Abstract
Siemens Energy runs several service centres for power plants. The main task of a service centre is remote monitoring and diagnostics of many thousands appliances, such as gas and steam turbines, generators, and compressors installed in plants. Monitoring and diagnostics are performed by service engineers and are typically conducted in four steps: (i) engineers receive a notification about a potential or detected issue with an appliance, (ii) they gather data relevant to the case, (iii) analyse the data, and finally (iv) report about ways to address the issue to the appliance owner. Currently, Step (ii) of the process is the bottleneck consuming, as statistics shows [5], up to 80% of the overall time needed by the engineer to accomplish the task. The main reason for this time consumption is the indirect data access, i.e., in many cases the engineers have to access data via IT experts. Involvement of IT experts in the process slows it down dramatically due to various reasons such as their overload, miscommunication between IT experts and the engineers.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 4 |
Publication status | Published - 01.10.2015 |
Event | ISWC 2015 Posters and Demonstrations Track, ISWC-P and D 2015 - co-located with the 14th International Semantic Web Conference - Bethlehem, United States Duration: 11.10.2015 → 11.10.2015 Conference number: 117676 |
Conference
Conference | ISWC 2015 Posters and Demonstrations Track, ISWC-P and D 2015 - co-located with the 14th International Semantic Web Conference |
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Abbreviated title | ISWC 2015 |
Country/Territory | United States |
City | Bethlehem |
Period | 11.10.15 → 11.10.15 |