University courses adapt to the theme of Industry 4.0

Add to my library

SF210 V1 Article

University courses adapt to the theme of Industry 4.0

Authors : Pascal VRIGNAT, Manuel AVILA, Pascale MARANGE, Frédéric KRATZ

Publication date: October 10, 2022 | Lire en français

Add to my library Add to my library

Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur You do not have access to this resource.
Request your free trial access! Free trial

Already subscribed?

Overview

ABSTRACT

With the industry of the future, also known as "Industry 4.0", digital technology, a virtual or otherwise confluence of data, software, sensors, actuators and effectors, various networks of technologies have had to be put in place. In addition to these digital technologies, there are new technologies in robotics and business management (agility, eco-responsibility, etc.).

In this context, one of the greatest challenges is to convert the employees of the industrial sector to its practices and codes. These induced changes also require that the training of young people be adapted even before they enter their professional careers. The efficiency of this training, whatever the degree level, must include close collaboration with industrial partners.

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHORS

  • Pascal VRIGNAT : Senior Lecturer - University of Orléans, PRISME Laboratory

  • Manuel AVILA : Senior Lecturer - University of Orléans, PRISME Laboratory

  • Pascale MARANGE : Senior Lecturer - Université de Lorraine, Centre de Recherche en Automatique

  • Frédéric KRATZ : University Professor - INSA Centre Val de Loire, PRISME Laboratory

 INTRODUCTION

The concept of the industry of the future, also known as "Industrie 4.0", was introduced in Germany in 2011 (Hannover Messe Fair). At the time, discussions on this theme focused on actions that could be taken to make German industry more competitive in the face of growing competition from the Asian continent. Under these conditions, this concept federated then, many countries and notably France within the framework of the "Industry of the Future" project initiated by the President of the Republic in 2015. The industry of the future is then associated as the 4th industrial revolution. The aim of this revolution is to enable industry to benefit from the considerable progress and solutions available in the field of digital technologies.

Until the early 2000s, the industrial paradigm involving OT (Operational Technology) nevertheless separated IT (Information Technology). Industrial processes were then functionally and physically structured and hierarchized according to a pyramid model (CIM: Computer Integrated Manufacturing) or a "Purdue" model. This structuring now converges around different bricks or functions that can be implemented according to specific needs.

Examples include new manufacturing processes, intelligent machines, new materials, process coupling, control and command, monitoring and traceability, additive manufacturing...

These predominantly digital solutions integrate :

  • digital engineering (modeling, simulation, virtual or augmented reality);

  • the digital chain (Computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM) ;

  • Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) ;

  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) ;

  • Electronic document management (EDM)...);

  • Internet of Things (interconnection, intelligent objects) ;

  • communication (protocol, securing exchanges) ;

  • Big Data;

  • Data mining ;

  • functions hosted in the cloud.

Like any revolution, Industry 4.0 requires companies to adapt efficiently in a context of accelerating technological innovation. This adaptation is not the only one: it also impacts the various university training courses and certain research projects.

The corpus of this article presents a panel of achievements and partnerships that today enable the validation of demonstrators for Industry 4.0. The various projects have been validated in a university or engineering school context.

You do not have access to this resource.
Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource. Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed?


KEYWORDS

information and communication technologies   |   learning   |   4.0 industry   |   communicating automated processes   |   university education

Ongoing reading
University courses adapt to the theme of Industry 4.0

Article included in this offer

"Industry of the future"

( 103 articles )

Complete knowledge base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

View offer details

Dans les ressources documentaires

Plateformes de développement faible coût pour la domotique, la robotique et le prototypage des systèmes embarqués

Les plateformes bas-coût sont populaires pour la formation en électronique et informatique sur des applic...

Réalité virtuelle et mixte pour l’apprentissage et la formation

Les progrès scientifiques et technologiques enregistrés dans le domaine de la réalité virtuelle permetten...

Plateformes élévatrices mobiles de personnes

Les plateformes élévatrices mobiles de personnel, communément appelées « PEMP » ou « nacel...

Tous les livres blancs
Article Regards de dirigeants #18 : Marc Rumeau, IESF
25 May 2022
Regards de dirigeants #18 : Marc Rumeau, IESF

A la tête d’IESF (Ingénieurs et scientifiques de France) depuis le mois de juin 2021, Marc Rumeau est un ancien élève des Arts & Métiers ParisTech. Il a exe...

Toutes les actualités
Contact us