Unlocking the potential of industrial digitalisation with 5G

Posted on 26 Nov 2020 by The Manufacturer

The advent of 5G promises to unlock greater innovation and productivity as well as new revenue streams and services. IBM is ideally positioned to help turn promise into reality, as Charles Lupton explains.

Innovative thinkers across Britain are using their creativity to harness the power of 5G to boost economic productivity, reduce pollution and congestion, and develop the next generation of entertainment.

In the North of England, the focus is firmly on accelerating the growth of advanced manufacturing across the region.

There are many possibilities for innovation and productivity in the manufacturing industry that utilising 5G can open up. Powering an agile connected digital infrastructure across manufacturing operations and beyond into the supply chain has become even more important as new data-intensive innovations continue to transform the industry.

Advanced manufacturing has been given a significant boost by the introduction of the Factory of the Future programme, which aims to create an open access 5G industrial testbed in the North West and ultimately deliver the RAF’s Tempest future fighter jet in half the time, while driving UK and global manufacturing competitiveness.

5G use cases

Led by the University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) and a consortium of industry partners, the testbed will be based at the centre’s soon-to-be built facility on the Salmesbury Enterprise Zone.

The two-year project aims to seek out new and more efficient ways of manufacturing to ensure the industry continues growing in the UK for the foreseeable future.

The programme will develop integrated solutions to some of the key challenges to deploying 5G technologies in manufacturing, using 5G to test use cases such as robotic assembly, reconfigurable product assembly lines and distributed and shared virtual and augmented reality (VR/AR).

It will also focus on improving the performance of manufacturers by exploring significant reductions in defects and waste through:

  • real-time monitoring
  • enhanced machine utilisation and energy saving through digital twin track and trace
  • a significant reduction in travel and maintenance times brought about by shared hybrid reality spaces
  • reduced costs and greater efficiencies through using 5G to track the location and monitoring the condition of goods in the supply chain through a chain of custody system

The end result will be multiple public case studies on solutions deployed within the testbed manufacturing facility with tangible results – demonstrating the effect of 5G combined with analytics and artificial intelligence (AI) to provide insights on data gathered from the factory floor.

Throughout the programme, we expect to be able to provide updates on the milestones along the way to keep the wider industry updated on the very latest discoveries.

This article first appeared in the November issue of The Manufacturer.

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Proven flexible solutions

The programme is part of the government’s investment into 5G testbed facilities across the country. IBM is part of the consortium that includes BAE Systems, University of Sheffield AMRC North West, Digital Catapult, MTT, Miralis and Three Networks.

IBM is the technology partner and will provide a hybrid cloud platform built using Red Hat OpenShift on the IBM public cloud, providing a solid foundation of open source innovation, security leadership and enterprise-grade infrastructure.

The platform will provide the flexibility to access the very latest applications and services without vendor lock-in. As well as flexibility, IBM aims to provide deep data insights through its advanced analytics software and the application of AI hosted on IBM Power Systems.

Data is now our most valuable asset and 5G will help us to gather it quickly and securely throughout the supply chain. Once securely gathered, IBM’s data integration, advanced analytics and AI can be utilised to provide detailed insights on productivity and quality control.

This is where 5G and AI combine to gather more data at greater speeds with better visualisation of patterns, defects and anomalies.

5G digitalisation communications telecoms - depositphotos
image by depositphotos

Solving industry’s common challenges

Technology is the vital ingredient to help deliver solutions to solve problems that are common to the manufacturing sector. Technology such as AI, analytics, Internet of Things (IoT) and 5G should be able to drive greater efficiencies on the factory floor by gathering more data, providing better insights and delivering better quality products using less materials.

What’s not to like? The proof of course is in the pudding and this is where the 5G Factory of the Future programme comes in to provide the UK, and indeed the world, with the basis for the technology and the testbed to showcase the use cases.

More information http://www.bit.ly/350UO6I