Author :
Katsaros, Konstantinos ; Wei Chai ; Ning Wang ; Pavlou, George ; Bontius, Herman ; PAOLONE, MARIO
Abstract :
Largely motivated by the proliferation of content-centric applications in the Internet, information-centric networking has attracted the attention of the research community. By tailoring network operations around named information objects instead of end hosts, ICN yields a series of desirable features such as the spatiotemporal decoupling of communicating entities and the support of in-network caching. In this article, we advocate the introduction of such ICN features in a new, rapidly transforming communication domain: the smart grid. With the rapid introduction of multiple new actors, such as distributed (renewable) energy resources and electric vehicles, smart grids present a new networking landscape where a diverse set of multi-party machine-to-machine applications are required to enhance the observability of the power grid, often in real time and on top of a diverse set of communication infrastructures. Presenting a generic architectural framework, we show how ICN can address the emerging smart grid communication challenges. Based on real power grid topologies from a power distribution network in the Netherlands, we further employ simulations to both demonstrate the feasibility of an ICN solution for the support of real-time smart grid applications and further quantify the performance benefits brought by ICN against the current host-centric paradigm. Specifically, we show how ICN can support real-time state estimation in the medium voltage power grid, where high volumes of synchrophasor measurement data from distributed vantage points must be delivered within a very stringent end-to-end delay constraint, while swiftly overcoming potential power grid component failures.
Keywords :
Internet; distribution networks; phasor measurement; smart power grids; spatiotemporal phenomena; ICN; Internet; Netherlands; content-centric applications; distributed energy resources; electric vehicles; host-centric paradigm; in-network caching; information-centric networking; machine-to-machine data delivery; medium voltage power grid topologies; power distribution network; power grid component failures; smart grid; smart grid applications; spatiotemporal decoupling; synchrophasor measurement data; Content-based retrieval; Delays; Information retrieval; Information technology; Network architecture; Network topology; Phasor measurement units; Power distribution; Real-time systems; Smart grids;