Smart
Grid Communications
Although some communications systems are up-to-date,
they may not be fully integrated because they have been developed
in an incremental fashion. In most cases, data is being collected
via modem rather than direct network connection. These data applications
include:
Sensing and Measurement
Core duties are evaluating congestion and grid stability, monitoring
equipment health, energy theft prevention, and control strategies
support.
Smart Meters
A smart grid replaces analog mechanical meters with digital meters
that record usage in real time. Smart meters provide a communication
path extending from generation plants to electrical outlets (smart
socket) and other smart grid-enabled devices.
Phasor Measurement Units
High speed sensors called Phasor Management Units (PMU’s) are distributed
throughout the network and are used to monitor power quality and
respond automatically to power irregularities.
Wide-Area Measurement Systems (WAM’s)
A Wide Area Measurement system (WAM) is a network of PMU’s that perform
real-time monitoring on a regional and national scale. Many in
the power systems engineering community believe that the Northeast
blackout of 2003 would have been contained to a much smaller area
if a WAM network was in place.
Advanced Control
Power system automation enables rapid diagnosis of and precise solutions
to specific grid disruptions or outages.
Areas for Smart Grid improvement include:
Substation automation, demand response, distribution automation,
Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA), energy management
systems, wireless mesh networks and other technologies, power-line
carrier communications, and fiber-optics. Integrated communications
will allow for real-time control, information and data exchange
to optimize system reliability, asset utilization, and security. |
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Encore
Networks and the Smart Grid
One of the challenges facing many of today’s utility
companies is how to effectively monitor and control the critical
functions of their SCADA networks over slow analog lines. To
create an effective communications ‘highway’ capable of monitoring
the status of the grid and, for example, take the quick actions
required to prevent a localized problem from developing out of
control, utilities must take advantage of today’s faster and
more reliable transmission services.
Encore’s family of industrially hardened (rugged) routers,
the BANDIT™, enables these utilities to seamlessly upgrade their
legacy SCADA networks to these services including Frame Relay, Internet
Protocol (IP), VSAT, cellular wireless, cable modem, DSL, fiber and
microwave.
The BANDIT™ ensures secure system data and SCADA network
connections directly to a Wide Area Network (WAN) and/or Local Area
Network (LAN), or a commercial cellular data IP service. The BANDIT™
is a rugged security router with integrated firewall, terminal server,
serial-to-IP conversion, legacy-protocol conversion, and VPN functionality.
Its hardened construction allows for operation over the wide temperature
ranges found at remote substations.
Encore’s carrier class, host site solution, the VSR
1200™ provides high performance, end-to-end Virtual Private Network
(VPN) solutions that include standard features such as IP routing
via Encore’s patented Selective Layer Encryption (SLE), advanced
QoS capabilities, a stateful packet inspection firewall, compression
and optimized bandwidth utilization, and embedded address management
capabilities such as NAT and PrAT. In addition to its unique VPN
features like SLE, the VSR 1200™ also interoperates with standards-based
routers using well-known formats for IPsec and GRE.
A high-port-density Remote Data Unit (RDU) module makes
the VSR 1200™ an ideal fit for the smooth migration of legacy data
applications to broadband IP networks. By performing protocol conversion
and spoofing, the VSR 1200™ optimizes the utilization of satellite
bandwidth. |