| Literature DB >> 34884092 |
Fredrik Ege Abrahamsen1, Yun Ai2, Michael Cheffena2.
Abstract
With the ongoing trends in the energy sector such as vehicular electrification and renewable energy, the Smart Grid (SG) is clearly playing a more and more important role in the electric power system industry. One essential feature of the SG is the information flow over high-speed, reliable, and secure data communication networks in order to manage the complex power systems effectively and intelligently. SGs utilize bidirectional communication to function whereas traditional power grids mainly only use one-way communication. The communication requirements and suitable techniques differ depending on the specific environment and scenario. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive and up-to-date survey on the communication technologies used in the SG, including the communication requirements, physical layer technologies, network architectures, and research challenges. This survey aims to help the readers identify the potential research problems in the continued research on the topic of SG communications.Entities:
Keywords: review; smart grid; smart grid communication; smart grid security; smart grid technologies; survey; wired communication; wireless communications
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884092 PMCID: PMC8659758 DOI: 10.3390/s21238087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The structure of the paper.
Comparison of traditional power grid and smart power grid [3].
| Traditional Grid | Smart Grid | |
|---|---|---|
| Information flow | One-way communication | Two-way communication |
| Power generation | Centralized power generation | Distributed power generation |
| Grid topology | Radial | Network |
| Integration of distributed | Low degree | High degree |
| energy sources | ||
| Sensors | Low degree | High degree |
| Monitoring | Manual monitoring | Self-monitoring |
| Outage recovery | Manual restoration | Self-reconfiguration |
| Testing | Manual | Remote |
| Ability to control | Limited | Pervasive |
| Efficiency | Low | High |
Smart Grid domains, electrical and communication interface [23].
| Domain | Communication Interface | Electrical Interface |
|---|---|---|
| Market | Service provider, Operations, Generation, | None |
| Operations | Markets, Service provider, Transmission, | None |
| Service provider | Markets, Operations, Customer, | None |
| Transmission | Markets, Operations Generation, | Generation, Distribution |
| Distribution | Operations, Transmission, Customer, | Transmission, Customer |
| Customer | Markets, Operations, Service provider, | Distribution, Generation |
| Generation incl. DER | Markets, Operations, Transmission, | Transmission, Customer |
Overview of SG communication layers [20].
| Application Layer | Power Transmission and | Customer Applications | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Communication Layer | Wide Area Network | Neighborhood Area | Premise Area Network |
| Power Control Layer | Power monitoring, control, and management systems | ||
| Power System Layer | Power Generation | Power Distribution | Customer |
Figure 2Smart metering architecture.
Smart Grid QoS requirements [50].
| Smart Grid Application | Data Rate | Latency | Reliability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smart Metering | Low | High | Medium |
| SCADA | Medium | Low | High |
| Substation Automation | Low | Low | High |
| DER | Medium | Low | High |
| DR | Low | Low | High |
Figure 3Data rate and communication range requirements in SG hierarchy [20].
Overview of network types and requirements [20].
| Network Type | Coverage | Data Rate | Data Rate | Technology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WAN | 10–100 km | High data rate. | 10 Mbps | Wireless: WiMAX, 3G,4G,5G. |
| NAN/FAN | 10 m–10 km | Highly dependent | 100 kbps | Wireless: ZigBee, Wi-Fi, |
| HAN/BAN/IAN | 1–100 m | Dependent on | 10–100 kbps | Wireless: ZigBee, Z-wave, |
Figure 4Networks in SG.
Overview of wired communication technologies in SG [20,34,57,72,74].
| Wired Communication Technologies | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Ethernet | Up to | Up to | In-home communication, | Good on short | Coverage | Premise network, |
| Broadband PLC | Up to | Up to | SCADA, backbone | Existing | Noisy channel | NAN/FAN, WAN |
| Narrowband PLC | 10-500 | Up to | SCADA, backbone | Existing | Noisy channel | NAN/FAN, WAN |
| HomePlug | 4, 5, 10 | Up to | In-home communication, | Low cost, | Coverage | Premise network |
| Fiber optic | Up to | Up to | SCADA, backbone | High bandwidth, | Costly | WAN |
Overview of wireless communication technologies in SG [20,57,81,82,83,84,85,86,92,93,94,97].
| Wireless Communication Technologies | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| WiMAX | 75 Mbps | Up to | In-home communication | Low cost, | Not widespread, | NAN/FAN, WAN |
| ZigBee | 20–250 kbps | Up to | In-home communication, | Mesh capability, | Low data rate, | Premise network, |
| Z-Wave | 9-40 kbps | Up to | Wireless mesh network | Mesh capability, | Low data rate, | Premise network |
| Wi-Fi | 2 Mbps– | Up to | In-come communication, | Good on short | Security | Premise network, |
| 3G | Up to | 70 km | SCADA, | Already existing | Network shared | NAN/FAN, WAN |
| 4G/LTE | Up to | Up to | SCADA, | Already existing | Network shared | NAN/FAN, WAN |
| LTE-M | 7 Mbps | 11 km | Smart meter reading | Low cost, low | Lower data rate | NAN/FAN |
| NB-IoT | 159 kbps | Smart meter reading | Low cost, low | Lower data rate | NAN/FAN | |
| 5G | Up to | SCADA, Remote control | Low energy, Low latency, | NAN/FAN, WAN | ||
| Satellite | 50 Mbps | Backup, remote location | Good when no other | High cost | WAN | |