An industrial digital twin is a high-fidelity digital model of physical assets, lines, and plants that updates in real time. It enables monitoring, analysis, optimization of processes, and better decisions with fewer downtime and maintenance costs.
- The concept of a digital twin
- Strategy and roadmap
- Building industrial digital twins
- Operation and analysis
- Value tracking techniques
This overview explains building industrial digital twins and value tracking techniques, from concept to full deployment.
The concept of a digital twin
A digital twin mirrors equipment, machines, and systems in a virtual environment. Sensors stream data that the model uses to simulate, analyze, and evaluate behavior under different conditions and scenarios. With this access to the operational state, teams can test “what-if” changes safely before touching the line, then roll out only what works.
More information at https://www.capnor.com/en/blog/what-is-a-digital-twin.
Strategy and roadmap
A practical digital twin strategy starts small: define the decision you want to improve (quality, throughput, energy), the parameters to measure, and the actions to automate. Many programs begin with a minimum viable twin (MVT) that covers one asset or part of a process, then scale to a line, area, and site. That path reduces risk, aligns stakeholders, and clarifies ownership across engineering, operations, and IT.
Building industrial digital twins
To develop the twin, fuse data from PLCs, historians, MES/ERP, and condition sensors into a clean point cloud or feature space for machine learning and physics-based modeling. Calibrate against known states; once you’ve validated accuracy, you’ll be able to run closed-loop optimization and predictive control. Use modular design so models are reusable across assets and scale from pilot to plant.
Operation and analysis
In production, the twin performs continuous monitoring, anomaly detection, and root-cause analysis. It improves asset performance by recommending setpoints, scheduling maintenance, and balancing costs vs. output. Teams can simulate startups, changeovers, and recipes in the twin to reduce scrap and shorten time-to-rate.
Value tracking techniques
Prove ROI with explicit baselines and KPIs: OEE, energy per unit, MTBF/MTTR, quality escapes, and maintenance costs avoided. Tag each recommendation with expected impact, capture real outcomes, and audit monthly. This “and value tracking techniques” discipline links technology to business results and guides further deployment.
You May Also Read: Fire Alarm Systems Anchor Fire London – modern technology in the service of safety
