Smart Factory: What it is and the solutions you need to build one

There are already many articles on the topic of smart factory.

In this article, I will try to simplify it a little bit, starting off with a brief overview of the history of industrial revolutions, introduction of what smart factory is, and then talk more in detail about its characteristics, technologies and solutions necessary to give what is mere flesh (physical, hardware) a soul (cyber, software).

Industrial revolutions then, and now

To fully grasp what smart factory is and where it’s headed, we must first understand the history of manufacturing.

It all began with the First Industrial Revolution, which introduced machines to factories and farms in the mid-18th century. In the past 250 or so years, manufacturing has evolved from handwork to machines like the spinning jenny, from the rise of machines to automobiles which were first introduced to the general public by Henry Ford in 1908, and from new inventions to digital technologies that made semiconductors, computers and the Internet possible.

It wasn’t until decades ago that the fourth industrial revolution brought smart manufacturing technologies which emphasise on automation with the use of Internet of Things (IoT).

Smart factory, and why it matters to you

We will briefly explain what a smart factory is and dig deeper into some of its characteristics and the key technologies necessary to make it smart.

What is smart factory?

A smart factory is a shop floor that adopts smart manufacturing. Smart manufacturing is manufacturing that uses various technologies and solutions – like AI and IoT – arising from Industry 4.0 to optimise the production process.

By using smart manufacturing technologies, smart factories produce more goods with less errors, down-time and human efforts, as opposed to traditional factories that rely on manual processes prone to human errors and production delays.

What are the notable characteristics of a smart factory?

A smart factory has the following characteristics:

What are the key technologies used to build a smart factory?

Industry 4.0 is powered by technologies such as the Internet of Things, big data, machine learning and digital twins – all these buzzwords are attached to the topic of smart factory.

Here is a short explanation of what each term means for the factory of the future:

In short, these data-driven technologies serve as the backbone of a smart factory. When used together, they enable machines to communicate to one another, think on their own, and become smarter for a more automated and efficient manufacturing process.

A couple solutions to kick off your smart factory

TECHDesign is a one-stop hardware development platform that offers solutions and services to help you develop your smart solutions.

To stay on top of what’s going on in your factory, the first step in making it smart, we picked a couple IoT control and monitoring solutions:

The utilisation of all these mentioned IoT solutions allows you to keep your factory running effectively and efficiently, producing more goods with less downtime and errors.

What’s next after Industry 4.0?

In this article, we’ve explained the characteristics of a smart factory, the key technologies that drive it, and solutions from TECHDesign that can quickly help you build this new model of factory born in the latest industrial revolution, Industry 4.0.

What comes next after the fourth industrial upheaval? The answer is Industry 5.0.

Industry 5.0 that focuses on resiliency and sustainability

You probably have already read many opinions on what Industry 5.0 is, and what it will bring to manufacturing in the next decade.

So here I’m tackling it from a different viewpoint: Industry 5.0 is the next industrial revolution that extends, or complements, Industry 4.0 with elements such as resiliency and sustainability.

What is a resilient smart factory? In the future, smart factories located in different parts of the world could respond quickly to external impacts such as the COVID-19 crisis. By connecting all the systems and their corresponding data, smart factories could automatically order from different supplies and find new ones to avoid domestic or worldwide supply chain shortage, as opposed to operating on their own as standalone factories like they do now.

Being sustainable means doing our part for Earth and the future generations. A sustainable smart factory could contribute its share by rolling out cleaner, healthier goods. That is, things in your everyday life – from PCs to cars to coffee machines – could be produced by recycling waste from the same products and generating such waste into energy while minimising CO2 emissions.

Industry 5.0 will arrive soon. To simply stay competitive, manufacturing companies like yourself need to act now. TECHDesign is and will be here to help you get ready for such a resilient, and sustainable industrial era.