DocumentCode :
687804
Title :
Toward distributed intelligent: A case study of peer to peer communication in smart grid
Author :
Mingkui Wei ; Wenye Wang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
9-13 Dec. 2013
Firstpage :
2210
Lastpage :
2216
Abstract :
Smart grid is an emerging cyber-physical system which aims at making power systems more intelligent and efficient. One of the major attributes of smart grid is integration of distributed renewable power resources into the traditional power grid. As a result, traditional centralized control is not always effective in smart grid, and distributed control is essential for flexible energy management. To facilitate distributed control, Intelligent Electronic Devices (IEDs), which are embedded computers equipped on power devices, are interconnected based on the peer-to-peer communication model. An open question is whether such a distributed control mechanism over peer to peer communication is delay-efficient to support time-critical smart grid applications. To answer this question, we establish a micro smart grid, called Green Hub, to measure the delay performance for both distributed and centralized control systems. Our results show that, for computationally intensive applications, the delay performance of the distributed system is worse than that of the centralized control system, mostly due to IEDs´ limited capability. In addition, we find that in distributed control systems, the peer to peer communication may cause different behaviors of physical devices in power systems, and consequently deviates their decisions from optimal. Our experimental study reveals the distributed control system in smart grid does not necessarily performs better than the centralized control system for certain applications, and the peer to peer communication in the distributed control system may bring new concerns which did not exist in the centralized control system. A special attention need to be paid on the effectiveness and efficiency aspects when design algorithms/schemes for smart grid.
Keywords :
centralised control; control engineering computing; distributed control; distributed power generation; intelligent control; peer-to-peer computing; renewable energy sources; smart power grids; IED; centralized control system; cyber-physical system; distributed control system; distributed intelligent system; distributed renewable power resources; flexible energy management; green hub; intelligent electronic devices; microsmart grid; peer-to-peer communication model; power grid; time-critical smart grid applications; Centralized control; Circuit faults; Decentralized control; Delays; Green products; Peer-to-peer computing; Smart grids;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2013.6831403
Filename :
6831403
Link To Document :
بازگشت