DocumentCode :
1847887
Title :
An integrated testbed for advanced wireless networked control systems technology
Author :
Taylor, James H. ; Slipp, Jeff
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada
fYear :
2010
fDate :
7-10 Nov. 2010
Firstpage :
2101
Lastpage :
2106
Abstract :
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have gained widespread acceptance during the last decade, largely due to the greatly increased flexibility, lower costs and scalability that they have been shown to provide. The pace of application in the context of wireless networked control systems (WNCSs) has been somewhat impeded, however, by the reluctance of industry to accept the risks of allowing wireless paths to be incorporated in process control loops. The problem is that there are conflicts between maintaining control loop performance, which can be degraded by many factors, such as low data rates, delays in wireless paths, jitter and electromagnetic interference; and the usual objectives in managing a wireless sensor network, namely freedom to configure the network and to adjust data rates at will, to maximize efficiency and to conserve energy consumption in battery-powered network nodes. In the context of developing advanced controls technology for systems with wireless networks in feedback paths there is a strong need for a test environment that can be used to explore all facets of such systems, including potential problems relating to control loop performance and WSN management. We propose to address this requirement by developing a new testbed for research in WNCSs by adding advanced control agents and process simulators from the Intelligent Control and Asset Management or ICAM project to an existing WSN testbed called the Wireless Industrial Sensor Network Testbed for Radio-Harsh Environments or WINTeR. This testbed has been custom developed for oil and gas industrial environments, i.e., it includes features such as electromagnetic interference and complex multipath propagation. The proposed new testbed, hereafter called WINTeR-ICAM, will include the ICAM Supervisor, ICAM Agents and an additional agent to resolve conflicts between maintaining control loop performance and managing the WSN effectively and efficiently, called a WNCS Coordination Agent or WNCSCA. This age- - nt is designed to be part of an intelligent supervisory control system, and to grant the WSN as much latitude in meeting its objectives as possible while maintaining the performance of control loops that incorporate wireless paths, thus adding to the safety and reliability of future WNCSs. Together, the process simulators, ICAM Agents and WINTeR will provide a powerful new environment for research and development of advanced WNCS technology, with WSN hardware and software in the loop; this novel conception is the contribution of this paper.
Keywords :
networked control systems; telecommunication control; wireless sensor networks; WNCS coordination agent; advanced wireless networked control systems; battery-powered network nodes; data rate factor; electromagnetic interference factor; jitter factor; radio-harsh environments; wireless industrial sensor network testbed; wireless paths delay factor; wireless sensor networks; Actuators; Communication system security; Data models; Delay; Process control; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
IECON 2010 - 36th Annual Conference on IEEE Industrial Electronics Society
Conference_Location :
Glendale, AZ
ISSN :
1553-572X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5225-5
Electronic_ISBN :
1553-572X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IECON.2010.5675268
Filename :
5675268
Link To Document :
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