Implementation of digital twins in the food supply chain: a review and conceptual framework

Date

2024-01-31

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0020-7543

Format

Citation

Huanga Y, Ghadgea A, Yatesa N. (2024) Implementation of digital twins in the food supply chain: a review and conceptual framework. International Journal of Production Research, Available online 31 January 2024

Abstract

Digital Twins (DTs) hold significant promise in addressing the challenges faced by food supply chains (FSCs). This paper aims to provide critical insights into the potential for Digital Twins to meet the key challenges of the FSC and establish a comprehensive conceptual framework for their implementation. Following a systematic literature review (SLR), the study identified 81 peer-reviewed, high-quality papers published over the last decade (2012–2023). The typology-driven thematic analysis emphasises the emergent nature of DTs within FSCs, highlighting their key characteristics including monitoring, real-time simulation, and scenario analysis. The identified characteristics, applications, implementation drivers and barriers of Digital Twin form the basis for a novel conceptual framework for implementing DTs in FSCs. Leveraging insights from Innovation Adoption Theory and the Technology-Organization-Environment (TOE) framework, the study outlines a structured five step implementation process divided into three stages. Notably, technology assessment and performance evaluation emerge as two innovative steps necessary for the successful implementation of DTs specifically, not previously considered by the theory. The study identifies promising avenues for future research. These findings provide invaluable guidance to researchers and practitioners seeking to embrace the potential of Digital Twin within the food industry.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Digital twin, food supply chains, innovation adoption theory, technology-organization-environment (TOE), industry 4.0, implementation framework

DOI

10.1080/00207543.2024.2305804

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Relationships

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