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Siemens Adds Artificial Intelligence to Control Logic

08 Oct 2019
Siemens Adds Artificial Intelligence to Control Logic
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Imagine if a robot could automatically adjust its grip based on the size and shape of the object? Put simply, a robot that could fine-tune how it is holding an item so as not to drop it, much just as humans do. According to Siemens, it’s truly possible, and it all comes down to artificial intelligence (AI) based on neural networks.
 
Neural networking is a technology that copies the human brain in that it is able to distinguish complex patterns. Keeping that in mind, Siemens says that by adding AI via neural networks to traditional control programs - which were designed to execute a set task - the capabilities of the system can be extended to change based on the parameters of the product or process. Bottom line: machines turned out to be naturally flexible.
 
A year ago at the SPS/IPC/Drives showcase in Nuremberg, Germany, Siemens announced a module that will integrate AI capabilities into the company’s Simatic S7-1500 controller and the company’s ET 200MP I/O system. This year, at PACK EXPO Las Vegas, Siemens unveiled the offering in the U.S., setting the foundation for the future portfolio that will enable AI throughout all levels of SiemensTotally Integrated Automation (TIA) architecture, which is a combination of hardware and software that links everything together seamlessly. The goal with TIA is to apply AI within applications that span from Siemens’ MindSphere, a cloud-based Internet of Things (IoT) operating platform, out to the industrial edge and even to the controller and field devices.
 
With the launch of the S7-1500 TM NPU (neural processing unit) module for the Simatic S7-1500 controller and the ET 200MP I/O system, Siemens has brought AI right to the controller. The S7-1500 TM NPU module is more appropriate for use on the field level at the machine – and wherever reliable, fast, deterministic decisions are required — as it enables the transfer of human expertise to the machine through training, the company said.
 
“With artificial intelligence we are able to train, recognize, and adjust to allow more flexible machinery,” said Colm Gavin, Factory Automation digitalization specialist at Siemens during a press conference at PACK EXPO. “Because, do we want 10 machines to package 10 different types of products, or a tool that accommodates different packages and different sizes and automatically adjusts to the new format?”
 
The S7-1500 TM NPU module works using a trained neural system on an SD card. Users can connect Gigabit Ethernet- and USB 3.1-compatible sensors like cameras and microphones to the module’s integrated interfaces. CPU data transmitted by the backplane bus can also be used as input data. The processing results then are assessed in the CPU program.
 
In packaging, for instance, bottles are coming down a conveyor belt quickly and if the system is trained for pass/fail, the moment something goes out of tolerance, it will fail. But if using AI, where the camera is trained with neural networks to recognize a billion pictures of every possible combination, the system will be able to figure out the rules on its own.
 
According to Gavin, the benefits of the S7-1500 TM NPU module are:
 
Flexibility - it makes handling unknown objects easy without resource-intensive programming.
Quality - Expert knowledge for fast and reliable quality checks is transferred directly to the module thanks to the higher-level training of a neural network.
Greater efficiency - Machines can respond flexibly and automatically to situations that used to require manual intervention, which reduces downtime and increases availability.
Cost-effectiveness - The module makes it possible to detect problems in production early on and avoid the cost of having to rework or even discard the product.
 
Applications in the areas of robotics, quality assurance, and condition monitoring are certainly suitable for the TM NPU module, but applications are limited only by the user’s imagination. At PACK EXPO, Siemens was demonstrating a robot with “flexible grasping” using AI, which looks at a shape and calculates the optimal point the gripper can pick it up (see video here). Once it understands the best grasping point the AI tells it where to go.“You don’t need to program the robot as AI makes it possible to grasp arbitrarily shaped and positioned objects,” Gavin said, adding that the ability to mimic the human hand in manufacturing has the potential to be a very big business.
 

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