3,412 research outputs found

    Overlay networks for smart grids

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    Distributed Data-Gathering and -Processing in Smart Cities: An Information-Centric Approach

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    The technological advancements along with the proliferation of smart and connected devices (things) motivated the exploration of the creation of smart cities aimed at improving the quality of life, economic growth, and efficient resource utilization. Some recent initiatives defined a smart city network as the interconnection of the existing independent and heterogeneous networks and the infrastructure. However, considering the heterogeneity of the devices, communication technologies, network protocols, and platforms the interoperability of these networks is a challenge requiring more attention. In this paper, we propose the design of a novel Information-Centric Smart City architecture (iSmart), focusing on the demand of the future applications, such as efficient machineto-machine communication, low latency computation offloading, large data communication requirements, and advanced security. In designing iSmart, we use the Named-Data Networking (NDN) architecture as the underlying communication substrate to promote semantics-based communication and achieve seamless compute/data sharing

    Proactive content caching in future generation communication networks: Energy and security considerations

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    The proliferation of hand-held devices and Internet of Things (IoT) applications has heightened demand for popular content download. A high volume of content streaming/downloading services during peak hours can cause network congestion. Proactive content caching has emerged as a prospective solution to tackle this congestion problem. In proactive content caching, data storage units are used to store popular content in helper nodes at the network edge. This contributes to a reduction of peak traffic load and network congestion. However, data storage units require additional energy, which offers a challenge to researchers that intend to reduce energy consumption up to 90% in next generation networks. This thesis presents proactive content caching techniques to reduce grid energy consumption by utilizing renewable energy sources to power-up data storage units in helper nodes. The integration of renewable energy sources with proactive caching is a significant challenge due to the intermittent nature of renewable energy sources and investment costs. In this thesis, this challenge is tackled by introducing strategies to determine the optimal time of the day for content caching and optimal scheduling of caching nodes. The proposed strategies consider not only the availability of renewable energy but also temporal changes in network trac to reduce associated energy costs. While proactive caching can facilitate the reduction of peak trac load and the integration of renewable energy, cached content objects at helper nodes are often more vulnerable to malicious attacks due to less stringent security at edge nodes. Potential content leakage can lead to catastrophic consequences, particularly for cache-equipped Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) applications. In this thesis, the concept of \trusted caching nodes (TCNs) is introduced. TCNs cache popular content objects and provide security services to connected links. The proposed study optimally allocates TCNs and selects the most suitable content forwarding paths. Furthermore, a caching strategy is designed for mobile edge computing systems to support IoT task offloading. The strategy optimally assigns security resources to offloaded tasks while satisfying their individual requirements. However, security measures often contribute to overheads in terms of both energy consumption and delay. Consequently, in this thesis, caching techniques have been designed to investigate the trade-off between energy consumption and probable security breaches. Overall, this thesis contributes to the current literature by simultaneously investigating energy and security aspects of caching systems whilst introducing solutions to relevant research problems

    Software Defined Networks based Smart Grid Communication: A Comprehensive Survey

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    The current power grid is no longer a feasible solution due to ever-increasing user demand of electricity, old infrastructure, and reliability issues and thus require transformation to a better grid a.k.a., smart grid (SG). The key features that distinguish SG from the conventional electrical power grid are its capability to perform two-way communication, demand side management, and real time pricing. Despite all these advantages that SG will bring, there are certain issues which are specific to SG communication system. For instance, network management of current SG systems is complex, time consuming, and done manually. Moreover, SG communication (SGC) system is built on different vendor specific devices and protocols. Therefore, the current SG systems are not protocol independent, thus leading to interoperability issue. Software defined network (SDN) has been proposed to monitor and manage the communication networks globally. This article serves as a comprehensive survey on SDN-based SGC. In this article, we first discuss taxonomy of advantages of SDNbased SGC.We then discuss SDN-based SGC architectures, along with case studies. Our article provides an in-depth discussion on routing schemes for SDN-based SGC. We also provide detailed survey of security and privacy schemes applied to SDN-based SGC. We furthermore present challenges, open issues, and future research directions related to SDN-based SGC.Comment: Accepte
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