Chapter 1 - Industry 4.0 in retrospect and in context
Karl-Erik Michelsen (LUT University)
Coming to terms with the concept of industrial revolution
Unde venis Industry 4.0 ?
Implications of Industry 4.0 beyond technology
References
I Technical Perspectives
Chapter 2.
Additive Manufacturing - Past, Present, and the Future
Markus Korpela (LUT University), Niko Riikonen (LUT University), Heidi Piili (LUT University), Antti Salminen (LUT University), and Olli Nyrhilä (EOS Finland Ltd.)
Introduction
Additive manufacturing materials and processes
Metal additive manufacturing
Powder-bed fusion
Other metal additive manufacturing technologies
Technology readiness level
On the new possibilities AM offers
Challenges for AM
Future Trends and development
References
Chapter 3.
Additive manufacturing from the point of view of materials research
Ville Laitinen (LUT University), Mehdi Merabdene (LUT University), Erica Stevens (University of Pittsburgh), Markus Chmielus (University of Pittsburgh), Jan Van Humbeeck (KU Leuven), and Kari Ullakko (LUT University)
Introduction
Additive manufacturing of stimuli-responsive materials
Additive manufacturing of shape memory alloys
Additive manufacturing of magnetic shape memory alloys
Additive manufacturing of magnetocaloric materials
Future aspects of additive manufacturing for novel metallic materials
Summary
References
Chapter 4.
Robotics in Manufacturing - The Past and the Present
Ming Li (LUT University), Andrija Milojevic (LUT University), and Heikki Handroos (LUT University)
Robots - from myth to industry favorite
New trends in industrial robotics - cobots and advanced logistics robots
Supporting technologies behind modern robotics
Conclusions
References
Chapter 5.
Maintenance management in light of manufacturing 4.0
Michele Urbani (University of Trento), Dario Petri (University of Trento), Matteo Brunelli (University of Trento), and Mikael Collan (LUT University)
Introduction
Maintenance-Management: an Overview
Time-Based Maintenance Condition-Based Maintenance
More about condition-based maintenance
Fault Detection
Fault Diagnosis
Prognostics and Health Management - towards Industry 4.0
Digital twins and their connection to maintenance
Conclusion
References
II Manufacturing 4.0 Business Models and the Economic Feasibility of Additive Manufacturing
Chapter 6.
Industrial additive manufacturing business models - what we know from the literature?
Jyrki Savolainen (LUT University) and Mikael Collan (LUT University)
Introduction
Short-term implications of additive manufacturing and incremental business model development
Generally on Current Applications
Additive Manufact
About the Author:
Mikael Collan is a tenured Professor of strategic finance at LUT University in Lappeenranta, Finland. He is an ordinary member of the Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters, the oldest of the four Finnish academies of Science and the past president of the Finnish operations research society.
Karl-Erik Michelsen is a Professor at LUT University, Finland, specializing in innovation and technology studies and business history. In 2018, Michelsen was selected the "professor of the year" in Finland.