The aerospace and defense industry continues to be a hotbed of patent innovation. Activity is driven by modernization imperatives, battlefield digitization, platform autonomy, and growing importance of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), unmanned maritime vehicles, remote sensing and directed energy weapons. In the last three years alone, there have been over 84,000 patents filed and granted in the aerospace and defense industry, according to GlobalData’s report on Innovation in defense: underwater ROVs. Buy the report here.
However, not all innovations are equal and nor do they follow a constant upward trend. Instead, their evolution takes the form of an S-shaped curve that reflects their typical lifecycle from early emergence to accelerating adoption, before finally stabilizing and reaching maturity.
Identifying where a particular innovation is on this journey, especially those that are in the emerging and accelerating stages, is essential for understanding their current level of adoption and the likely future trajectory and impact they will have.
110 innovations will shape the aerospace and defense industry
According to GlobalData’s Technology Foresights, which plots the S-curve for the aerospace and defense industry using innovation intensity models built on over 260,000 patents, there are 110 innovation areas that will shape the future of the industry.
Within the emerging innovation stage, missile aerodynamic guidance, aerial cargo delivery, and underwater ROVs are disruptive technologies that are in the early stages of application and should be tracked closely. UAV fuselage, multi-mode regenerative fuel cells and aircraft power distribution network are some of the accelerating innovation areas, where adoption has been steadily increasing. Among maturing innovation areas are aircraft power management and rocket engine assembly, which are now well established in the industry.
Innovation S-curve for the aerospace and defense industry
Underwater ROVs is a key innovation area in aerospace and defense
Underwater remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) are a class of unmanned underwater vehicle which enable operators to deploy a submersible platform, which maintains a human ‘in-the-loop' and is thus controlled remotely suing either tethered or un-tethered teleoperation technology. Underwater ROVs have been developed to suit a wide variety of applications in both the civilian and defense sectors including surveillance, monitoring, maintenance, data collection and exploration. These systems can be deployed to depths typically inaccessible to human divers or be leveraged to offset manpower requirements in a variety of scenarios.
GlobalData’s analysis also uncovers the companies at the forefront of each innovation area and assesses the potential reach and impact of their patenting activity across different applications and geographies. According to GlobalData, there are 305+ companies, spanning technology vendors, established aerospace and defense companies, and up-and-coming start-ups engaged in the development and application of underwater ROVs.
Key players in underwater ROVs – a disruptive innovation in the aerospace and defense industry
‘Application diversity’ measures the number of applications identified for each patent. It broadly splits companies into either ‘niche’ or ‘diversified’ innovators.
‘Geographic reach’ refers to the number of countries each patent is registered in. It reflects the breadth of geographic application intended, ranging from ‘global’ to ‘local’.
Patent volumes related to underwater ROVs
Source: GlobalData Patent Analytics
Boeing is the leading patent filer in underwater ROVs due to its investment in a range of dual-use technologies relating to platform design and autonomy including underwater harvesting drones, secure and disruption-tolerant communications, and closed course submersible navigation solutions.
Some other key patent filers in this domain include Subsea 7, HADAL, and Hanwha.
In terms of application diversity, HADAL leads the pack, while Saudi Arabian and Oil Halliburton stood in the second and third positions, respectively. By means of geographic reach, HADAL held the top position, followed by Eni and InCube Labs.
To further understand the key themes and technologies disrupting the aerospace and defense industry, access GlobalData’s latest thematic research report on Aerospace & Defense.
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