AEI

ASIA ELECTRONICS INDUSTRYYOUR WINDOW TO SMART MANUFACTURING

Delta’s New Hub to Surge AI-Based Smart Factories

Delta Electronics, Inc. has recently opened its Smart Manufacturing Innovation Center in Taiwan. Accordingly, the strategic hub will offer equipment validation and talent training programs to support customers implementing geographically-distributed production and smart centralized management.

Nearly a hundred representatives from industry, government, and academia attended the grand opening, bringing fresh transformation momentum for the electronics and semiconductor industries.

Delta President and Chief Operating Officer Simon Chang said Delta has long been dedicated to the research and development in smart manufacturing solutions. In fact, Chang said the power of AI has given them the opportunity to expand further its capabilities in the field.

Andy Liu, General Manager of Delta’s Industrial Automation Business Group said the center will simulate real-world production environments using live equipment to validate the performance and applicability of new technologies, and collaborates with the industrial chain through training programs, to jointly solve these obstacles.”

Delta inaugurated the Smart Manufacturing Innovation Center. (From left to right) Joe Wu, the deputy head of Delta’s Industrial Automation Business Group(IABG), Simon Chang, Delta’s President and COO and Andy Liu, General Manager of Delta’s IABG attended the opening ceremony.

Partnership With NVIDIA

Furthermore, one-stop platform site will highlight Delta’s partnership with NVIDIA. That is, it houses the jointly established Delta & NVIDIA Cyber-Physical Integration Classroom, which aims to boost adoption of digital twin and AI model applications. Thus, offering integrated cyber-physical training programs of individual machines, production lines, to factory-wide system integration for end-users and system integrators, and incorporating training resources for developing on the NVIDIA Omniverse digital twin platform.

Chang said, “This center represents a significant milestone thereof, and we are honored to deepen our partnership with NVIDIA, working together to implement digital twin applications through NVIDIA Omniverse training resources.

Delta inaugurated the Smart Manufacturing Innovation Center. (From left to right) Andy Liu, General Manager of Delta’s Industrial Automation Business Group, Kuo-Hsuan Chen, Secretary General, MOEA ‘s Industrial Development Administration (IDA), Simon Chang, Delta’s President & COO, Ethan Hsiao, NVIDIA Taiwan’s Head of Enterprise Business and Sterling Lin, Chairman of Taiwan Electronic Equipment Industry Association (TEEIA) attended the opening ceremony.

Moreover, Liu said the Delta’s new hub aims to help customer address key challenges in in implementing smart manufacturing. 

Delta’s Smart Manufacturing Innovation Center, located at its own Zhongli Plant 6 in Taiwan, spans approximately 500sq.m, offering solutions from individual machines to full production lines. It offers a 3D dashboard for real-time equipment monitoring, hands-on validation zones, and equipment testing for trial production and acceptance. For that reason, the design will accelerate line deployment.

The center also showcases application scenarios of Delta’s Line Manager platform and DIATwin digital twin technology. These solutions demonstrate cyber-physical integration across individual machines, complete production lines, and entire factories. Based on modular and replicable line setups combined with digital management, the center supports rapid global manufacturing expansion.

Peter Chen, Factory Automation Solution Business Division Director of Delta’s Industrial Automation Business Group (IABG), introduced the Delta & NVIDIA Cyber-Physical Integration Classroom, which focuses on scenario-based digital twin training.

The center also features the Delta & NVIDIA Cyber-Physical Integration Classroom, which simulates real-world manufacturing scenarios. Through structured and tiered courses and workshops, participants learn to tackle pain points from design to mass production. The curriculum includes digital simulation and AI model applications for new line setup, process recipe optimization, and production management.

In the future, the new center also plans to introduce training courses for NVIDIA Omniverse and Isaac Sim, which focus on digital twin technologies and robotic equipment simulation.

30 July 2025