While the
concept of a digital twin has been around since 2002, it’s only thanks to the
Internet of Things (IoT) that it has become cost-effective to implement. And,
it is so imperative to business today, it was named one of Gartner’s Top 10
Strategic Technology Trends for 2017.
Quite
simply, a digital twin is a virtual model of a process, product, or service.
This pairing of the virtual and physical worlds allows analysis of data and
monitoring of systems to head off problems before they even occur, prevent down
time, develop new opportunities, and even plan for the future by using
simulations.
Thomas
Kaiser, SAP Senior Vice President of IoT, put it this way: “Digital twins are
becoming a business imperative, covering the entire lifecycle of an asset or process
and forming the foundation for connected products and services. Companies that
fail to respond will be left behind.”
How does a
digital twin work?
Think of a
digital twin as a bridge between the physical and digital world.
First, smart
components that use sensors to gather data about real-time status, working
condition, or position are integrated with a physical item. The components are
connected to a cloud-based system that receives and processes all the data the
sensors monitor. This input is analyzed against business and other contextual
data.
Lessons are
learned and opportunities are uncovered within the virtual environment that can
be applied to the physical world — ultimately to transform your business.
Pairing
technology pioneered in aerospace
NASA was the
first to dabble with pairing technology — the precursor to today’s digital twin
— as far back as the early days of space exploration.
How do you
operate, maintain, or repair systems when you aren’t within physical proximity
to them? That was the challenge NASA’s research department had to face when
developing systems that would travel beyond the ability to see or monitor
physically. And when disaster struck Apollo 13, it was the innovation of
mirrored systems still on earth that allowed engineers and astronauts to
determine how they could rescue the mission. Today, NASA uses digital twins to
develop new recommendations, roadmaps, and next-generation vehicles and
aircraft.
“The
ultimate vision for the digital twin is to create, test and build our equipment
in a virtual environment,” says John Vickers, NASA’s leading manufacturing
expert and manager of NASA’s National Center for Advanced Manufacturing. “Only
when we get it to where it performs to our requirements do we physically
manufacture it. We then want that physical build to tie back to its digital
twin through sensors so that the digital twin contains all the information that
we could have by inspecting the physical build.”
Michael
Grieves at the University of Michigan first wrote of the concept using the
digital twin terminology in 2002. Today, machine intelligence and connectivity
to the cloud allows us unprecedented potential for large-scale implementation
of digital twin technology for companies in a variety of industries.
Why is
digital twin technology important?
Digital
twins are powerful masterminds to drive innovation and performance. Imagine it
as your most talented product technicians with the most advanced monitoring,
analytical, and predictive capabilities at their fingertips. By 2018, companies
who invest in digital twin technology will see a 30 percent improvement in
cycle times of critical processes, predicts IDC.
There will
be billions of things represented by digital twins within the next five years.
These proxies of the physical world will lead to new collaboration
opportunities among physical world product experts and data scientists whose
jobs are to understand what data tells us about operations.
Digital twin
technology helps companies improve the customer experience by better
understanding customer needs, develop enhancements to existing products,
operations, and services, and can even help drive the innovation of new
business.
For example,
GE’s “digital wind farm” opened up new ways to improve productivity. GE uses
the digital environment to inform the configuration of each wind turbine prior
to construction. Their goal is to generate 20 percent gains in efficiency by
analyzing the data from each turbine that is fed to its virtual equivalent.
“For every
physical asset in the world, we have a virtual copy running in the cloud that
gets richer with every second of operational data,” says Ganesh Bell, chief digital
officer and general manager of Software & Analytics at GE Power &
Water.
All
indications seem to predict we are on the cusp of a digital twin technology
explosion. More companies will learn of real-world and pilot program success
stories and will want to deploy their very own digital twins to gain a
competitive advantage.
Bernard Marr
is a best-selling author & keynote speaker on business, technology and the
effective use of data. To read his future posts simply join his network here.
(Forbes)
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