A £10M project to demonstrate the advances digital technology can make in steelmaking production is underway.

The Materials Processing Institute, in Teesside, is working alongside Liberty Steel Group’s Hartlepool Pipes mill, Stocksbridge-based Liberty Speciality Steels, Warwickshire-based Shiftec and Nottingham's TSC Simulation to create digital twins of the plants in order to demonstrate the advances that can be achieved within the production process, a project it says could transform the industry.

The project will seek to highlight the benefits of introducing industrial digital technologies (IDT) to steel and other sectors serving strategic manufacturing and construction supply chains.

Chris Oswin, who leads the institute’s digital technologies group, said: “The real challenge in adopting smart technology is how it can be retro-fitted to improve the performance of existing plant.

“Whilst this project is centred on the metals sector, it can easily be applied to any process where digital imaging can be linked to machine learning and intelligent process control.

“The three sites involved will act as demonstrators for IDT – enabling the lessons learned to be shared across other foundation industries, including energy, oil and gas, pharmaceuticals, chemicals and the process industries.”

The institute will undertake an initial pilot project using its Normanton steel plant to assess and improve the IDT before it is applied to the production processes operated by Liberty Steel Group.

Liberty Steel Group is seeking to make a significant change in both productivity and product performance by working in conjunction with the Institute, Shiftec and TSC.

The project will focus on using camera and imaging technologies in conjunction with intelligent processing and machine learning to increase accuracy – including process characterisation, the creation of digital twins and intelligent interactive process models.

The two-year project, which is worth £2m to the institute, is being funded by Innovate UK, the UK’s innovation agency, through its Manufacturing Made Smarter Challenge, part of the governments larger Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund.

The fourth industrial revolution, also known as Industry 4.0, uses IDT to enable the recording and analysis of data across machines for continuous improvement, creating a more cost-effective, efficient, flexible and faster process.

Chris McDonald, chief executive of the institute, said: “This is a hugely exciting and prestigious project which places the institute at the forefront of the fourth industrial revolution.

"I'm confident this project will show how the latest digital technologies can be adopted by small businesses and successfully applied to foundation industry factories. We will enable companies to tackle the difficult, but all too common problems of brownfield sites, legacy systems, lack of connectivity and ageing equipment.

“Many of these technologies have been developed here at the institute and we are confident they will optimise production facilities – providing far-reaching opportunities to develop the future UK economy."