Digital Twins Pave Way for AI-Enabled Smart Factories

thumbnail
Digital Twins Pave Way for AI-Enabled Smart Factories

Manufacturers find that the integration of digital twins, AI, and simulation technologies supports advanced plant modeling, simulation, planning, and operations management.

Written By
thumbnail
Joe McKendrick
Joe McKendrick
Jul 2, 2025

It’s reaching the point in which major global manufacturers cannot effectively function without digital twins to help managers plan operations and expansions. Such requirements are fueling the digital twin market, which is growing at a rate of 40% a year worldwide, from $18 billion as of 2024 to $260 billion by 2032, according to estimates published in Fortune Business Insights. Growth of digital twins is especially seen in enhanced healthcare applications and advancements in 3D simulation and printing technologies.

Digital twin technology helps companies “identify cost-saving opportunities by optimizing resource usage, reducing downtime through predictive maintenance and minimizing inefficiencies in operations,” the report’s authors state. “In addition, large enterprises use twin technology for innovation in product development, testing, and design validation for the creation of high-quality products.”

See also: Using Digital Twins to Drive Manufacturing Efficiency

Digital Twins in Action

Foxconn, well-known as the manufacturer of iPhones for Apple as well as NIVIDIA chips, is leveraging digital twin technology to manage its global network of production facilities. The challenge for Foxconn was unprecedented complexity. Setting up, optimizing, and managing large-scale production lines across multiple global sites requires significant time and resources — a slow process using traditional method. “They limit a manufacturer’s ability to perform real-time analysis, dynamically optimize operations, or replicate best practices across facilities,” according to a report from NVIDIA, which is also Foxconn’s chip supplier.

To meet these needs, the electronics manufacturer employed digital twins powered by NVIDIA Omniverse and Universal Scene Description (OpenUSD) to replicate its production facilities. The company’s digital twin platform is a virtual replica of its factories, enabling simulation-driven design, real-time monitoring, and optimized operations.

The integration of digital twins, AI, and simulation technologies supports advanced plant modeling, simulation, planning, and operations management. The platform connects virtual factories to real-world operational data, embedding dashboards with key metrics from manufacturing execution systems (MES), shop floor control (SFC), and automation systems. In addition, entire production lines are virtually assembled using the digital twin platform, enabling the manufacturer “to rapidly migrate and duplicate layouts between global sites (e.g., Taiwan to Mexico). New factory bring-up and scaling are speeding up significantly as a result,” the report states.

Managers can also explore production lines immersively while monitoring performance and resolving issues instantly.

_

thumbnail
Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is RTInsights Industry Editor and industry analyst focusing on artificial intelligence, digital, cloud and Big Data topics. His work also appears in Forbes an Harvard Business Review. Over the last three years, he served as co-chair for the AI Summit in New York, as well as on the organizing committee for IEEE's International Conferences on Edge Computing. (full bio). Follow him on Twitter @joemckendrick.

Recommended for you...

What High-Performing Manufacturers Do Differently
3 Reasons Why AI in Commissioning, Qualification, and Validation Matters Now
Siva Samy
Jan 15, 2026
Top 5 Smart Manufacturing Articles of 2025
How Technology is Powering Resilient Manufacturing in a Volatile World

Featured Resources from Cloud Data Insights

Why Explainable AI Will Define the Next Wave of Innovation
Efrain Ruh
Mar 17, 2026
AI Data Compliance: Why Organizations Need Protective Data Gateways Now
Danielle Barbour
Mar 16, 2026
Real-time Analytics News for the Week Ending March 14
Why AI Governance Breaks Without Exposure Management
Mark Lambert
Mar 14, 2026
RT Insights Logo

Analysis and market insights on real-time analytics including Big Data, the IoT, and cognitive computing. Business use cases and technologies are discussed.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.