Materials Map

Discover the materials research landscape. Find experts, partners, networks.

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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Materials Map under construction

The Materials Map is still under development. In its current state, it is only based on one single data source and, thus, incomplete and contains duplicates. We are working on incorporating new open data sources like ORCID to improve the quality and the timeliness of our data. We will update Materials Map as soon as possible and kindly ask for your patience.

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University of Derby

in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

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Publications (1/1 displayed)

  • 2021Managing Intellectual Property Issues with Digital Twinscitations

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Wood, Paul
1 / 40 shared
Clementson, Jenny
1 / 2 shared
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2021

Co-Authors (by relevance)

  • Wood, Paul
  • Clementson, Jenny
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document

Managing Intellectual Property Issues with Digital Twins

  • Wood, Paul
  • Windmill, Christopher
  • Clementson, Jenny
Abstract

The application of Digital Twins is increasing across industry sectors from transport, energy, builtenvironment, medical and health to manufacturing. The potential benefits of Digital Twins for understanding, anticipating and influencing behaviours of real systems are underpinned by enabling technologies such as the Industrial Internet of Things and large scale data processing tools.At sector and national level, the benefits of linking Digital Twins for greater end‐user and societal benefit are further driving interest and leading to collaborations which should tackle technical, and non‐technical barriers and drive enabling policy changes.Such collaborations are drawing attention to non‐technical challenges that need to be overcome to embrace the potential benefits of the change and how they are inextricably linked to technical architecture choices and managed stakeholder relationships. Issues include, life‐cycle responsibilities for the Digital Twin, clarity of intellectual Property rights and risks, trust, privacy and ethics and the challenges of working with legacy assets, where any rights and contractual arrangements had not previously anticipated collaborative Digital Twins.In this paper, the specific challenges with Intellectual Property and Digital Twins is explored. In particular, illustrating the challenges through a generic Digital Twin and Rail Sector example, comparing with experience emerging in Digital Manufacture and outlining a potential approach to manage Intellectual Property risk using model based systems assurance methodologies, consistent with existing assuranceframeworks. The paper concludes with further work to develop and trial specific guidance.

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • drawing