Innovations at Siemens
Innovations at Siemens
Innovations at Siemens
Innovation at Siemens
siemens.com
Contents
01
Introduction
Innovations that set standards
for the future
06
10
Electrification
Fueling the new age of power
20
Automation
Shaping the Fourth Industrial
Revolution
30
Digitalization
Shaping the digital enterprise
40
Open Innovation
Reinventing the way we invent
52
Contacts
Introduction
Innovations
that set
standards for
the future
SIEMENS.COM/INNOVATION
01
02
Introduction
1866
Conversion of mechanical energy
into electrical energy the Siemens
dynamo is steadily putting electricity
into peoples daily lives.
1816 1892
Founder of Siemens, visionary businessman, pioneer in electrical engineering
and an initiator of the modern economy.
1847 innovations
1866
Siemens
covering about 170 years
1847
In the pointer telegraph, Werner von Siemens
created a reliable system for transmitting messages
and also laid the foundation for the Siemens & Halske
Telegraph Construction Company and therefore for
the global company Siemens.
Introduction
03
2012
1959
In launching the Simatic controllers
on the market, Siemens laid the
foundation for a leading position
in automation technology, which
lasts until today.
1983
The Magnetom was the firstmagnetic
resonance imaging scanner from
Siemens toenter service in Germany.
1925
The Irish Free State awarded Siemens thecontract
for electrification of the entire country. Thecore
was the hydroelectric power plant on the river
Shannon with three 30 MVA generators.
Electrification
PAGE 10
2010
1975
Breakthrough for Siemens in high-voltage
direct-current (HVDC) transmission
firstused along the1,400 km route from
Mozambique to South Africa.
2014/15
Siemens presents its digitalization strategy.
One result is that all Siemens digital services
will run via Sinalytics (platform for industrial
data analytics) in the future.
Automation
PAGE 20
Digitalization
PAGE 30
04
Introduction
CKI Universities
In the Center ofKnowledgeInter
change (CKI) program Siemens
collaborates with world-renowned
universities on long-term research
projects on key technologies.
R&D intensity
Research and
development (R&D)
expenses
Principal Partner
Universities
Siemens maintains an intensive
strategic cooperation with top
universities in the area of research
and development.
5.9
16
4.5
bn
32,100
3,700
Inventions
Patents granted
56,200
7,650
Introduction
05
Worldwide
Australia
China
India
Israel
Japan
Mexico
Republic
ofKorea
Russia
Turkey
USA
Europe
Austria
Belgium
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
France
Germany
Hungary
Italy
Netherlands
Norway
Romania
Sweden
Switzerland
Slovakia
Spain
United Kingdom
06
A view to
the future
Interview with Joe Kaeser and Siegfried Russwurm
Joe Kaeser
Prof.Dr.Siegfried Russwurm
07
Of course. The Company has been living from good ideas that
earn us money for almost 170 years. We have stayed profitable because
we have reinvented ourselves several times. We cant afford to slacken
when it comes to our innovative power, and we wont! This is why we are
stepping up our investments in R&D to 4.8 billion euros in fiscal year
2016 an increase of 20 percent over the figure for 2014. A large portion
of this funding will flow into our core fields of electrification, automation
and digitalization.
JOE KAESER
SEE PAGE 40
SIEMENS.COM/DIGITALIZATION
08
SEE PAGE 10
SEE PAGE 20
SEE PAGE 42
09
10
Electrification
Fueling
thenew age
ofpower
11
12
Electrification
Autonomous
driving on
electricity super
highways
SIEMENS.COM/POF-ELECTRIFICATION
13
Heart of an HVDC
transmission system
These special modules make it
possible to transmit the power
generated by entire wind farms
from the north of Germany to
thesouth without interruption.
14
Electrification
the complex structure of our future energy landscape into a reliable, flexible
power supply system is closing. In other
words, the long term is very quickly becoming the short term.
Innovations are
their job
Michael Vieth, Dr. Gnter Ebner
and Dr. Christian Siegl (clockwise)
have revolutionized HVDCtechnology with their innovation.
Electrification
15
HVDC lines are overland electricity superhighways that span great distances. The
new Siemens technology that the three
brilliant engineers in Nuremberg and Erlangen worked on achieves this through a
full bridge, known in technical circles as
HVDC PLUS with full bridge topology. Unlike its half bridge counterpart, the full
bridge makes it possible to discover and
clear up faults more quickly and keep
them from spreading in web-like transmission systems. And it does so during live
operation, even in branching grid structures, while taking up very little space.
When lightning strikes
Full bridge technology offers crucial advantages, especially with overhead lines.
Because the power needs to keep flowing
even during rain, snow, and storms and
it needs to come back online quickly even
after a direct lightning strike. Siemens engineers came up with an idea for keeping
the direct current superhighways moving
even in this scenario. Or to stay with the
highway metaphor: to ensure that an accident on one section of road does not
lead to a multicar pile-up or even a traffic jam. If lightning strikes a line, the clever
new converters in Erlangen allow the system to attempt up to three restarts in just
450 milliseconds and keep faults local.
optimized, using as little material as possible. Together, the trio made it possible
Vieths modesty is also shared by his two for the mass of electrons moving from A
colleagues in Erlangen who gave the silver to B along the direct current superhighways to do something akin to autonoshoebox this capability. Christian Siegl
was responsible for the control technol- mous driving.
ogy in other words, adapting the software code. In the end, he says, it works Thinking one level further, from the techusing algorithms, as always. The algo- nical to the abstract, this means: Together,
rithms ensure that power and voltage are they are responsible for technical realizaregulated and kept within limits across the tion of a requirement brought to a comentire system. He sees no need to men- pany like Siemens as a result of political
tion that these algorithms can be rather targets, and for ensuring that it works and
tricky. Last but not least, Gnter Ebners is cost-effective. An important piece of
job was to ensure that the overall system the puzzle for the sustainable power
works. How many of these modules need supply of tomorrow.
to be interconnected? Which main com
ponents are needed? Which voltages can
SIEMENS.COM/POF
theoverall system accommodate, and
whathappens when there are faults? He
Unimpeded flow of
power in any weather
Unique selling point: if lightning
strikes the power line, a full bridge
system will bring about a restart
within 450 milliseconds.
16
Electrification
Tower of Nuremberg
Bundled in packages of six and with
thousands of them interconnected,
the modules are part of a sustainable
energy supply for the future.
Electrification
17
Electrification
In parallel to this, the companys researchers have developed technologies that support energy stability and resource conservation in tomorrows energy landscape.
That landscape will consist of millions of
small and larger decentralized generation
units. To ensure these cover demand reliably, electronics, power electronics and
information and communication technologies will be integrated more than ever, for
example through new converter technologies and ever more powerful software.
46bn.
590bn.
390bn.
+51.3%
+91.6%
Smart
homes
24bn.
Security
Power
Distribution
Service
Applications
Power
Transmission
2011
ICT1
2020
2011
2020
Energiewende 2.0
ar
ce
eo
ur
f re
so
newable energy
Sh
The more volatile power generation becomes as a result of renewables, the more
urgently we will need technologies in the
future that enable large volumes of electricity to be stored over a long period.
Siemens is focusing on chemical solutions
and also using green electricity to transform CO2 into valuable resources. Researchers use carbon dioxide and green electricity
in an electrolysis process to create valuable
raw materials, such as carbon monoxide,
ethylene and alcohols for industry.
<10%
20+%
40+%
60+%
80+%
Traditional
mix
System
integration
Market
integration
Regional
self-sustaining
systems
Decoupled
generation and
consumption
Predictable regional
area generation
(topological plants)
Interaction of all
energy carriers
Fossil
Nuclear
Renewables
Fossil
Renewables
Past
Today
apacity markets
C
etc.
Mid-term
Long-term
18
Electrification
Electrification
19
20
Automation
Shaping
the Fourth
Industrial
Revolution
21
22
Automation
Factory
of the Future
SIEMENS.COM/POF-AUTOMATION
23
Before we build a
new product, we
create and optimize
its digital twin.
Product development and
roduction planning are tightly
p
interlacedthanks to end-to-end
3Dvisualization.
24
Automation
Automating with
common sense
Robots support people.
Production planners in Erlangen are therefore constantly looking for the optimum
course for each product line. What should
a worker do? What should a machine do?
How can their interactions be optimized?
There is no economical off-the-shelf automation system for production on our
scale, says Kirchberger. As a result, we
have to systematically build up experience
and share it with other Siemens plants all
over the world.
Why flexible production is a must
On top of that, customer requirements are
changing faster than ever, making it increasingly important for production lines
to be flexible. Here in the production
halls, nothing is where it was just a few
years ago, Kirchberger points out. The
GWE is a classic example of the art of
Automation
Lifting 7 tons
a day
Employees were skeptical initially.
Even more robots? But nowalight
weight robot has relieved them
ofheavy loads they would not like
to do without it.
25
26
Automation
Ownership Culture
Automation
Automation
Manufacturings evolving
paradigm shift
In order to increase industrial value creation, leading companies are working at top speed
torealize the next stage of manufacturing with the aid of digital automation.Companies
areaiming to achieve advantages through networked, flexible manufacturing operations
thatdynamically organize themselves to create extremely customizable products.
Innovation
Manufacturing has a 77% share
of global research and development.
Exports
Manufacturing is responsible for 70%
of entire global trade.
77%
70%
17%
GDP
Manufacturing provides 17%
of global GDP.
MANUFACTURING
OTHER SECTORS
Source: Siemens
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
tomorrowbased
on the use ofcyber-
physical systems.
Source: Siemens
IMAGE
1908
Ford
T-Model
2015
Ford
F-150
There is an almost
infinite number of
variations possible.
17,500
Software
developers
TECHNOLOGY
SOCIETY
52%
of
CEOs
job
in manufacturing
creates
jobs
in other
sectors.
27
28
Automation
A safe connection
formachines
orwind turbines
Steffen Fries
Principal Engineer at Corporate
Technology, Munich, Germany
Innovative security solutions are needed
tomake Industrie 4.0 and smart grids work.
Theydo not arise in an ivory tower but
throughthe exchange of information with
colleagues. We shoot ideas back and
forthlike ping-pong balls to really put them
tothe test.
Automation
Rapid introduction
of innovations to the
marketplace
Ming Li
Director of Venture Technologies at TTB
(Technology to Business), Shanghai, China
Ming Li and her colleagues in Shanghai, Berkeley
and Munich monitor the world of start-ups.
Iftheir technologies are relevant to Siemens,
the TTB experts, together with Siemens' business
units, quickly introduce them to the marketplace.
29
30
Digitalization
Shaping
the digital
enterprise
31
32
Digitalization
T
hinking beyond
the next bend
inthe road
SIEMENS.COM/POF-DIGITALIZATION
33
34
Digitalization
Tel Aviv
Digitalization
One car: as a constantly-evolving prototype, a race car that cannot be left in the
dust by competition from smaller, more
agile start-ups. We have to think beyond
the next bend in the road, says Segall.
Segall, the mother of four children, is the
ideal person for handling the task of helping give a large business the agility of a
start-up. More than twenty years ago,
while still a computer science student, she
began working with Tecnomatix, which at
the time was a small start-up in Tel Aviv.
Today, the technology that the company
brought to Siemens through an acquisition has b
ecome a comprehensive product portfolio of digital manufacturing solutions and an essential facet of Siemens
overall PLM offerings. The hackathons, five
of which have already been held worldwide, are only one of the ways in which
she has turbocharged the creativity of her
team. But they are the methods that deliver the most results. Atthe same time,
they reflect the two m
axims that Segall
holds upto her staff: Everything is possible in software. And itsalways fun to
learn newthings.
Taking a page from the start-up
scene, hackathons are turbo
charging innovation.
During the hackathons, the software regularly learns something new. The biggest
event to date, which was held in Pune,
India with the participation of 600 local
Siemens employees, resulted in an application that can be used to control PLM 3D
software with voice recognition. You just
tell the product on the screen to turn 90
degrees and it turns 90 degrees, explains
Segall, who still finds this exciting today.
The application has not yet been turned
into a product. But when that time comes,
it will have met Segalls stated goal: to
have produced a new, cool tool that
brings value to the customer or possibly
even solves a problem the user was not
aware of.
SIEMENS.COM/POF
Hackathons
Developing something
cool for the customer
Hackathons involving hundreds
ofparticipants can turbocharge the
innovation process.
35
36
Digitalization
Software development
Everything is possible
with software
During the hackathon, Siemens
programmers had 36 hours to write
a software program for their idea.
Digitalization
37
Digitalization
Data is not valuable in itself. Only in context is it useful and able to help us reshape
the world. What counts is not big data
butsmart data. One example is Sinalytics,
Siemens company-wide platform for industrial data analytics, which we are already using to monitor and check some
300,000 systems all over the world systems such as gas turbines, traffic control
centers in more than 200 cities and entire
skyscrapers using advanced IT measures
to ensure data security.
Digitalization is one of Siemens specialties. Power plant technology, electrification and automation through self-learning
programs, self-diagnostics and state-based
maintenance the digital transformation
covers all of these businesses.
Whats more, we have given substance to
the concept of the Internet of Things for
Siemens. In our electrification and automation domains the real world we
have invaluable expertise that we link to
the virtual world of digitalization. In our
approach, which we call the Web of Systems, we use web technologies to turn
devices and machines into the starting
point for digitally-networked industries.
Specifically, this means that such technologies do not send unfiltered data to
cloudapplications, but that they interact
with each other and understand each
other b
ecause the transmitted data includes itsmeaning. We connect our
knowledge from the devices and link it
toour expertise from all other sectors.
Whether itsenergy suppliers, traffic control centers, buildings, manufacturing or
FUTURE OF MANUFACTURING
30%
50%
INTELLIGENT INFRASTRUCTURE
NETWORKED ENERGY
40%
90%
HEALTHCARE IT
40%
Intelligent buildingtech
nologies reduce energy costs
byup to 40%.
73%
20%
77%
Source: Siemens
38
Digitalization
Digital modeling
made easy
Douglas King and
Howard Mattson
Software experts at Digital Factory,
Cambridge, United Kingdom
With synchronous technology, on-screenmodeling has become easier and faster. Tobereally
innovative, Mattson and King needtheirfreedom: Innovative ideas donotonly arise in
theoffice but also in thepark or in the pub.
Digitalization
39
40
Reinventing
the way
weinvent
41
42
Dreamit,
make it,
shareit
SIEMENS.COM/POF-INNOVATIONS
The frames of two half-ready drones are Here, on the left, are two of our 3D printlying in the corner and one of the 3D ers for building plastic parts. Back there, in
printers is humming away, building a the corner, you can see a printer for larger
structure from a thin spray of blue plastic. parts made of gypsum. We also have a
At the workbench, a young Siemens re- computer numerically-controlled mill and
searcher is assembling a robotic arm from a laser cutter. The only thing thats missing
the components. Engraved by a laser cut- is a couch to relax on, says Ryashentseva
ter in a garish green sheet of acrylic glass, as she adjusts a solderingiron.
the motto of this high tech lab for tinkerers hangs resplendently at the entrance: The whole environment has the feel of the
Dream it. Make it. Share it.
proverbial garage in Silicon Valley a place
where ideas can be tried out without comDream it. Make it. Share it. These words pulsion, without instructions, and somedescribe the goal of the Maker Space, times without a specific goal. But often
which Siemens Corporate Technology (CT) with amazing success. That is what freehas set up at its research site in Munich. All dom of research looks like at a largegroup.
of the companys employees can use this
space with its high tech tools not just the Innovation cycles have become much
roughly 32,100 researchers and develop- shorter, says Falk Wottawah, Head of
ers. And it does not matter whether they Visioning and Scouting at Siemens Cor
are tackling a tricky task for a Siemens porate Technology. Thats why we are
project or want to print plastic toys for breaking up conventional research and
development processes at many points.
their children.
We are also mixing teams far more. To get
The main thing is that people use the a good result fast, you need more than a
latest technologies and have fun, says single perspective.
Oxana Ryashentseva, a CT employee.
Another way to open the door to innovations lies in idea contests. Siemens held its
inaugural Quickstarter contest in 2015.
This was not about getting ideas from outside but from employees of Siemens Corporate Technology. The thinking behind
the contest was to allow everything, including ideas for which the market seems
too small at present or which may never
be realized. In all, 111 suggestions were
submitted within six weeks. One of them
was the idea to have drones fly up close to
wind turbines to inspect the huge rotor
blades for damage.
A key technology
forthe Energiewende
megawatt
43
44
Working together
9
leading universities worldwide
as strategical partners
You can try to do everythingyour
selfbut you will never be able to
doeverything perfectly. This is why
Siemens conducts research and
development together with many
partners, institutes, leadinguniver
sities and start-ups. Our research
projects mostly have a time horizon
ofjust three to ten years whereas
universities tend to look further into
the future in the course of their
basicresearch, says Natascha Eckert,
Headof University Relations at
Siemens. Siemens strategic partners
include the University of California
atBerkeley and Georgia Tech (both
inthe U.S.), Tsinghua University
(China), the Technical University
ofBerlin, the Technical University
ofMunich, RWTH Aachen University,
Friedrich-Alexander University of
Erlangen-Nuremberg (all in Germany),
the Technical University of Denmark
and the Technical University of Graz
(Austria). It is not only Siemens
thatprofits from these relationships.
Academic institutions are exposed
topractical applications of their
technologies. Professors can develop
practical subjects for their students
theses. And doctoral candidates can
establish contact with potential
employers. The recruitment of highly
qualified young people is animportant
goal of our research partnerships,
Eckert points out.
45
Regardless of the challenge, the knowledge resources that Siemens can focus on
solving it are formidable. If particularly
difficult questions arise, employees can
use the companys TechnoWeb social network to request support from over 43,000
in-house experts. Urgent requests are particularly popular.
Who can install a radio antenna on a service ship? Where can I get bearings that
can withstand temperatures of minus 40
degrees Celsius? The trickier the question,
the better! It takes just half an hour on
average to get the first answer on TechnoWeb somewhere in the world there is
always a Siemens employee awake to help
with an urgent problem.
46
1990
1850
Individual inventors
1905
Corporate researchers
The innovator as employee
Crowdsourcing of ideas
For years, Siemens has been looking for
exciting ideas on public crowdsourcing
platforms and in internal idea contests.
One example is Quickstarter, where
researchers and developers at Corporate
Technology distribute money to projects
for which their colleagues came up
with the ideas. Adequately financed
ideas are implemented without any
further decision by management. In
2015, 111 suggestions were submitted
within six weeks.
Founding start-ups
Investments in start-ups
The Siemens Venture Capital (SVC) unit
identifies young companies and finances
them during their start-up phase. Siemens
has been investing in innovative start-up
companies for 20 years. With more than
800 million euros invested in over 180
start-ups to date, SVC was one of the top
10corporate venture capitalists in 2014.
47
48
We mostly start with a working hypothesis. We trawl the web on the basis of our
search algorithms and, when we find
something, we approach our research
teams as well as the appropriate Business
Units. Together, we then clarify whether
the trend has business potential for
Siemens, Blumoser explains, adding that
if you recognize and pick up trends at an
early stage, you can turn them into opportunities. But if one waits too long, they
can become a problem. That is one of the
basic rules of disruptive innovation.
Start-ups and innovations
that fit Siemens
Start-ups are important for Siemens. For us,
they are a look into the future. Thats why
we work closely with start-ups throughout
the world via our Siemens Technology to
Business Centers, says Rudolf Freytag, CEO
of Siemens Innovative Ventures. And via
Siemens Novel Businesses, we establish
start-ups outside the Group and can thus
test business models that might be relevant for Siemens in the future.
PAGE 43 CATERVA
AND MAGAZINO, RIGHT
10
drives
Claudia-Camilla Malcher,
Siemens Novel Businesses, Munich,
Germany
49
50
started to go this route by acquiring startups that might not involve their core business and letting them operate largely on
their own. Siemens, for example, does
this very well with its Technology to Business (TTB) centers in Shanghai, Munich,
Berkeley or soon in Tel Aviv. Whenever
new technologies or new trends emerge
whose development holds great potential,
the TTBs scouts are on the lookout for
start-up companies that may be of interest
to Siemens. There has to be room in established companies for this kind of true
open innovation.
When it comes to innovation
in the digital age everyone thinks
of Silicon Valley. Many have tried
to copy it. Why has no place been
so successful as the original?
JEROME S. ENGEL Silicon Valley is not the
only innovation cluster, although its a very
successful one. There are also innovation
clusters in Israel, Germany, Taiwan, and
other places. They all have similar characteristics. And that goes beyond just a certain set of components and players, such
as start-up founders, venture capitalists,
and established companies. These ecosystems are characterized above all by a
certain behavior: highly mobile resources,
money, people, and knowledge. Think,
for example, of Mark Andreessen, who
founded the web browser company Netscape and is now a venture capitalist. The
people involved in Silicon Valley are constantly striving to create and drive forward
innovations that have the potential to
change the world and they are willing to
experiment and also fail. And ultimately,
theyre pursuing goals that they cant
achieve alone but only collectively. Entrepreneurship and innovation are the order
of the day here, and it can pay off in a big
way for many not just those at the top.
The Twitter IPO created about 1,600 millionaires at one stroke; the Facebook IPO
over 1,000. Add to that the ripple effect as
that wealth is consumed and you can see
that it can have a massive effect in terms
of energizing and motivating an entire
community.
Jerome S. Engel
Venture capitalist, company founder,
and university professor Jerome S.
Engel is an innovation expert and
senior fellow at the University of
California at Berkeley, where he established the Lester Center for Entrepreneurship in 1991. He founded startups
himself and now heads a venture
capital fund together with a partner.
In recent years, Jerome S. Engel
has mainly been involved in innovation clusters. He is convinced that
large companies and startups can help
each other.
51
52
Imprint
Additional information
For more on Siemens innovative power, visit:
SIEMENS.COM/INNOVATION
Innovation
at Siemens
siemens.com/innovation
Pictures of
the Future
siemens.com/pof
siemens.com/innovation