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Applications of Wireless Sensor Networks in Smart Grid

Applications of Wireless Sensor Networks in Smart Grid. Presented by Zhongming Zheng. Outline. Introduction System Model OREM iHEM Application Performance evaluation. Introduction. Smart grid Modern electric power-grid infrastructure For improving efficiency, reliability and safety

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Applications of Wireless Sensor Networks in Smart Grid

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  1. Applications of Wireless Sensor Networks in Smart Grid Presented by ZhongmingZheng

  2. Outline • Introduction • System Model • OREM • iHEM Application • Performance evaluation

  3. Introduction • Smart grid • Modern electric power-grid infrastructure • For improving efficiency, reliability and safety • With integration of renewable and alternative energy sources • Through automated control and modern communication technologies

  4. Introduction • The key factor • Online power system condition monitoring, diagnostic, and protection • Reliable and online information • Avoid power disturbances and outages due to equipment failures, capacity limitations, natural accidents and catastrophes

  5. Introduction • Possible Solutions • Traditional wired monitoring systems • Expensive communication cable installations • Expensive regularly maintenance • Not widely implemented today due to high cost

  6. Introduction • Possible Solutions • Wireless sensor networks • Rapid deployment • Low cost • Flexibility • Aggregated intelligence via parallel processing

  7. Introduction • Existing and potential applications of WSNs on smart grid • Wireless automatic meter reading • Remote system monitoring and equipment fault diagnostic

  8. Introduction • Wireless automatic meter reading • Reduce electric utility operational costs (No need for human readers) • Online pricing based on online energy consumption of the customers • Asset protection through advanced remote monitoring • WSNs provide low-cost and low-power solution

  9. Introduction • Remote system monitoring and equipment fault diagnostic • Avoid or largely alleviated power-grid and facility breakdowns • Existing remote sensing, monitoring and fault diagnostic solutions are too expensive • WSNs provide cost-effective sensing and communication solution in a remote and online manner

  10. Introduction • Challenges to apply WSNs in smart grid • Harsh environmental conditions • Reliability and latency requirements • Packet errors and variable link capacity • Resource constraints

  11. Overview • Previous work • Propose an in-home energy management application • Employ a wireless sensor home area network • Exploit communications among the appliances and an energy management unit • This work • Develop the optimization-based residential energy management scheme • Aim to minimize the energy expenses of the consumers • Schedule appliances to less expensive hours according to the time of use tariff

  12. Outline • Introduction • System Model • OREM • iHEM Application • Performance evaluation

  13. System Model • System Configuration • Home area network • Utilize Zigbee protocol • Divide one day into equal-length timeslots • Various timeslots may have different price

  14. Outline • Introduction • System Model • OREM • iHEM Application • Performance evaluation

  15. Optimization-Based Residential Energy Management (OREM) • The consumer requests are given in advance • Objective function • Minimize the total energy expenses

  16. Optimization-Based Residential Energy Management (OREM) • Constraints • the total duration of the cycles of the scheduled appliances does not exceed the length of the timeslot that is assigned for them

  17. Optimization-Based Residential Energy Management (OREM) • Constraints • A cycle may start at the end of one timeslot and it will naturally continue in the consecutive timeslot. • An appliance cycle is fully accommodated without experiencing any interruptions

  18. Optimization-Based Residential Energy Management (OREM) • Constraints • Bound the maximum delay to two timeslots to reduce consumer discomfort and to avoid bursts of request

  19. Outline • Introduction • System Model • OREM • iHEM Application • Performance evaluation

  20. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) • Consumer demands are processed in real time • Objective • Decrease the cost of energy usage at home • Minimize the comfort degradation for the consumers

  21. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) • Scenario

  22. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) • Notations • RFD: reduced function device. • FFD: full function device • PAN(Grey node): personal area network coordinator

  23. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) Check price & Scheduling

  24. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) • START-REQ (a) • Request to start • AVAIL-REQ (b) • Request for the availability of energy • UPDATE-AVAIL (c) • Update the amount of available energy on the unit

  25. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM)

  26. In-Home Energy Management(iHEM) • Personal area network coordinator • Beacon-enabled mode • Define the duty cycle with the superframe duration of the superframe structure • Synchronize the nodes in the network • Nodes only communicate in the active period • In Contention Access Period, transmit data by CSMA/CA

  27. Outline • Introduction • System Model • OREM • iHEM Application • Performance evaluation • Conclusion

  28. Simulation Results

  29. Simulation Results

  30. Q & A

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