Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs

Augmented Reality (AR) is worldwide recognized as one of the leading technologies of the 21st century and one of the pillars of the new industrial revolution envisaged by the Industry 4.0 international program. Several papers describe, in detail, specific applications of Augmented Reality developed...

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Main Authors: Gian Maria Santi, Alessandro Ceruti, Alfredo Liverani, Francesco Osti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/9/2/33
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spelling doaj-697f860062f24a83b444ef4fd39342da2021-04-29T23:01:25ZengMDPI AGTechnologies2227-70802021-04-019333310.3390/technologies9020033Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation ProgramsGian Maria Santi0Alessandro Ceruti1Alfredo Liverani2Francesco Osti3Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna, 40136 Bologna, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna, 40136 Bologna, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna, 40136 Bologna, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Bologna, 40136 Bologna, ItalyAugmented Reality (AR) is worldwide recognized as one of the leading technologies of the 21st century and one of the pillars of the new industrial revolution envisaged by the Industry 4.0 international program. Several papers describe, in detail, specific applications of Augmented Reality developed to test its potentiality in a variety of fields. However, there is a lack of sources detailing the current limits of this technology in the event of its introduction in a real working environment where everyday tasks could be carried out by operators using an AR-based approach. A literature analysis to detect AR strength and weakness has been carried out, and a set of case studies has been implemented by authors to find the limits of current AR technologies in industrial applications outside the laboratory-protected environment. The outcome of this paper is that, even though Augmented Reality is a well-consolidated computer graphic technique in research applications, several improvements both from a software and hardware point of view should be introduced before its introduction in industrial operations. The originality of this paper lies in the detection of guidelines to improve the Augmented Reality potentialities in factories and industries.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/9/2/33augmented realitymixed realityIndustry 4.0factory automationmaintenancedesign for disassembly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gian Maria Santi
Alessandro Ceruti
Alfredo Liverani
Francesco Osti
spellingShingle Gian Maria Santi
Alessandro Ceruti
Alfredo Liverani
Francesco Osti
Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
Technologies
augmented reality
mixed reality
Industry 4.0
factory automation
maintenance
design for disassembly
author_facet Gian Maria Santi
Alessandro Ceruti
Alfredo Liverani
Francesco Osti
author_sort Gian Maria Santi
title Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
title_short Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
title_full Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
title_fullStr Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
title_full_unstemmed Augmented Reality in Industry 4.0 and Future Innovation Programs
title_sort augmented reality in industry 4.0 and future innovation programs
publisher MDPI AG
series Technologies
issn 2227-7080
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Augmented Reality (AR) is worldwide recognized as one of the leading technologies of the 21st century and one of the pillars of the new industrial revolution envisaged by the Industry 4.0 international program. Several papers describe, in detail, specific applications of Augmented Reality developed to test its potentiality in a variety of fields. However, there is a lack of sources detailing the current limits of this technology in the event of its introduction in a real working environment where everyday tasks could be carried out by operators using an AR-based approach. A literature analysis to detect AR strength and weakness has been carried out, and a set of case studies has been implemented by authors to find the limits of current AR technologies in industrial applications outside the laboratory-protected environment. The outcome of this paper is that, even though Augmented Reality is a well-consolidated computer graphic technique in research applications, several improvements both from a software and hardware point of view should be introduced before its introduction in industrial operations. The originality of this paper lies in the detection of guidelines to improve the Augmented Reality potentialities in factories and industries.
topic augmented reality
mixed reality
Industry 4.0
factory automation
maintenance
design for disassembly
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7080/9/2/33
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AT alessandroceruti augmentedrealityinindustry40andfutureinnovationprograms
AT alfredoliverani augmentedrealityinindustry40andfutureinnovationprograms
AT francescoosti augmentedrealityinindustry40andfutureinnovationprograms
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