Technology
Plant & Machinery: IR-CFB boiler technology
Published
4 years agoon
By
admin
The IR-CFB boiler-based captive power plant helps a cement manufacturer improve his profit lines while remaining environmentally friendly, says Vivek Taneja.
When business organisations consider moving to decisions that are sustainable – like saving electricity, recycling water or using renewable energy – the big investments required upfront would certainly impact the balance sheet here and now. However, if we were to think of a longer time-frame, all these decisions would make a lot of sense when we consider the concept of lifecycle cost – a higher capital cost, but with far lower operating costs such that it pays for itself over the life of the product. Long-term sustainability also goes hand- in- hand with the kind of decisions we make, processes we follow, policies we adopt and the values we propagate. Companies passionate about the cause of sustainable development will constantly come up with innovative solutions which, over time, will definitely add to the bottomline. If we were to redefine the success of an organisation as achieving the triple bottomline – economic, environmental and social – it would be a sustainable model and also benefit the bottomlines of the company in the long run.
In today’s competitive scenario, it is imperative for any cement manufacturer to maintain his growth and keep all shareholders happy, but at the same time, improve his profitability by improving the plant’s specific energy consumption, while remaining committed to the environment by reducing his carbon footprint. An Internal Recirculation – Circulating Fluidised Bed (IR-CFB) boiler-based captive power plant distinctively helps a cement manufacturer meet these objectives and improve his competitive positioning.
An IR-CFB is a compact boiler, with various unique features to ensure minimum maintenance, thus offering the maximum available uptime for the power plant. The design incorporates a two- stage separation system for better bed inventory control. The benefits of this patented technology include a superior combustion efficiency, high operational thermal efficiency, low emissions, low maintenance, low pressure drop, and a high turndown, resulting in an improved overall plant performance. The two-stage system includes a primary U-beam impact separator and a secondary multi-cyclone dust collector (MDC), which work together to provide a combined particle collection efficiency in excess of 99.8 per cent. The U-beams, a staggered array of stainless steel channels at the furnace exit plane, capture nearly all the solids suspended in the flue gas leaving the furnace, and internally re-circulate these solids to the lower furnace. The ceramic MDC, with small diameter 250 mm cyclones, captures the solids in the second pass and returns this material to the lower furnace in a controlled manner. The ability to regulate the secondary recycle system provides the operator with an unprecedented furnace temperature control, resulting in improved boiler performance and relatively faster load response.
Compact and simplified This two-stage particle separation system results in a compact, simplified boiler arrangement. The entire U-beam particle separator is located at the furnace exit. Compared with hot cyclone-type CFBC designs, the IR-CFBC has significantly lower furnace exit gas velocity and requires significantly less building volume. By relying on internal recirculation, the IR-CFBC design eliminates J-valves, loop seals, high-pressure blowers, and soot blowers, which are required with other CFBC designs. One goal of CFBC boiler manufacturers has been to eliminate thick, un-cooled refractory and hot expansion joints from their designs to reduce the expense and lost time associated with refractory maintenance. This goal was achieved with the development of the IR-CFBC boiler. The furnace, U-beam separator, and super-heater enclosures are constructed entirely of top-supported, gas-tight, all-welded membrane tube walls, which do not require hot expansion joints. The small amount of refractory that is used in the IR-CFBC is applied to selected areas of the water-cooled enclosure surface in a thin layer which is only 16 mm thick in the lower furnace and slightly thicker over the tube face elsewhere in the furnace. As a result, IR-CFBC requires only 10 to 25 per cent of the total refractory found in a hot cyclone CFBC design and less than 50 per cent of the refractory used in a water-cooled or steam-cooled cyclone CFBC unit. This construction has significantly reduced the need for refractory maintenance in operating CFBC units.
The patented reduced diameter zone (RDZ) tube section is another feature designed to reduce maintenance. The RDZ consists of a reduced diameter tube section mating to a specially-shaped ceramic tile. The reduced diameter tube section on each tube slopes away from the solids falling down the wall. This eliminates the solids material from building up and eroding the furnace tubes where the lower furnace refractory ends.
Erosion is a major cause of maintenance problems in CFBC boilers due to the high solids loading in the flue gas. The severity of this erosion is exponentially related to the velocity of the flue gas through the system. On hot cyclone CFBCs, the particle separator depends upon an extremely high flue gas velocity to provide the energy needed to efficiently disengage the particles from the flue gas. By comparison, the U-beam particle separator is designed to operate efficiently with much lower flue gas velocity at full-load operating conditions. The particle capture efficiency actually increases as the flue gas velocity through the U-beam separator decreases. By operating at such a low gas velocity, the potential for erosion in the IR-CFBC is significantly reduced. Proper material selection and low flue gas velocities allow reducing the erosion of U-beam separators, thus reducing the maintenance down time throughout years of operation at design load conditions.
Another advantage of IR-CFBC technology is that it allows the owner to specify a wide variety of fuels to optimise the profitability of the facility. Different type of fuels that can be successfully fired into an IR-CFB boiler include Indian or imported coal, lignite, petroleum coke (petcoke), washery rejects, mill rejects, agro-waste, biomass, char, etc. Other fuels such as fly ash and sludge are also candidates, depending on their percentage of heat input, moisture content and emission requirements. The IR-CFB boiler also can be designed to burn several of these specified fuels in the same unit. This provides an additional flexibility needed to respond to changes in the fuel markets.
Environmentally friendly
The design also ensures best-in-class compliance with environmental norms. The IR-CFBC boiler can control SO2 emissions by injecting limestone into the lower furnace. Relatively low NOx emissions are inherent in the IR-CFBC due to low and uniform furnace temperatures and staged combustion. NOx emissions can be further reduced by using a selective non-catalytic reduction (SNCR) system. In addition, the IR-CFBC’s patented secondary particle recycle system provides increased control, not found in other CFBC technologies, to maintain an optimum uniform furnace temperature which is essential for low SO2 and NOx emissions and for better limestone utilization.
Thus, for energy intensive sector like cement, an Internal Recirculation – Circulating Fluidised Bed (IR-CFB) boiler- based captive power plant guarantees to the cement manufacturer an improvement of his profitline as well as a reduced carbon footprint. For these organisations not in the power business, the retention of highly experienced and dedicated team of resources to set up and operate captive power plants is a challenge not related to his core business, thus exposing the business to unwanted risks. These include risks related to cost and time overruns, integration hurdles between various packages, project management to take care of unforeseen risks, ensuring quality to address issues related to reliability and availability of power from the power plant. This is where the cement industry can benefit from the services of an experienced EPCOM (Engineer-Procure-Construct-Operate- Maintain) contractor who will guarantee performance and the overall completion schedule within fixed costs. The contractor will also guarantee reliable power at the least lifecycle cost because the entire risk of operating and maintaining the power project is also outsourced to this experienced service provider.
However, it is very important that the project developer must look for the following abilities while finalising an EPC contractor:
- Is the EPC company willing to take single- point responsibility for executing the project? This will ensure that the entire set of risks associated with the power project is effectively transferred to the EPC contractor, with matching securities, ensuring peace of mind for the developer.
- Does the EPC company have a successful track record of executing similar types of challenging projects? This is necessary to ensure that the contractor can incorporate its learning from executing similar projects and deliver optimised solutions that would ensure minimum lifetime costs for the power project.
- Does the EPC company have the financial strength to wade through the entire lifecycle of project execution?
- Is the contractor aware of the local legal issues that must be adhered to, to ensure the smooth execution of the project?
- Is the contractor a manufacturer of the key equipment that would be used in the power project? This will ensure that the contractor has a greater control over the project schedule.
- Does the contractor provide after sales service? If the contractor also offers Operation and Maintenance (O&M) services after setting up the power plant, it would ensure minimum investment for the developer into resources for managing the power plant, thus enabling him to maximise his profits.
An EPC company that satisfies these criterions will ensure that all the risks associated with the project are identified up-front and are mitigated at the earliest to ensure on- time implementation of the project, thus providing a win – win situation for both the developer as well as the solution provider.
Vivek Taneja, Head Business Development-Power Division, Thermax Email – vtaneja@thermaxindia.com
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Concrete
Redefining Efficiency with Digitalisation
Published
2 weeks agoon
February 20, 2026By
admin
Professor Procyon Mukherjee discusses how as the cement industry accelerates its shift towards digitalisation, data-driven technologies are becoming the mainstay of sustainability and control across the value chain.
The cement industry, long perceived as traditional and resistant to change, is undergoing a profound transformation driven by digital technologies. As global infrastructure demand grows alongside increasing pressure to decarbonise and improve productivity, cement manufacturers are adopting data-centric tools to enhance performance across the value chain. Nowhere is this shift more impactful than in grinding, which is the energy-intensive final stage of cement production, and in the materials that make grinding more efficient: grinding media and grinding aids.
The imperative for digitalisation
Cement production accounts for roughly 7 per cent to 8 per cent of global CO2 emissions, largely due to the energy intensity of clinker production and grinding processes. Digital solutions, such as AI-driven process controls and digital twins, are helping plants improve stability, cut fuel use and reduce emissions while maintaining consistent product quality. In one deployment alongside ABB’s process controls at a Heidelberg plant in Czechia, AI tools cut fuel use by 4 per cent and emissions by 2 per cent, while also improving operational stability.
Digitalisation in cement manufacturing encompasses a suite of technologies, broadly termed as Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT), AI and machine learning, predictive analytics, cloud-based platforms, advanced process control and digital twins, each playing a role in optimising various stages of production from quarrying to despatch.
Grinding: The crucible of efficiency and cost
Of all the stages in cement production, grinding is among the most energy-intensive, historically consuming large amounts of electricity and representing a significant portion of plant operating costs. As a result, optimising grinding operations has become central to digital transformation strategies.
Modern digital systems are transforming grinding mills from mechanical workhorses into intelligent, interconnected assets. Sensors throughout the mill measure parameters such as mill load, vibration, mill speed, particle size distribution, and power consumption. This real-time data, fed into machine learning and advanced process control (APC) systems, can dynamically adjust operating conditions to maintain optimal throughput and energy usage.
For example, advanced grinding systems now predict inefficient conditions, such as impending mill overload, by continuously analysing acoustic and vibration signatures. The system can then proactively adjust clinker feed rates and grinding media distribution to sustain optimal conditions, reducing energy consumption and improving consistency.
Digital twins: Seeing grinding in the virtual world
One of the most transformative digital tools applied in cement grinding is the digital twin, which a real-time virtual replica of physical equipment and processes. By integrating sensor data and
process models, digital twins enable engineers to simulate process variations and run ‘what-if’
scenarios without disrupting actual production. These simulations support decisions on variables such as grinding media charge, mill speed and classifier settings, allowing optimisation of energy use and product fineness.
Digital twins have been used to optimise kilns and grinding circuits in plants worldwide, reducing unplanned downtime and allowing predictive maintenance to extend the life of expensive grinding assets.
Grinding media and grinding aids in a digital era
While digital technologies improve control and prediction, materials science innovations in grinding media and grinding aids have become equally crucial for achieving performance gains.
Grinding media, which comprise the balls or cylinders inside mills, directly influence the efficiency of clinker comminution. Traditionally composed of high-chrome cast iron or forged steel, grinding media account for nearly a quarter of global grinding media consumption by application, with efficiency improvements translating directly to lower energy intensity.
Recent advancements include ceramic and hybrid media that combine hardness and toughness to reduce wear and energy losses. For example, manufacturers such as Sanxin New Materials in China and Tosoh Corporation in Japan have developed sub-nano and zirconia media with exceptional wear resistance. Other innovations include smart media embedded with sensors to monitor wear, temperature, and impact forces in real time, enabling predictive maintenance and optimal media replacement scheduling. These digitally-enabled media solutions can increase grinding efficiency by as much as 15 per cent.
Complementing grinding media are grinding aids, which are chemical additives that improve mill throughput and reduce energy consumption by altering the surface properties of particles, trapping air, and preventing re-agglomeration. Technology leaders like SIKA AG and GCP Applied Technologies have invested in tailored grinding aids compatible with AI-driven dosing platforms that automatically adjust additive concentrations based on real-time mill conditions. Trials in South America reported throughput improvements nearing 19 per cent when integrating such digital assistive dosing with process control systems.
The integration of grinding media data and digital dosing of grinding aids moves the mill closer to a self-optimising system, where AI not only predicts media wear or energy losses but prescribes optimal interventions through automated dosing and operational adjustments.
Global case studies in digital adoption
Several cement companies around the world exemplify digital transformation in practice.
Heidelberg Materials has deployed digital twin technologies across global plants, achieving up to 15 per cent increases in production efficiency and 20 per cent reductions in energy consumption by leveraging real-time analytics and predictive algorithms.
Holcim’s Siggenthal plant in Switzerland piloted AI controllers that autonomously adjusted kiln operations, boosting throughput while reducing specific energy consumption and emissions.
Cemex, through its AI and predictive maintenance initiatives, improved kiln availability and reduced maintenance costs by predicting failures before they occurred. Global efforts also include AI process optimisation initiatives to reduce energy consumption and environmental impact.
Challenges and the road ahead
Despite these advances, digitalisation in cement grinding faces challenges. Legacy equipment may lack sensor readiness, requiring retrofits and edge-cloud connectivity upgrades. Data governance and integration across plants and systems remains a barrier for many mid-tier producers. Yet, digital transformation statistics show momentum: more than half of cement companies have implemented IoT sensors for equipment monitoring, and digital twin adoption is growing rapidly as part of broader Industry 4.0 strategies.
Furthermore, as digital systems mature, they increasingly support sustainability goals: reduced energy use, optimised media consumption and lower greenhouse gas emissions. By embedding intelligence into grinding circuits and material inputs like grinding aids, cement manufacturers can strike a balance between efficiency and environmental stewardship.
Conclusion
Digitalisation is not merely an add-on to cement manufacturing. It is reshaping the competitive and sustainability landscape of an industry often perceived as inertia-bound. With grinding representing a nexus of energy intensity and cost, digital technologies from sensor networks and predictive analytics to digital twins offer new levers of control. When paired with innovations in grinding media and grinding aids, particularly those with embedded digital capabilities, plants can achieve unprecedented gains in efficiency, predictability and performance.
For global cement producers aiming to reduce costs and carbon footprints simultaneously, the future belongs to those who harness digital intelligence not just to monitor operations, but to optimise and evolve them continuously.
About the author:
Professor Procyon Mukherjee, ex-CPO Lafarge-Holcim India, ex-President Hindalco, ex-VP Supply Chain Novelis Europe, has been an industry leader in logistics, procurement, operations and supply chain management. His career spans 38 years starting from Philips, Alcan Inc (Indian Aluminum Company), Hindalco, Novelis and Holcim. He authored the book, ‘The Search for Value in Supply Chains’. He serves now as Visiting Professor in SP Jain Global, SIOM and as the Adjunct Professor at SBUP. He advises leading Global Firms including Consulting firms on SCM and Industrial Leadership and is a subject matter expert in aluminum and cement. An Alumnus of IIM Calcutta and Jadavpur University, he has completed the LH Senior Leadership Programme at IVEY Academy at Western University, Canada.
Concrete
Digital Pathways for Sustainable Manufacturing
Published
2 weeks agoon
February 20, 2026By
admin
Dr Y Chandri Naidu, Chief Technology Officer, Nextcem Consulting highlights how digital technologies are enabling Indian cement plants to improve efficiency, reduce emissions, and transition toward sustainable, low-carbon manufacturing.
Cement manufacturing is inherently resource- and energy-intensive due to high-temperature clinkerisation and extensive material handling and grinding operations. In India, where cement demand continues to grow in line with infrastructure development, producers must balance capacity expansion with sustainability commitments. Energy costs constitute a major share of operating expenditure, while process-related carbon dioxide emissions from limestone calcination remain unavoidable.
Traditional optimisation approaches, which are largely dependent on operator experience, static control logic and offline laboratory analysis, have reached their practical limits. This is especially evident when higher levels of alternative fuel and raw materials (AFR) are introduced or when raw material variability increases.
Digital technologies provide a systematic pathway to manage this complexity by enabling
real-time monitoring, predictive optimisation and integrated decision-making across cement manufacturing operations.
Digital cement manufacturing is enabled through a layered architecture integrating operational technology (OT) and information technology (IT). At the base are plant instrumentation, analysers, and automation systems, which generate continuous process data. This data is contextualised and analysed using advanced analytics and AI platforms, enabling predictive and prescriptive insights for operators and management.
Digital optimisation of energy efficiency
- Thermal energy optimisation
The kiln and calciner system accounts for approximately 60 per cent to 65 per cent of total energy consumption in an integrated cement plant. Digital optimisation focuses on reducing specific thermal energy consumption (STEC) while maintaining clinker quality and operational stability.
Advanced Process Control (APC) stabilises critical parameters such as burning zone temperature, oxygen concentration, kiln feed rate and calciner residence time. By minimising process variability, APC reduces the need for conservative over-firing. Artificial intelligence further enhances optimisation by learning nonlinear relationships between raw mix chemistry, AFR characteristics, flame dynamics and heat consumption.
Digital twins of kiln systems allow engineers to simulate operational scenarios such as increased AFR substitution, altered burner momentum or changes in raw mix burnability without operational risk. Indian cement plants adopting these solutions typically report STEC reductions in the range of 2 per cent to 5 per cent. - Electrical energy optimisation
Electrical energy consumption in cement plants is dominated by grinding systems, fans and material transport equipment. Machine learning–based optimisation continuously adjusts mill parameters such as separator speed, grinding pressure and feed rate to minimise specific power consumption while maintaining product fineness.
Predictive maintenance analytics identify inefficiencies caused by wear, fouling or imbalance in fans and motors. Plants implementing plant-wide electrical energy optimisation typically achieve
3 per cent to 7 per cent reduction in specific power consumption, contributing to both cost savings and indirect CO2 reduction.
Digital enablement of AFR
AFR challenges in the Indian context: Indian cement plants increasingly utilise biomass, refuse-derived fuel (RDF), plastic waste and industrial by-products. However, variability in calorific value, moisture, particle size, chlorine and sulphur content introduces combustion instability, build-up formation and emission risks.
Digital AFR management: Digital platforms integrate real-time AFR quality data from online analysers with historical kiln performance data. Machine learning models predict combustion behaviour, flame stability and emission trends for different AFR combinations. Based on these predictions, fuel feed distribution, primary and secondary air ratios, and burner momentum are dynamically adjusted to ensure stable kiln operation. Digitally enabled AFR management in cement plants will result in increased thermal substitution rates by 5-15 percentage points, reduced fossil fuel dependency, and improved kiln stability.
Digital resource and raw material optimisation
Raw mix control: Raw material variability directly affects kiln operation and clinker quality. AI-driven raw mix optimisation systems continuously adjust feed proportions to maintain target chemical parameters such as Lime Saturation Factor (LSF), Silica Modulus (SM), and Alumina Modulus (AM). This reduces corrective material usage and improves kiln thermal efficiency.
Clinker factor reduction: Reducing clinker factor through supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) such as fly ash, slag and calcined clay is a key decarbonisation lever. Digital models simulate blended cement performance, enabling optimisation of SCM proportions while maintaining strength and durability requirements.
Challenges and strategies for digital adoption
Key challenges in Indian cement plants include data quality limitations due to legacy instrumentation, resistance to algorithm-based decision-making, integration complexity across multiple OEM systems, and site-specific variability in raw materials and fuels.
Successful digital transformation requires strengthening the data foundation, prioritising high-impact use cases such as kiln APC and energy optimisation, adopting a human-in-the-loop approach, and deploying modular, scalable digital platforms with cybersecurity by design.
Future Outlook
Future digital cement plants will evolve toward autonomous optimisation, real-time carbon intensity tracking, and integration with emerging decarbonisation technologies such as carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS). Digital platforms will also support ESG reporting and regulatory compliance.
Digital pathways offer a practical and scalable solution for sustainable cement manufacturing in India. By optimising energy consumption, enabling higher AFR substitution and improving resource efficiency, digital technologies deliver measurable environmental and economic benefits. With appropriate data infrastructure, organisational alignment and phased implementation, digital transformation will remain central to the Indian cement industry’s low-carbon transition.
About the author:
Dr Y Chandri Naidu is a cement industry professional with 30+ years of experience in process optimisation, quality control and quality assistance, energy conservation and sustainable manufacturing, across leading organisations including NCB, Ramco, Prism, Ultratech, HIL, NCL and Vedanta. He is known for guiding teams, developing innovative plant solutions and promoting environmentally responsible cement production. He is also passionate about mentoring professionals and advancing durable, resource efficient technologies for future of construction materials.

Concrete
Turning Downtime into Actionable Intelligence
Published
2 weeks agoon
February 19, 2026By
admin
Stoppage Insights instantly identifies root causes and maps their full operational impact.
In cement, mining and minerals processing operations, every unplanned stoppage equals lost production and reduced profitability. Yet identifying what caused a stoppage remains frustratingly complex. A single motor failure can trigger cascading interlocks and alarm floods, burying the root cause under layers of secondary events. Operators and maintenance teams waste valuable time tracing event chains when they should be solving problems. Until now.
Our latest innovation to our ECS Process Control Solution(1) eliminates this complexity. Stoppage Insights, available with the combined updates to our ECS/ControlCenter™ (ECS) software and ACESYS programming library, transforms stoppage events into clear, actionable intelligence. The system automatically identifies the root cause of every stoppage – whether triggered by alarms, interlocks, or operator actions – and maps all affected equipment. Operators can click any stopped motor’s faceplate to view what caused the shutdown instantly. The Stoppage UI provides a complete record of all stoppages with drill-down capabilities, replacing manual investigation with immediate answers.
Understanding root cause in Stoppage Insights
In Stoppage Insights, ‘root cause’ refers to the first alarm, interlock, or operator action detected by the control system. While this may not reveal the underlying mechanical, electrical or process failure that a maintenance team may later discover, it provides an actionable starting point for rapid troubleshooting and response. And this is where Stoppage Insights steps ahead of traditional first-out alarm systems (ISA 18.2). In this older type of system, the first alarm is identified in a group. This is useful, but limited, as it doesn’t show the complete cascade of events, distinguish between operator-initiated and alarm-triggered stoppages, or map downstream impacts. In contrast, Stoppage Insights provides complete transparency:
- Comprehensive capture: Records both regular operator stops and alarm-triggered shutdowns.
- Complete impact visibility: Maps all affected equipment automatically.
- Contextual clarity: Eliminates manual tracing through alarm floods, saving critical response time.
David Campain, Global Product Manager for Process Control Systems, says, “Stoppage Insights takes fault analysis to the next level. Operators and maintenance engineers no longer need to trace complex event chains. They see the root cause clearly and can respond quickly.”
Driving results
1.Driving results for operations teams
Stoppage Insights maximises clarity to minimise downtime, enabling operators to:
• Rapidly identify root causes to shorten recovery time.
• View initiating events and all affected units in one intuitive interface.
• Access complete records of both planned and unplanned stoppages
- Driving results for maintenance and reliability teams
Stoppage Insights helps prioritise work based on evidence, not guesswork:
• Access structured stoppage data for reliability programmes.
• Replace manual logging with automated, exportable records for CMMS, ERP or MES.(2)
• Identify recurring issues and target preventive maintenance effectively.
A future-proof and cybersecure foundation
Our Stoppage Insights feature is built on the latest (version 9) update to our ACESYS advanced programming library. This industry-leading solution lies at the heart of the ECS process control system. Its structured approach enables fast engineering and consistent control logic across hardware platforms from Siemens, Schneider, Rockwell, and others.
In addition to powering Stoppage Insights, ACESYS v9 positions the ECS system for open, interoperable architectures and future-proof automation. The same structured data used by Stoppage Insights supports AI-driven process control, providing the foundation for machine learning models and advanced analytics.
The latest releases also respond to the growing risk of cyberattacks on industrial operational technology (OT) infrastructure, delivering robust cybersecurity. The latest ECS software update (version 9.2) is certified to IEC 62443-4-1 international cybersecurity standards, protecting your process operations and reducing system vulnerability.
What’s available now and what’s coming next?
The ECS/ControlCenter 9.2 and ACESYS 9 updates, featuring Stoppage Insights, are available now for:
- Greenfield projects.
- ECS system upgrades.
- Brownfield replacement of competitor systems.
Stoppage Insights will also soon integrate with our ECS/UptimeGo downtime analysis software. Stoppage records, including root cause identification and affected equipment, will flow seamlessly into UptimeGo for advanced analytics, trending and long-term reliability reporting. This integration creates a complete ecosystem for managing and improving plant uptime.
(1) The ECS Process Control Solution for cement, mining and minerals processing combines proven control strategies with modern automation architecture to optimise plant performance, reduce downtime and support operational excellence.
(2) CMMS refers to computerised maintenance management systems; ERP, to enterprise resource planning; and MES to manufacturing execution systems.
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