The adoption of Digital Twin technology is surging, reshaping business operations profoundly. Over recent years, its application has spread across diverse industries, tackling various challenges. At the forefront of pioneering research and innovation stands the Digital Twin Innovation Centre, proof of the Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology's commitment to merging the physical and digital realms seamlessly.
A Digital Twin serves as a virtual replica of a physical entity, whether it be an object, system, or process, represented via the convergence of data, models, and visualization. It meticulously mirrors the characteristics and functionalities of its real-world counterpart, affording us the ability to monitor, analyze, forecast, comprehend, and even control its behavior from the digital plane.
The necessity for a Digital Twin stems from its multifaceted utility. Depending on the nature of the asset or system being replicated, its usage may encompass:
Within the scope of LIST's vision, Digital Twins emerge as major tools for procuring predictive insights and facilitating informed decision-making. They serve as catalysts for driving economic prosperity, fostering sustainability, and enhancing societal welfare.
The mission of the Digital Twin Innovation Centre is to spearhead innovation and lead the vanguard of digital twin technologies. Our aim is to establish ourselves as a preeminent hub for research and innovation, driving the development of cutting-edge solutions, methodologies, and practical applications within the realm of digital twins. Through collaborative efforts spanning various disciplines, we are dedicated to pushing the boundaries of AI modeling, simulation, data analytics, and human-machine interaction. Our ultimate goal is to cultivate transformative digital twin ecosystems that catalyze industry-academia partnerships, facilitate knowledge exchange, and accelerate the widespread adoption of digital twin technologies across diverse sectors, from industrial-oriented to city or nation-wide use-cases.
At the Digital Twin Innovation Centre, we are committed to positioning LIST as a predominant Research and Technology Organization within the Digital Twin ecosystem, with a particular focus on:
To fulfill its mission, the Digital Twin Innovation Centre consistently undertakes the following actions:
The realization of the Digital Twin concept articulates upon several key enabling technologies, all of which form the core focus of LIST's research and development efforts. These encompass data collection and IoT, data modeling and harmonization, data spaces integration, data analytics, AI machine learning modeling, cloud and edge computing, simulation platforms integration, data visualization, AR/VR technologies, connectivity solutions such as 5G/6G, and robust cybersecurity measures.
At the vanguard of the digital twinning revolution, our projects seamlessly bridge research and development components with practical real-world applications. We welcome stakeholders, researchers, and industry partners to join forces with us, fostering collaborative efforts that propel the ongoing advancement of this transformative technology.
We support companies in different fields to enhance their processes with digital twins. We specifically accompany the companies in the local sector with digital tools that are adapted to their maturity level.
As a neutral player, LIST is fully independent when it comes to technology. It priorities open standards and interoperable solutions so that its partners can decide, with its support, which combination of technologies suits their needs best in terms of regulatory compliance, performance, scalability, ethics, and cost.
Companies with a substantial presence in Luxembourg can also be eligible for research, development, and innovation funding, with several instruments available to facilitate collaboration between industry and research players. This could be within the scope of eligible European calls for proposals, industrial fellowships, or local initiatives co-funded by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR) or the Ministry of Economy (LuxInnovation), among other funding instruments.