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Scrivener Publishing

100 Cummings Center, Suite 541J Beverly, MA 01915-6106

Advances in Learning Analytics for Intelligent Cloud-IoT Systems

Series Editors: Dr. Souvik Pal and Dr. Dac-Nhuong Le

Scope: e role of adaptation, learning analytics, computational Intelligence, and data analytics in the eld of Cloud-IoT Systems is becoming increasingly essential and intertwined. e capability of an intelligent system depends on various self-decision making algorithms in IoT Devices. IoT based smart systems generate a large amount of data (big data) that cannot be processed by traditional data processing algorithms and applications. Hence, this book series involves di erent computational methods incorporated within the system with the help of Analytics Reasoning and Sense-making in Big Data, which is centered in the Cloud and IoT-enabled environments.

e series seeks volumes that are empirical studies, theoretical and numerical analysis, and novel research ndings. e series encourages cross-fertilization of highlighting research and knowledge of Data Analytics, Machine Learning, Data Science, and IoT sustainable developments.

Please send proposals to:

Dr. Souvik Pal Department of Computer Science & Engineering

Sister Nivedita University (Techno India Group) Kolkata, India souvikpal22@gmail.com

Dr. Dac-Nhuong Le

Faculty of Information Technology, Haiphong University, Haiphong, Vietnam nhuongld@hus.edu.vn

Publishers at Scrivener

Martin Scrivener (martin@scrivenerpublishing.com)

Phillip Carmical (pcarmical@scrivenerpublishing.com)

The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)

Intelligent Analytics for Predictive Maintenance

Suseendran Gopalakrishnan Souvik Pal and Noor Zaman

This edition first published 2022 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, USA and Scrivener Publishing LLC, 100 Cummings Center, Suite 541J, Beverly, MA 01915, USA © 2022 Scrivener Publishing LLC

For more information about Scrivener publications please visit www.scrivenerpublishing.com.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

ISBN 978-1-119-76877-7

Cover image: Pixabay.Com

Cover design by Russell Richardson

Set in size of 11pt and Minion Pro by Manila Typesetting Company, Makati, Philippines

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Preface

It is with immense pleasure that we introduce this book on intelligent analytics for predictive maintenance through the industrial internet of things (IIoT), with the objective of fostering advancements and disseminating results concerning recent applications in the field.

Since the internet of things (IoT) dominates all sectors of technology, from home to industries, automation through IoT devices is remarkably changing the processes of our daily lives. For example, more and more businesses are adopting and accepting industrial automation on a large scale, with the market for industrial robots expected to reach 73.5 billion US dollars by 2023. The primary reason for adopting IoT industrial automation in businesses is the benefits it provides, including enhanced efficiency, high accuracy, cost-effectiveness, quick process completion, low power consumption, fewer errors, and ease of control. Therefore, every smart entrepreneur undoubtedly has the vision of automating office processes to match the latest technological innovations. However, it is not so easy to use these same innovations to automate industrial processes. Which is why the IIoT, a key element of a smart factory, was created to bring together modern cloud computing, the IoT, and AI to design intelligent, self-optimizing industrial equipment and facilities.

Since engineers, both current and future, need systematic training in industrial automation in order to keep up with and advance the rapidly evolving field of applied control technologies, expert systems with IoT capabilities make for more versatile and innovative handling of problems. However, since security of both physical devices and administration applications is basic to the activity of the IoT and is imperative for its success, this book was designed to provide students with an opportunity to explore knowledge concerning the security frameworks of the IoT that are dependent on new specialized norms. Therefore, new security plans are discussed which highlight these new norms.

This book showcases industrial automation through the IoT by including case studies in the areas of the IIoT, robotic and intelligent systems, and

web-based applications which will be of interest to working professionals and those in education and research involved in a broad cross section of technical disciplines. The diverse topics covered in the 15 chapters herein are briefly described below.

– Chapter 1 provides an updated overview of the IoT and IIoT, addressing its evolution along with AI technology and its potential in the industry, approaching its relationship with a concise bibliographic background, and synthesizing the potential of the technologies.

– Chapter 2 discusses the major challenges in securing IoT devices and the data being exchanged over the network. It also covers the manufacturers of IoT devices and the standards they follow. Security challenges such as privacy, confidentiality, integrity and reliability are also discussed in a broader manner.

– Chapter 3 extensively covers the challenges concerning smart automation, and smart and grid management.

– Chapter 4 focuses on how advanced forms of automated data processing connect with new types of computer vision (CV) applications that directly influence safety, thereby protecting human lives and physical assets in hazardous places.

– Chapter 5 explains the use of precise system modeling along with appropriate objective function that can offer optimal solutions, along with the financial implications of using soft computing techniques.

– Chapter 6 provides insightful knowledge on antenna designs, which can further help in future wearable antenna design research to fulfil the requirements of best wearable electronics.

– Chapter 7 briefly reports on the numerous IoT devices used in daily life. Since the data generated by these devices are huge, there is a discussion on how it should be monitored, controlled, and acted upon using IoT data transmission protocols in data centers using various computing methods such as Fog, Cloud, Edge, and distributed computing along with machine learning techniques.  Challenges faced in data centers and the IoT are also presented.

– Chapter 8 provides insight into the challenges of drone delivery system and the use of IoT to overcome them.

Chapter 9 studies IoT-based water management system, including investigations of rate impediments in biophysical and geochemical measures to help biological system administrations concerning water quality.

– Chapters 10 and 11 further emphasize the numerous advantages of the industrial IoT.

– Chapter 12 introduces a novel neural predictive classifier for improving the prediction rate of adverse drug reactions (ADRs), which is proposed to identify ADRs using the IoT.

– Chapter 13 explains the impact that COVID-19 has had on the IIoT and gives an overview of IoT’s role in COVID19, the benefits and challenges of the IIoT, and the effects of COVID-19 on industrial manufacturing and its impact on IoT-connected applications and digital transformation, and also the influence of COVID-19 on IoT application in general.

– Chapter 14 paves the way for a comprehensive composite smart ambulance booking and tracking system using the IoT for digital services.

– Chapter 15 discusses the increasing demand to solve health issues affecting the elderly, where the use of new IoT technology is completely changing their everyday lives, and promises to revolutionize modern healthcare by enabling a more personalized, preventive and collaborative form of care. Embedding devices with a cloud server and the sensorcloud paradigm will give the elderly a more versatile facility. So, by analyzing security problems, such as authentication and data protection to protect the privacy of the elderly, an intelligent and safe health control system is proposed in this chapter with an IoT sensor focused on cloud storage and encryption.

In conclusion, we would like to extend our appreciation to our many colleagues and give our sincere thanks to all the experts for providing preparatory comments that will surely motivate the reader to read the topic. We also wish to thank the reviewers who took time to review this book. Also, we are very much grateful to our family members for their patience, encouragement, and understanding. Special thanks are given to the many individuals at Scrivener Publishing who contributed their talents and

xx Preface

efforts in bringing this book to fruition. Finally, any suggestions to improve the text will be highly appreciated.

R. Anandan Suseendran Gopalakrishnan

Souvik Pal Noor Zaman

January 2022

A Look at IIoT: The Perspective of IoT Technology Applied in the Industrial Field

Ana Carolina Borges Monteiro1, Reinaldo Padilha França1*, Rangel Arthur2, Yuzo Iano1, Andrea Coimbra Segatti2, Giulliano Paes Carnielli2, Julio Cesar Pereira2, Henri Alves de Godoy2 and Elder Carlos Fernandes2

1School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (FEEC), University of Campinas –UNICAMP, Av. Albert Einstein, Barão Geraldo, Campinas – SP, Brazil

2Faculty of Technology (FT), University of Campinas – UNICAMP, Paschoal Marmo Street, Jardim Nova Italia, Limeira, Brazil

Abstract

The advent of solutions with AI (Artificial Intelligence) technology means tools and software that integrate resources that automate the process of making algorithmic decisions. Simply put, AI consists of systems or machines that mimic human intelligence to perform tasks improving iteratively over time based on the information collected. Thus, IoT currently matches a series of hardware that works connected to the internet, from a refrigerator to a wearable watch that measures heart rate and sends this data to an application. In this sense, it is possible to interpret what part of these devices uses, even on a small scale, AI technology. This technological innovation connects everyday intelligent devices or even intelligent sensors, to the internet, linking the physical world increasingly closer to the digital world. In this scenario, the world is experiencing a digital transformation, and related to it, the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) aims to connect different devices to collect and transmit data present in an industrial environment. Performing this communication through essential industrial variables related to smart devices, effecting communication, data, and data analysis. In this sense, this chapter is motivated to provide an updated overview of IoT and IIoT, addressing its evolution along with AI technology and potential in the industry, approaching its relationship, with a concise bibliographic background, synthesizing the potential of technologies.

Keywords: IoT, IIoT, industrial, IoT applications, sensors

*Corresponding author: padilha@decom.fee.unicamp.br

R. Anandan, Suseendran Gopalakrishnan, Souvik Pal and Noor Zaman (eds.) The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT): Intelligent Analytics for Predictive Maintenance, (1–30) © 2022 Scrivener Publishing LLC

1.1 Introduction

The concept behind the Internet of Things (IoT) is to connect several devices, through the internet which can exchange information with each other. Considering that this technology can be applied to industry, it makes this connection between these different devices generates Industry 4.0, which is reputable as the Fourth Industrial Revolution, being the new trend that is being adopted by large corporations to get ahead in the market, characterized by the introduction of information technology in the industry [1].

IoT in Industry 4.0 is basically responsible for the integration of all devices inside and outside the plant, considering that the concept represents the connection as it is a network of physical devices (objects), systems, platforms, and applications with embedded technology to communicate, feel or interact with indoor and outdoor environments [1, 2].

Industry 4.0 is the complete transformation of the entire scope of industrial production through the fusion of internet and digital technology with traditional industry, being motivated by three major changes in the productive industrial world related to the immense amount of digitized information, exponential advancement of computer capacity, and innovation strategies (people, research, and technology) [2, 3].

When it is said that the internet is in the industry, these changes allow everything inside and around an operational plant (suppliers, distributors, plants, and even the final product) to be digitally related and connected, affording a highly incorporated value chain, from the factory floor, is important to relate this to an environment where all equipment and machines are connected in networks and uniquely providing information [3, 4].

For Industry 4.0 to become feasible, it requires the adoption of a technological infrastructure made up of physical and virtual systems, aiming to create a favorable environment for new technologies to be disseminated and incorporated by the industry, with the support of Big Data Analytics technology (Figure 1.1), automated robots, simulations, advanced manufacturing, augmented reality, and the IoT, employing the monitoring of technological trends, assisting managers throughout the entire industrial chain [3, 5].

The Industrial Internet of Things has an IoT and IIoT layer in the industry, provoking a prognostic model, since automation, which in general already exists, answers questions regarding what is happening, what happened, and why it happened, considering its network of physical devices (objects and things, among others), systems, platforms, systems, and

applications with embedded technology in industry sectors, aiming to promote automation of manufacturing and, thus, increase the productivity of production lines, generating greater competitiveness with the international industry through intelligent factories (smart manufacturing) [6].

Generating an increasing number of connected devices (in some situations, it even include unfinished products), since the digitization of data from machines, methods, processes, procedures, and intelligent devices, integrates and complements the operational layer of an industrial plant, enabling communication and systems integration and controls and allowing responses and decision-making in real time. Thus, IIoT becomes a prerequisite for Industry 4.0 [1, 7].

The difference between IoT and IIoT is in the sense that the first relates systems that connect things, complement information, normally only produce data, and can be used in any sector of the industry, transforming the second, to manage assets and analyze maintenance trends [8–10].

IIoT forms a critical layer of the production process and can directly connect a product supplier in real time on the production line, which analyzes the quality and use of your product, as well as connecting the input and output logistics chain of materials and control production, in real time, at the optimum point of operation, becoming an application of production and consumption of data, with a critical profile [8–10].

The use of IoT and IIoT proposes the digital factory bringing benefits to productive plants as an improvement in the use of the asset, reduction of operations or asset cycle cost, improved production, reduction of

Figure 1.1 Big data analytics illustration.

4 The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)

operations or stoppages, improving asset use (performance), increased speed in decision-making, allow the sale or purchase of products as a service, generate opportunity for new business, among several others. Thus, the premise of digitizing all information can lead to a question about the reason and reason for digitizing so much data, since this information is all digitized and there are all the means (networks) for them to travel and exchange information with each other, it is expected that decisions can be made not only between operators and machines, but also between machine and machine, this is called M2M, Machine to Machine, which before were not available in real time and are now needed [8–11].

Thus, the architectures of industrial automation systems, which have adherence to Industry 4.0, manage to integrate different devices in favor of industrial evolution, with more and more sensors, cameras, and systems that will be monitoring the entire industrial production process, evaluating and supervising the performance of equipment, and providing, in addition to the already known layers of operational control and the entire control framework, the IoT and IIoT layer, where it will converge all this data into a Big Data, delivering operational control possibilities (Figure 1.2), with decision-making in prognoses and with the possibility of autonomous actions [10–12].

Optimizing the production process of the industry is the main reason for the application of IoT in the production line of the factories, since the IoT technology and its IIoT aspect allows the equipment that makes up the industrial yard of a company today that can be connected in a network. With the data collected and stored in the cloud, it allows the decisionmakers of the companies to have quick and easy access to all the information of the company and its collaborators; in other words, this makes all the

Figure 1.2 Big data illustration.

industrial machinery work automatically through of highly programmable intelligent sensors [13, 14].

Wherefore, this chapter is motivated and has the purpose to originate an updated overview of IoT and IIoT, addressing its evolution and branch of application potential in the industry, approaching its relationship with current technologies and synthesizing the potential of technology with a concise bibliographic background.

1.2 Relationship Between Artificial Intelligence and IoT

The emergence of solutions and tools with AI (Artificial Intelligence) technology means solutions, tools, and software that have integrated resources that automate the process of making algorithmic decisions. The technology to be used can be anything from independent databases employing Machine Learning to pre-built models that can be employed to a diversity of data sets to solve paradigms related to image recognition and text analysis. Applied in the industry, it can help a business achieve a faster time to evaluate, reduce costs, increase productivity, and improve the relationship with stakeholders and customers [15, 16].

Machine Learning is only part of AI, that is, it is an AI application in which it accesses a large volume of data and learns from it automatically, without human intervention. This is what happens in the case of recommendations on video streaming platforms and facial recognition in photos on social media pages. AI is a broader concept that, in addition to Machine Learning, includes technologies such as natural language processing, neural networks, inference algorithms, and deep learning, in order to achieve reasoning and performance similar to that of human beings [15, 16].

An AI system is not only sufficient and capable of storing, analyze, and manipulating data, but also of acquiring, representing, and manipulating information and knowledge. Including the characteristic to infer or even deduce new knowledge, new relationships between data-generating information about facts and concepts, from existing information and knowledge and to use methods and procedures of representation, statistical analysis, and manipulation to solve complex questions that are often incognito and non-quantitative in nature [17].

The increase in mass data collection over the years, related to IoT devices, has boosted AI, given that the volume of information produced by people has been growing exponentially. But allied with Big Data technology to understand this massive set of data, which serves as a basis for

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