1) Standardized Equipment State / Metadata Model

Use case:
Create a consistent, high-level representation of machine state derived from raw signals.

What it does:
	•	Converts low-level sensor/PLC data into meaningful states (e.g., Running, Idle, Faulted, Starved, Blocked)
	•	Normalizes differences across equipment types
	•	Aggregates multiple signals into a single, authoritative “machine state”

Examples:
	•	Deriving true run state from multiple interlocks and status bits
	•	Calculating actual cycle time vs. theoretical
	•	Identifying top fault instead of exposing dozens of raw alarms

Value:
	•	Provides a single, consistent view of equipment behavior
	•	Reduces complexity for downstream systems and users
	•	Improves accuracy of KPIs like OEE and downtime tracking

⸻

2) Virtual Testing / Simulation (FAT, Integration, Validation)

Use case:
Use a digital representation of equipment to simulate behavior for testing without requiring physical machines.

What it does:
	•	Emulates machine signals, states, and sequences
	•	Allows testing of automation logic, workflows, and integrations
	•	Supports replay of historical scenarios or generation of synthetic ones

Examples:
	•	Simulating startup, shutdown, and fault conditions
	•	Testing alarm handling and recovery workflows
	•	Validating system behavior under edge cases (missing data, delays, abnormal sequences)

Value:
	•	Enables earlier testing before equipment is available
	•	Reduces commissioning time and risk
	•	Improves quality and stability of deployed systems

⸻

3) Cross-System Data Normalization / Canonical Model

Use case:
Act as a common semantic layer between multiple systems interacting with manufacturing data.

What it does:
	•	Defines standardized data structures for equipment, production, and events
	•	Translates system-specific formats into a unified model
	•	Provides a consistent interface for all consumers

Examples:
	•	Mapping different machine tag structures into a common equipment model
	•	Standardizing production counts, states, and identifiers
	•	Providing uniform event definitions (e.g., “machine fault,” “job complete”)

Value:
	•	Simplifies integration between disparate systems
	•	Reduces duplication of transformation logic
	•	Improves data consistency and interoperability across the enterprise

⸻

Combined Outcome

Together, these three use cases position a digital twin as:
	•	A translator (raw signals → meaningful state)
	•	A simulator (test without physical dependency)
	•	A standard interface (consistent data across systems)

This approach focuses on practical operational value rather than high-fidelity modeling, aligning well with discrete manufacturing environments.