DocumentCode
3017683
Title
An adaptive network architecture for home- and building environments
Author
Kistler, Rolf ; Knauth, Stefan ; Klapproth, Alexander
Author_Institution
Lucerne Univ. of Appl. Sci. & Arts, Horw
fYear
2008
fDate
15-18 Sept. 2008
Firstpage
295
Lastpage
302
Abstract
Fieldbus networks have significantly improved flexibility and management in classic building automation domains. However, the costs of such installations are still greatly affected by the commissioning efforts needed to bring them up and running. The dedicated cabling, initial engineering efforts and sophisticated binding and configuration tools often prevent home owners from investing in such networks. On the other side, many electronic devices from other domains have found their way into home- and building environments. And with IT equipment TCP/IP connectivity and ldquozero configrdquo protocols were introduced. There is the vision of an intelligent home/building with one integrated network in which all devices work together seamlessly. It may positively influence factors such as energy efficiency, usability, flexibility, security and comfort. This paper proposes an Internet protocol based architecture thought to build up such a network. The result is a distributed, scalable hard- and software infrastructure that adapts to the context of use and comes up with goal-centric services provided by the numerous underlying devices. It allows standard mobile clients to act as remote controls with dynamic user interfaces generated on the fly. This text explores the different building blocks that make up the architecture and presents results derived from a first prototype.
Keywords
distributed processing; field buses; home automation; software architecture; user interfaces; Internet protocol; adaptive network architecture; building automation; distributed infrastructure; fieldbus networks; intelligent building; intelligent home; scalable infrastructure; software infrastructure; user interfaces; Adaptive systems; Buildings; Computer architecture; Costs; Field buses; Home automation; Intelligent networks; Intelligent structures; Protocols; TCPIP;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Emerging Technologies and Factory Automation, 2008. ETFA 2008. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Hamburg
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1505-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1506-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ETFA.2008.4638410
Filename
4638410
Link To Document