TransTrans: Blockchain Hackathon Stuttgart

Next Visions
#NextLevelGermanEngineering
5 min readMar 15, 2018
Source: Unsplash

What is Blockchain?

There is a lot of excitement surrounding the Blockchain technology. It is basically a digital and distributed ledger technology that can be used to record any kind of information in it in the form of cryptographic hashes, with a hash of each block referring to the hash of the previous block. As it is distributed and each block is added to the Blockchain based on a set of consensus mechanisms, it is difficult to modify or alter something that is recorded on the Blockchain. There is also a possibility to have certain smart contracts on the Blockchain, which can be used to pay someone only if certain conditions are met. A smart contract is basically a program run on the nodes of the blockchain. Being open source, decentralized and with the ability to add smart contracts, it offers a great deal of transparency and trust between the people who use it, thus avoiding any third-party intermediaries. The technology behind Blockchain can solve a wide variety of problems where transparency and trust between different parties are needed.

Stuttgart, meet TransTrans

Dr. Karthick Perumal and Pascal Pflüger from the Porsche Digital Lab, their colleagues Lukas Weiß and Moritz Papenfuß from MHP and Erik de Graaf with Fatih Salikutluk from Targens participated in the Blockchain Hackathon organised by Baden-Württemberg: Connected e.V. (bwcon) at Merz Akademie in Stuttgart.

Source: Merz Akademie Stuttgart

We named our team TransTrans, which is an acronym of TRANSparent TRANSport. That is what we intended to do during the 2-day hackathon. The idea was to implement a smart supply chain management system on an Ethereum based Blockchain using smart contracts right from production up until the sale to the end customer.

The Plan: Blockchain-powered pharmaceutical transports

We took the healthcare industry as an example for our hackathon. Consider drugs that have to be maintained under certain temperature conditions, above or below which the effect of the drug weakens or becomes nullified. Under the current scenario, when a customer buys some drug from the pharmacy, they do not have any knowledge of how the drug was stored or transported. Therefore, a customer has to trust the pharmacy at which they buy the drugs, and the pharmacy has to trust the logistics provider and the pharmaceutical company, hoping that they maintained the drug at the right conditions throughout the manufacturing and transport process. How do you build this trust? The only way to gain this trust is make the whole process transparent by having it on a distributed ledger that records all the relevant information at regular intervals, right from the production to the storage at the pharmacy. The end customer can use their smartphone to see the history of the product and buy it, knowing that it was not compromised in any way. This can be applied not only to healthcare, but also to any industries where quality of the product can be compromised.

Source: Unsplash

Here is a workflow of the implementation of our supply chain management model:

1. A customer visits a pharmacy and identifies a product need. The pharmacy gets in touch with a pharmaceutical company.

2. The pharmaceutical company develops a new product design according to the customer needs. The pharma company creates a smart contract with product details, as well as quantity and crucial quality attributes (such as temperature and shock/vibration conditions under which the product has to be maintained and delivered). If the pharmaceutical company feels that the production and delivery are expensive and needs funding, it can send out a tender.

3. A financial institution can accept the smart contract and fund the pharma company for production.

4. The manufacturer and logistics provider bid for the tender.This tender includes the sensor framework which is provided by a sensor provider. Sensor data is recorded at regular intervals on the Blockchain throughout the production and delivery process.

5. The manufacturer begins production. Once the production is over, the product quality criteria are sent to the Blockchain. Tokens are provided to prove ownership of the product, and if the product meets requirements, money is transferred to the manufacturer via the smart contract.

Source: Unsplash

6. The logistics provider arrives and picks up the product. The ownership of the product is transferred to the logistics provider. They transport the product to the pharmacy.

7. The pharmacy verifies if the product meets the desired quality criteria. Ownership of the product is transferred to pharmacy and saved as token.

8. The customer checks whether the product meets the quality criteria, right from the production to delivery of the product via their smartphone. If the product is fine, the customer buys the product from the pharmacy.

9. The bank receives money from the smart contract.

48 hours later

To show the steps we created a short clip at the hackathon (no audio). The technical implementation was done using Ethereum. We used a local testnet on which to deploy our smart contracts. A web frontend was used to simulate the different steps from the various parties. We used web3 to interact with the smart contracts and create transactions on the Blockchain. Even though we only had the two days, we decided to develop the smart contract test-driven. This approach helps to avoid bugs, which is a serious problem for code on the Blockchain, as it can’t be fixed as easily as in other software.

Source: Unsplash

Conclusion

To sum it up, we learned a lot and had two very interesting and funny days in Stuttgart. With our project and all the others presented at the hackathon, one can see some of many use cases, where the Blockchain could solve problems in the future. The development of real applications is already going on, for example at the Porsche Digital Lab in Berlin. They already brought the blockchain to the car. This shows us for the TransTrans case that, in the future, it is also possible to log sensor values in the trucks directly, on the blockchain.

Karthick Perumal is a data science consultant at Porsche Digital Lab. You can follow him on Twitter and on LinkedIn.

To find out more about Porsche and Technology, follow us on Twitter, LinkedInand Instagram.

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