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BEHIND THE SCENES World-class scientists as guests in Bad Pyrmont Professor Suzanne D. Berger from MIT on a research tour through Germany A delegation of four scientists from the renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology traveled to Bad Pyrmont to visit the Phoenix Contact location and the Smart Factory located here. Prof. Suzanne D. Berger visited Germany to do research for a new book. In 2013, the study “Making in America: From Innovation to Market” was published. In it, Prof. Berger examines the question of whether the US needs to strengthen the effi ciency of its production sector in order to create value from innovations. Now, she is embarking on a new project: in the “Work of the Future” task force, staff from the various MIT faculties are working together to determine what infl uence new technologies have on employees. The MIT team became aware of Phoenix Contact when they were looking for companies that were on the cutting edge of new technologies. At the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum at the end of 2018 in Tianjing (China), Phoenix Contact was named as one of the world’s nine New GM in South Africa The newcomer relies on teamwork Shortly before the end of 2019, the Springbok state on the Cape of Africa got a new general manager in Carl Kleynhans. The graduate business manager has more than 18 years of pro- fessional experience in the IT and electron- ics industry, including in German electronics companies. According to his own statement, teamwork is his means on the path to further success. phoenixcontact.com leading smart factories that already use IIoT technologies in practice. A guided tour of the production area showed how machines and systems can be converted to the production of new products within a short space of time. Based on a digital twin, the products to be manufactured are so smart, they can fi nd their way through the processing stations themselves. In this way, even small series and special productions can be realized that would be uneconomical in a pure mass production. Prof. D. Berger (middle) with her team and Production Manager Dr. Tilman Potente (right) Innovation from the printer Protiq prints pure copper With 3D printing of pure copper, Protiq has achieved a breakthrough in additive manufacturing. At the specialist trade fair formnext in late November 2019 in Frankfurt, the team surrounding General Manager Dr. Ralf Gärtner presented the global- ly unique process. Until now, printing pure copper was not considered possible, be- cause the metal refl ects the rays of the melting laser until it is destroyed. Due to its excellent electrical conductivity, copper is used to make inductors for the partial hardening of components, among other things. The production is complex and time-consuming, usually taking weeks. With the new process, it’s possible to reduce the conventional processing time to a few hours. In addition, the manufacturing data of the component can be uploaded, confi gured, and ordered directly on the Protiq online platform. protiq.com The Phoenix Contact innovation magazine UPDATE 4/20 49