The European Climate Law sets the target of reducing net greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 and for Europe to become climate-neutral by 2050. To meet these ambitious goals open standards and established modelling and simulation tools need be enhanced to better support large-scale systems and distributed controllers optimized to minimize energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.
Several industrial demonstrators will showcase how the OpenSCALING innovations are applied in the domains of
- energy,
- buildings,
- aviation,
- and automotive
through green hydrogen production, more efficient heat pumps, fuel cell propulsion and electrified vehicles.
Significant improvements are expected in terms of managing magnitudes larger system models in the virtual engineering process using the open standards Modelica, FMI, eFMI and SSP.
This includes
- reduction of compilation and simulation times,
- speed-up of simulations by means of machine learning surrogate models,
- and the tool support of traceable and credible modeling and simulation processes.
A European effort under the umbrella of the ITEA4 funded by:
- German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
- Swedish Innovation Agency