SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition)
Last updated 2026.02.13Definition
SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) is a control system architecture designed for remote monitoring and control of manufacturing equipment and processes. It combines computers, networked data communications, and graphical user interfaces (GUI) to interface with field devices such as sensors, PLCs (Programmable Logic Controllers), and DCS (Distributed Control Systems), collecting real-time data and transmitting control commands.
Applications in Manufacturing
Real-time Process Monitoring
- Production line visualization: Real-time dashboards displaying process variables like temperature, pressure, and flow rate
- Remote control: Centralized control room managing multiple production lines or plants
- Alarms and alerts: Immediate notifications when parameters deviate from set ranges for rapid response
Data-driven Decision Making
- Historical data storage: Long-term operational data accumulation for trend analysis
- Automated reporting: Automatic generation of reports on production volume, uptime, energy consumption, etc.
Integration with Manufacturing AI
SCADA serves as a critical data source for AI models. Real-time data collected by SCADA feeds AI algorithms to enable:
- Predictive maintenance: Analyzing equipment condition data to detect failure symptoms in advance
- Process optimization: Machine learning models suggest optimal operating conditions and automatically apply them through SCADA
- Quality prediction: Learning correlations between process parameters and quality outcomes to prevent defects
Key Points
The value of SCADA lies in real-time data collection and control from the field. When combined with AI, it evolves beyond simple monitoring into an intelligent autonomous control system. It is essential infrastructure particularly in large-scale continuous process industries such as petrochemicals, steel manufacturing, and automotive assembly.