IIoT And Predictive Maintenance

Users are realizing ROI through predictive maintenance with new technology.

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It’s every production line manager’s nightmare—some machinery breaks down, stopping production on the factory floor. In a fab, if just one piece of semiconductor manufacturing equipment goes down and is out of service for hours, wafer fabrication can grind to a halt. Such shutdowns are expensive, especially if the plant is operating on a 24-hour schedule to meet demand.

One selling point for the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) is it makes it possible to catch equipment failures before they happen by using predictive maintenance. What makes IIoT technology good for automating factory floors and simplifying data collection from smart meters and other products makes it good for keeping factory equipment running.

Predictive maintenance can provide wafer fabs and other industrial facilities the ability to know when a certain machine might go down, based on vibration monitoring, power consumption, and other means to detect anomalies in operation. Being able to stay ahead of equipment shutdowns in a mine, steel mill, or factory can save money and time for a busy enterprise. Predictive maintenance can be used to monitor and update devices.

Although predictive maintenance is related to preventive maintenance, they are not the same. Operators perform both types of maintenance before equipment fails, but they use different data sets to determine when and what form of maintenance is needed. Predictive maintenance relies on the actual condition of the equipment in question, using real-time data coming from sensors to give operators visibility into the current state of the equipment. Preventive maintenance uses manufacturers’ maintenance schedules based on statistics of average or expected lifecycles for that equipment. Predictive maintenance enables the timely use of corrective — often unscheduled — maintenance.

“Maintenance programs have been around for decades. I’m sure there’s people that have been and consider themselves as having been part of predictive maintenance even before IoT was a thing,” says Brett Burger, principal marketing manager for monitoring solutions at National Instruments. With the advent of IIoT, “we talk about a lot of automation.”

“With the advent of Industry 4.0 for manufacturing, companies are able to leverage new technologies, such as the Internet of Things, in order to monitor and gain deeper insight into their operations in real time, turning a typical manufacturing facility into a smart factory,” said Deloitte Consulting in a report entitled, “Predictive Maintenance And The Smart Factory.” “Simply put, a smart factory is one equipped with technology that enables machine-to-machine (M2M) and machine-to-human (M2H) communication in tandem with analytical and cognitive technologies so that decisions are made correctly and on time.”


Fig. 1: Effective maintenance strategy. Source: Deloitte Consulting.

Anomaly detection and automation in the cloud
“Anomaly detection is at the heart of predictive maintenance,” says Scot Morrison, general manager of embedded platform solutions at Mentor, a Siemens Business. Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) technology are often involved in this aspect of IIoT, and different types of anomaly detection employ various AI or ML techniques to find anomalies. For instance, acoustic, pressure, temperature, and vibration monitoring can be employed in establishing predictive maintenance.

“One of the main things you have to worry about is false positives,” Morrison warns.

“When we think in terms of IoT, we think of terms of intelligent sensors and actuators, which we typically call end nodes, being orchestrated in some fashion,” Morrison says. In a classical environment, some type of control function, such as a cell controller, is running on a central PLC [programmable logic controller], a rugged bank of computers located in the factory designed for a factory’s harsh environment. An IIoT architecture can move away from this model and put data into the cloud.

“What we’re seeing more and more of is aggregation devices that are being deployed into industrial settings,” says Morrison. “One purpose is aggregation of information. Centralizing that, aggregating it, lining it up, and making it accessible for some type of application, whatever that might be. And then also uploading that to the cloud, so you can get your local processing, edge or gateway-based processing, processing in the cloud, or some kind of hybrid of the two. When we think of IIoT, we think of that sort of architecture.”

In the cloud, the data aggregated from the sensors can be interpreted through AI/ML programs that can produce an action or recommendation (an alarm) to operators watching the data. Actions can even be automated. The cloud and AI concept changes the business model into a service. It’s “something as a service,” Morrison notes.

The IoT, meanwhile, helps to automate the collection, delivery and processing of data to these maintenance programs, adds Burger. “It is is really improving productivity, and it’s improving, beyond that, the overall uptime of whatever system you’re looking at.”

Automation journey
The measurement technologies pulling data off the sensors on machines are evolving and improving. “There’s a lot of discussion on edge-to-edge communication, as to cloud,” says Burger. “Is it a thin-layer communication, for mobile devices, or is it a heavier communication that’s going to move large data payloads? There are so many more tools that are out there, and technologies that can be pulled in and integrated into these larger systems, that are going to help automate that data collection and communication. There is the whole software analytics, and multiple buses on that, coming up. All of that data gets moved and plugged into that back end, where a lot of machine learning, artificial intelligence—all that comes in. It’s starting now, helping with productivity. And then, sometime in the future, you can make it full-scale, lights-out automated.”

To a large extent, this is evolutionary rather than revolutionary. “From my perspective, when you talk about predictive maintenance, you look at the maintenance and reliability journey, or the maintenance pyramid, these concepts have been around for quite a while,” Burger says. “If they were redone today, people would take a look at them and the IIoT technology would add some more layers to it. From an automating process and analytics standpoint, there are people, there are companies, there are utilities that are using these advanced tools that are helping their existing maintenance programs be more effective.”

The challenge is trying to find patterns in sensor data records that can indicate a failure before it happens. That could involve fully autonomous machine learning, where it is customized to a specific piece of equipment, or across a fleet of assets that the fab owns. It also could be tailored to a specific line where chips are being manufactured in Arizona, but the detection algorithm is running on hardware in Malaysia.

“It could be weather, it could be the human operators that are involved, but the software is going to automatically detect the subtle nuances and going to help predict when those machines need service and maintainability,” he adds.

An alternative to AI in predictive maintenance is the use of digital twins—models of the equipment being monitored. Such models could be fed into an evolutionary neural network, and a production cell or an assembly line could be created as a digital version. A high-fidelity digital twin may be preferable to an AI-based black box.

Semiconductor manufacturing
For semiconductor manufacturing equipment, the stakes are so high that extra effort spent on making sure something doesn’t break is considered resources well spent. Predictive maintenance is proving its effectiveness with return-on-investment, says Burger, especially when it comes to preventing catastrophic events in production that can ruin a fiscal quarter’s results.

This is consistent with the thinking at Falkonry, a provider of machine learning software-as-a-service for industrial operations. The company offers “a data scientist in a box,” according to Crick Waters, the company’s senior vice president of customer success. Falkonry’s investors are Basis Set Ventures, Polaris Partners, Start Smart Labs, and Zetta Venture Partners.

Falkonry is involved in automotive, chemicals, electronics and semiconductors, mining and metals, oil and gas, and power and energy. The company’s technology detects patterns in multivariate time series data and predicts critical events.

The software is “ready-to-use, operational machine learning,” Waters says. “With the advent of high-performance computing and the software we have available today, we can apply complex machine learning to complex sets of data. The dark data that is sitting in data storage is now something, using our technology, our customers are able to see what’s happening in their processes by having Falkonry go through the data, find patterns that occur over time,” he notes.

The technology is useful in semiconductor manufacturing, examining wafer fabrication tools and studying their calibration. Falkonry’s software identifies colors and patterns in the data, indicating “what’s happening inside a machine,” Waters says. Falkonry discovers real-time values, assesses quality conditions, and provides early warnings about possible breakdowns, through learning and applying what the software learns, he adds.

Predictive maintenance involves a proactive maintenance schedule, according to Waters. Quality monitoring is important to the process. Welds must be inspected, for instance. Their quality depends upon welding duration and welding time. “There’s a pattern to a good weld, and there’s a pattern to a bad weld,” he says. With this method and technology, it is not necessary to inspect every weld, as the bad welds will be picked up.

Falkonry’s customers include Ciner Resources, a mining company; EDP, an energy company in Portugal; Kawasaki Motors; and Ternium, a steel manufacturer in Latin America and North America.

Conclusion
The IIoT is proving its usefulness through predictive maintenance, which can prevent expensive breakdowns in factories, wafer fabs, and other facilities. The technology helps to keep production going on a steady basis, and that benefits the bottom line.

“Operational cost is the driving factor,” says Mentor’s Morrison. “It’s not a nice-to-have. It’s a must-have. Industrial companies are aiming for world-class operational effectiveness of 80% or more, and well over 90% is achievable.”

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1 comments

Candido Sequeira says:

This article was very important for understanding the most relevant issues on predictive maintenance level for different stages.

But can you streamline this predictive maintenance in a specific area on aviation and airport systems for compliance?

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