Author
Listed:
- Nikolaos Nikolakis
(Laboratory for Manufacturing Systems & Automation (LMS), Department of Mechanical Engineering & Aeronautics, University of Patras, Rio, 26504 Patras, Greece)
- Paolo Catti
(Laboratory for Manufacturing Systems & Automation (LMS), Department of Mechanical Engineering & Aeronautics, University of Patras, Rio, 26504 Patras, Greece)
Abstract
Data-driven quality control (QC) systems for the hot forming of steel parts increasingly rely on deep learning models deployed at the network edge, making multivariate sensor time series a critical asset for both local decisions and management information system (MIS) reporting. However, these models are vulnerable to adversarial perturbations and realistic signal disturbances, which can induce misclassification and distort key performance indicators (KPIs) such as first-pass yield (FPY), scrap-related losses, and latency service-level objectives (SLOs). To address this risk, this study introduces a Digital-Twin-Conditioned Diffusion Purification (DTCDP) framework that constrains latent diffusion-based denoising using process states from a lightweight digital twin of the hot-forming line. At each reverse-denoising step, the twin provides physics residuals that are converted into a scalar penalty, and the diffusion latent is updated with a guidance term. This directly bends the sampling trajectory toward reconstructions that adhere to process constraints while removing adversarial perturbations. DTCDP operates as an edge-side preprocessing module that purifies sensor sequences before they are consumed by existing long short-term memory (LSTM)-based QC models, while exposing purification metadata and physics-guidance diagnostics to the plant MIS. In a four-week production dataset comprising more than 40,000 bars, with white-box ℓ∞ attacks crafted on multivariate sensor time series using Fast Gradient Sign Method and Projected Gradient Descent at perturbation budgets of 1–3% of the physical range, combined with additional realistic disturbances, DTCDP improves the robust classification performance of an LSTM-based QC model from 61.0% to 81.5% robust accuracy, while keeping clean accuracy (≈93%) and FPY on clean data (≈97%) essentially unchanged. These results indicate that physics-aware, digital-twin-guided diffusion purification can enhance the adversarial robustness of edge QC in hot forming without compromising operational KPIs.
Suggested Citation
Nikolaos Nikolakis & Paolo Catti, 2026.
"A Physics-Aware Latent Diffusion Framework for Mitigating Adversarial Perturbations in Manufacturing Quality Control,"
Future Internet, MDPI, vol. 18(1), pages 1-23, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jftint:v:18:y:2026:i:1:p:23-:d:1831132
Download full text from publisher
Corrections
All material on this site has been provided by the respective publishers and authors. You can help correct errors and omissions. When requesting a correction, please mention this item's handle: RePEc:gam:jftint:v:18:y:2026:i:1:p:23-:d:1831132. See general information about how to correct material in RePEc.
If you have authored this item and are not yet registered with RePEc, we encourage you to do it here. This allows to link your profile to this item. It also allows you to accept potential citations to this item that we are uncertain about.
We have no bibliographic references for this item. You can help adding them by using this form .
If you know of missing items citing this one, you can help us creating those links by adding the relevant references in the same way as above, for each refering item. If you are a registered author of this item, you may also want to check the "citations" tab in your RePEc Author Service profile, as there may be some citations waiting for confirmation.
For technical questions regarding this item, or to correct its authors, title, abstract, bibliographic or download information, contact: MDPI Indexing Manager (email available below). General contact details of provider: https://www.mdpi.com .
Please note that corrections may take a couple of weeks to filter through
the various RePEc services.