A shipbuilder, university and two software developers are collaborating to develop digital twins and ship simulations for engineering lower emission vessels
Smarter and more efficient ships will be built in South Korea following a partnership agreement between a shipbuilder, university and digital developers.
Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering (DSME) has teamed up with Korea Maritime and Ocean University (KMOU) and companies, Napa and AVL, to develop intelligent ships and simulation technology.
Together they will use digital twins, system simulation and data analytics to design ships and engineroom machinery that have lower emissions. They will develop methods for collecting more onboard data for analysis to create digital twins for performance analytics.
The collaboration involves the acquisition and processing of engineroom data, ship performance and meteorological information. This will be used for training, simulation and human machine interfaces.
DSME chief technology officer Odin Kwon said these technologies are outcomes from a surge in maritime digitalisation and development of the internet of things
“By creating a virtual, real-time copy of engine equipment, we can monitor, analyse, and predict performance, leading to safer and more efficient operations,” said Mr Kwon.
“Digital twins bring together a range of different fields of expertise, requiring hardware, software and operations to work together,” he continued. “Collaboration is essential if this technology is to mature.”
“This partnership represents shipping’s best minds in shipbuilding, engines, ship operations, and software. We are excited to work together to develop digital twin technology and a platform that will make future generations of ships safer and smarter,” said Mr Kwon.
KMOU has started developing a platform for digital twin technology and for using augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR) for this project. KMOU professor Deog Hee Doh said this platform will balance academia and technology application. “This could be a basis for the development of autonomous ships,” he said.
KMOU will focus on the fields of ship simulation and communications by extending digital vessel technology with AR/VR. The university will also use its own training ships and conduct collaborative practical research and testing for practical validations on the developed prototype digital twin ship.
Napa will provide software and data analytics to develop digital twin ship models with digitalised components and a real-time simulation platform to integrate between engine models and ship models.
AVL will develop the simulation tools and methodologies that the partnership projects will require.
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