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July 2008 Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 Submission Title: [Wireless Neighborhood Area Networks - WNAN] Date Submitted: [15 July, 2008] Source: [Tommy Childress] Company [Cellnet+Hunt] Address: [30000 Mill Creek Ave, Alpharetta, GA 30022] Voice [678-258-1513] E-Mail:[[email protected]] Re: IEEE 802 Plenary WNAN Tutorial Abstract: States the needs for Utility Networks as expressed by the Utility view as high level technical requirements. Purpose: Contribution to Neighborhood Area Networks Interest Group (IG-NAN) Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.15. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P802.15. 1 July 2008 Today, Energy industry is undergoing significant transformation + Need for transformation driven by: - Escalating costs of energy generation against the regulatory pressures on pricing - Supply and network constraints requiring significant investments - Environmental & political pressure - Aging workforce + Confusion in markets and technology fields today, with many directions to choose Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 2 July 2008 Electric Utilities + Number of Utilities … 3,411 + Electric Utilities serve over 140M residential and commercial customers + Electric Utilities spent over $2.3B in Smart Metering in 2006 (Energy Insights Estimate) Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 3 July 2008 Deployments Fixed RF Networks 12 million meters Direct Sequence Over 200 Fixed RF Distribution Automation and SCADA Networks Mesh Frequency Hopping Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 4 July 2008 Key Requirements Equal Service Level Across the Network Scalable Network Low Capital Expense 20 year life Low Operational Expenses Bandwidth …Data Traffic Robust and Secure Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 5 July 2008 Equal Service Level Across the Network +Typically fixed installation - Electricity meter outside or inside the house - Sensor located throughout utility transmission and distribution infrastructure +Density - Downtown, Urban, sub-urban and rural environment - Density of deployment can range from 4000 devices per square mile to 1 device per 10 square mile Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 6 July 2008 Scalable Network +Network must be scalable - Millions of Meters - Thousands of Distribution Devices - Millions of Sensors Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 7 July 2008 Low Capital Expense +Communication devices costs must be in few dollars not tens of dollars +Capital expense includes - Purchase cost of sensor - Installation costs +Installations - Low Cost and Simple Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 8 July 2008 20 year life +Devices must last for 20 years in harsh outdoor environment +Over the Air Firmware Upgrade +-40 C to 85C +Surge and other AMI requirements from IEEE and ANSI apply Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 9 July 2008 Low Operational Expenses +Any field trip is expensive and can be more than the cost of the product +Devices must be highly reliable - 99.5% of the time no field visits should be required - Remote programming, configuration, diagnostic +Plug & Read networks +Self healing Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 10 July 2008 Bandwidth …Data Traffic +Few kilobytes of continuous traffic +Few seconds latency +Reliable delivery of data – in excess of 99.5% +Alarms and special events can cause few minutes spikes in traffic Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 11 July 2008 Data usage in AMI/AMR + Meter Data – 57% + On-Demand Meter Reads – 2% Data volume for typical AMI/AMR applications. + Outage/Restoration – 1% + Demand Response – 4% + System Firmware Upgrade – 10% + DA/SCADA – 26% Demand Response Meter Data On-demand meter reads System wide firmware upgrade DA/SCADA Outage/Restoration Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 12 July 2008 AMI/AMR bandwidth usage + Meter Data – 9% Bandwidth requirements for typical AMI/AMR applications is driven by time response. + On-Demand Meter Reads – 1% + Outage/Restoration – 16% + Demand Response – 70% + System Firmware Upgrade – 1% + DA/SCADA – 3% Demand Response Meter Reads On-Demand Reads Firmware Upgrade DA/SCADA Outage/Restoration Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 13 July 2008 Robust and Secure +Network Uses - Revenue Determinants - Command & Control - Distribution Automation - Demand Response +Security - Encryption - Authentication +Robust - Direct Sequence (802.15.4) – Very Good - Frequency Hopping Mesh (802.15.X) – Better! Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 14 July 2008 Thank You! Equal Service Level Across the Network Scalable Network Low Capital Expense 20 year life Low Operational Expenses Bandwidth …Data Traffic Robust and Secure Doc 15-08-0454-00-0000 15