News

Open, vendor-agnostic automation is the future of working life

Collaboration between Schneider Electric and Aalto University. Schneider’s open EcoStruxure Automation Expert platform will be used by Aalto University students in Aalto’s Factory of the Future unit.
Schneiderin avoin EcoStruxure Automation Expert -alusta on Aalto-yliopiston opiskelijoiden käytössä Aallon Factory of the Future -yksikössä. Kuva: Aalto ITiA research group
Schneider’s open EcoStruxure Automation Expert platform will be used by Aalto University students in Aalto’s Factory of the Future unit. Photo: Aalto ITiA research group

Schneider Electric, a specialist in energy management and automation, has launched collaboration with Aalto University to train future experts. Schneider’s open EcoStruxure Automation Expert platform will be used by Aalto University students in Aalto’s Factory of the Future unit. The unit develops flexible innovations and solutions for use in automation.

“The open automation platform is a good teaching base, as open platforms will only become more common in the future. The labour market will also offer more opportunities if a candidate’s know-how is not limited to a single closed automation system,” stresses Aalto University’s Professor of Electrical Engineering Valeriy Vyatkin.

“With this university collaboration, the students will learn about a good technology platform and understand the advantages and possibilities of open, vendor-agnostic automation. Any future employer will benefit from vendor-agnostic automation expertise gained during university studies,” says Manager Marko Latvasalo of Schneider Electric.

Education for the needs of future working life

Vyatkin underscores the importance of collaboration between enterprises and universities as a win-win situation.

“At Aalto University, we are training future experts in the field of automation. Our main task is to spark students’ interest in industrial automation, but we also hope to benefit industry by putting research results into practice.

“The key elements of the fourth industrial revolution are robotics, AI, digital twins and virtual reality, to name a few. Aalto University has tremendous expertise in these areas. The goal is to make use of this expertise to benefit industry. The technologies also give us a good opportunity to establish start-ups,” says Vyatkin.
Schneider Electric sees the open Automation Expert platform as something that will help students and teachers prepare for the new era of automation.

“Schneider has competent people who can support students in the direction the automation world is heading,” says Schneider Electric’s Head of Marketing, Tuomas Korhonen.

Some 100 students of electrical engineering and automation study the use of open automation at Aalto University every year.

“By collaborating with industrial enterprises, we can lower the threshold for adopting new technologies of the fourth industrial revolution. Aalto’s Factory of the Future can support companies in automation-related development projects and train future experts to meet the needs of industry. With Schneider’s automation platform, Aalto’s Factory of the Future can take part in pilot projects, for example” says Vyatkin.

Schneider Electric’s vendor and process automation logics support the new, open, IEC61499-based Automation Expert platform. As a platform, both series have been in use for years, with a proven and reliable track record in industry. In addition to the logics, wireless control components for the industrial environment to support the transition from conservative automation to the modern wireless industrial environment were also delivered to the Factory of the Future unit.

Further information:

Valeriy Vyatkin
Aalto University’s Professor of Electrical Engineering
tel. 050 578 0001
valeriy.vyatkin@aalto.fi

Tuomas Korhonen
Head of Marketing, Schneider Electric
tel. 050 544 2943
tuomas.korhonen@se.com

Marko Latvasalo
Product Manager, Schneider Electric
tel. 050 414 0124
marko.latvasalo@se.com

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

primo.aalto.fi main page
Research & Art Published:

Aalto-Primo has been updated

Aalto-Primo has been upgraded to a new version.
The PulseOn team posing for the camera. 7 men in suits, 5 standing and 2 sitting on the sides
Campus, Research & Art, University Published:

PulseOn Oy sprung up from the Nokia Bridge Program

In 2011, Nokia Oyj launched its extensive Nokia Bridge Program that aimed to help experts start entrepreneurship and find employment after being laid off. Aalto Startup Center offered business accelerator services to the participants and coached them in innovation and commercial processes.
Left to right: Simone Santucci, Boris Hudec and Ville Miikkulainen
Research & Art Published:

ACME hosted PhotoPrint project collaborators working on Direct Atomic Layer Processing

Prof. Ville Miikkulainen hosted collaborators from the PhotoPrint project to discuss advances in Direct Atomic Layer Processing (DALP®) and thin-film technologies.
Aerial view of a modern brick-and-glass campus with curved roads, trams and a lake and forest in the background
Awards and Recognition, Research & Art Published:

Highly sought-after EU funding for three Aalto University researchers

The projects focus on atomically precise materials-engineering, LED-based thermal management and quantum methods in distributed networks.