digital twin and all of the power that Industry 4.0 technologies bring.
The value of the digital twin increases as you apply it across more business functions and processes, allowing it to touch and optimize every single core aspect of your business.
A core advantage of Simulation Digital Twins is the capacity for clients to start small, secure quick wins by deploying Digital Twins of specific parts of a business, and then scale the deployment across the entire business.
Michel Morvan – Co Founder – Cosmo Tech
As our automotive client found, having a virtual simulation of their production process is the key to delivering products more efficiently while minimizing disruptions in the production line. But as your company adjusts to unforeseen circumstances or changes in supply (or demand), keeping up with a constantly changing landscape becomes difficult.
Rebounding from major supply chain disruptions or wild swings in customer demand means your team and response efforts need to be more agile and comprehensive than ever before. A challenge one day can lead to a seemingly unrelated one the next day without being able to see the full ripple effect changes in your process can make. That’s why we know, in this increasingly competitive market, digital twins are here to stay.
Digital twins give manufacturers the ability to understand their reality today and plan for whatever tomorrow brings.
Ready to get up and running with a Simulation Digital Twin? Head this way.