2010
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-10430-5_63
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Evolvable Production Systems: Approach towards Modern Production Systems

Abstract: To face current socio-economic adverse conditions enterprises must increase their efficiency and evolve to the requirements of customization and sustainability. Modern production systems need to deal with instability of markets and resource scarcity regarding an economical, ecological and social concern. The Evolvable Production Systems (EPS) has aimed at developing such technological solutions and support mechanisms that may endow European assembly companies to fulfil these demands. EPS seeks highly adaptable… Show more

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“…Like other efforts, EPSs try to respond to the necessity of increasing trend of producing smaller batch sizes and tight production schedules, by offering a robust process plan that can provide solutions based on the available resources (Akillioglu and Onori, 2011; Chen et al , 2015; Onori et al , 2011; Onori and Barata, 2010). To be effective, agile knowledge transmission among product design and process planning in EPS definition levels of self-re-configurability and self-adapting is always economically and ecologically desirable (Maffei et al , 2009; Neves and Barata, 2009). Product feature recognition, analysis and information offer significant clues for process planning (Garcia et al , 2011; Wang et al , 2010) and assembly planning (Mathew and Rao, 2010; Viganò, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like other efforts, EPSs try to respond to the necessity of increasing trend of producing smaller batch sizes and tight production schedules, by offering a robust process plan that can provide solutions based on the available resources (Akillioglu and Onori, 2011; Chen et al , 2015; Onori et al , 2011; Onori and Barata, 2010). To be effective, agile knowledge transmission among product design and process planning in EPS definition levels of self-re-configurability and self-adapting is always economically and ecologically desirable (Maffei et al , 2009; Neves and Barata, 2009). Product feature recognition, analysis and information offer significant clues for process planning (Garcia et al , 2011; Wang et al , 2010) and assembly planning (Mathew and Rao, 2010; Viganò, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%