156 research outputs found

    Internet of Things-aided Smart Grid: Technologies, Architectures, Applications, Prototypes, and Future Research Directions

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    Traditional power grids are being transformed into Smart Grids (SGs) to address the issues in existing power system due to uni-directional information flow, energy wastage, growing energy demand, reliability and security. SGs offer bi-directional energy flow between service providers and consumers, involving power generation, transmission, distribution and utilization systems. SGs employ various devices for the monitoring, analysis and control of the grid, deployed at power plants, distribution centers and in consumers' premises in a very large number. Hence, an SG requires connectivity, automation and the tracking of such devices. This is achieved with the help of Internet of Things (IoT). IoT helps SG systems to support various network functions throughout the generation, transmission, distribution and consumption of energy by incorporating IoT devices (such as sensors, actuators and smart meters), as well as by providing the connectivity, automation and tracking for such devices. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive survey on IoT-aided SG systems, which includes the existing architectures, applications and prototypes of IoT-aided SG systems. This survey also highlights the open issues, challenges and future research directions for IoT-aided SG systems

    Low-Power Wireless for the Internet of Things: Standards and Applications: Internet of Things, IEEE 802.15.4, Bluetooth, Physical layer, Medium Access Control,coexistence, mesh networking, cyber-physical systems, WSN, M2M

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    International audienceThe proliferation of embedded systems, wireless technologies, and Internet protocols have enabled the Internet of Things (IoT) to bridge the gap between the virtual and physical world through enabling the monitoring and actuation of the physical world controlled by data processing systems. Wireless technologies, despite their offered convenience, flexibility, low cost, and mobility pose unique challenges such as fading, interference, energy, and security, which must be carefully addressed when using resource-constrained IoT devices. To this end, the efforts of the research community have led to the standardization of several wireless technologies for various types of application domains depending on factors such as reliability, latency, scalability, and energy efficiency. In this paper, we first overview these standard wireless technologies, and we specifically study the MAC and physical layer technologies proposed to address the requirements and challenges of wireless communications. Furthermore, we explain the use of these standards in various application domains, such as smart homes, smart healthcare, industrial automation, and smart cities, and discuss their suitability in satisfying the requirements of these applications. In addition to proposing guidelines to weigh the pros and cons of each standard for an application at hand, we also examine what new strategies can be exploited to overcome existing challenges and support emerging IoT applications

    Building a test bed for simulation analysis for the internet of things

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    Mestrado com dupla diplomação com a Universidade Tecnológica e Federal do ParanáThe Internet of Things (IoT) enables the mix between the physical and informational world. Physical objects will be able to see, hear, think together, share information and coordinate decisions, without human interference in a variety of domains. To enable this vision of IoT in large scale is expected of the equipment to be low-cost, mobile, power efficient, computational constrained, and wireless communication enabled. This project performs an extensive overview of the state-of-the-art in communication technologies for IoT, simulation theory and tools. It also describes test bed for IoT simulation and its implementation. The simulation was built with Castalia Simulator (i.e. Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) network) and INET framework (i.e. IP network), both extends OMNeT++ features. There are two independent networks that communicate through files and exchange information about source, destination, payload and simulation time. Analyzing the outputs is possible to assure that the routing protocol that is provided in the Castalia Simulator does not provide any advantage in terms of packets loss, packets reception or energy consumption.A Internet das Coisas (IoT) permite a mistura entre o mundo físico e informacional. Objetos físicos serão capazes de ver, ouvir, pensar juntos, compartilhar informações e coordenar decisões, sem interferência humana em uma variedade de domínios. Para permitir essa visão de IoT em larga escala, espera-se que o equipamento seja de baixo custo, móvel, eficiente em termos de energia, com restrições computacionais e possibilite a comunicação sem fio. Este projeto faz uma extensa visão geral do estado da arte em tecnologias de comunicação para IoT, teoria de simulação e ferramentas. Também descreve o banco de testes para simulação de IoT e sua implementação. A simulação foi construída com o Simulador Castalia (ou seja, rede WSN) e o framework INET (ou seja, rede IP), ambos estendem os recursos do OMNeT ++. Existem duas redes independentes que se comunicam através de arquivos e trocam informações sobre origem, destino, carga útil e tempo de simulação. Analisando os resultados é possível garantir que o protocolo de roteamento que é fornecido no Simulador Castalia não oferece qualquer vantagem em termos de quebra de pacotes, recepção de pacotes ou consumo de energia

    Goodbye, ALOHA!

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    ©2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The vision of the Internet of Things (IoT) to interconnect and Internet-connect everyday people, objects, and machines poses new challenges in the design of wireless communication networks. The design of medium access control (MAC) protocols has been traditionally an intense area of research due to their high impact on the overall performance of wireless communications. The majority of research activities in this field deal with different variations of protocols somehow based on ALOHA, either with or without listen before talk, i.e., carrier sensing multiple access. These protocols operate well under low traffic loads and low number of simultaneous devices. However, they suffer from congestion as the traffic load and the number of devices increase. For this reason, unless revisited, the MAC layer can become a bottleneck for the success of the IoT. In this paper, we provide an overview of the existing MAC solutions for the IoT, describing current limitations and envisioned challenges for the near future. Motivated by those, we identify a family of simple algorithms based on distributed queueing (DQ), which can operate for an infinite number of devices generating any traffic load and pattern. A description of the DQ mechanism is provided and most relevant existing studies of DQ applied in different scenarios are described in this paper. In addition, we provide a novel performance evaluation of DQ when applied for the IoT. Finally, a description of the very first demo of DQ for its use in the IoT is also included in this paper.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    New Challenges in Quality of Services Control Architectures in Next Generation Networks

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    A mesura que Internet i les xarxes IP s'han anat integrant dins la societat i les corporacions, han anat creixent les expectatives de nous serveis convergents així com les expectatives de qualitat en les comunicacions. Les Next Generation Networks (NGN) donen resposta a les noves necessitats i representen el nou paradigma d'Internet a partir de la convergència IP. Un dels aspectes menys desenvolupats de les NGN és el control de la Qualitat del Servei (QoS), especialment crític en les comunicacions multimèdia a través de xarxes heterogènies i/o de diferents operadors. A més a més, les NGN incorporen nativament el protocol IPv6 que, malgrat les deficiències i esgotament d'adreces IPv4, encara no ha tingut l'impuls definitiu.Aquesta tesi està enfocada des d'un punt de vista pràctic. Així doncs, per tal de poder fer recerca sobre xarxes de proves (o testbeds) que suportin IPv6 amb garanties de funcionament, es fa un estudi en profunditat del protocol IPv6, del seu grau d'implementació i dels tests de conformància i interoperabilitat existents que avaluen la qualitat d'aquestes implementacions. A continuació s'avalua la qualitat de cinc sistemes operatius que suporten IPv6 mitjançant un test de conformància i s'implementa el testbed IPv6 bàsic, a partir del qual es farà la recerca, amb la implementació que ofereix més garanties.El QoS Broker és l'aportació principal d'aquesta tesi: un marc integrat que inclou un sistema automatitzat per gestionar el control de la QoS a través de sistemes multi-domini/multi-operador seguint les recomanacions de les NGN. El sistema automatitza els mecanismes associats a la configuració de la QoS dins d'un mateix domini (sistema autònom) mitjançant la gestió basada en polítiques de QoS i automatitza la negociació dinàmica de QoS entre QoS Brokers de diferents dominis, de forma que permet garantir QoS extrem-extrem sense fissures. Aquesta arquitectura es valida sobre un testbed de proves multi-domini que utilitza el mecanisme DiffServ de QoS i suporta IPv6.L'arquitectura definida en les NGN permet gestionar la QoS tant a nivell 3 (IP) com a nivell 2 (Ethernet, WiFi, etc.) de forma que permet gestionar també xarxes PLC. Aquesta tesi proposa una aproximació teòrica per aplicar aquesta arquitectura de control, mitjançant un QoS Broker, a les noves xarxes PLC que s'estan acabant d'estandarditzar, i discuteix les possibilitats d'aplicació sobre les futures xarxes de comunicació de les Smart Grids.Finalment, s'integra en el QoS Broker un mòdul per gestionar l'enginyeria del tràfic optimitzant els dominis mitjançant tècniques de intel·ligència artificial. La validació en simulacions i sobre un testbed amb routers Cisco demostra que els algorismes genètics híbrids són una opció eficaç en aquest camp.En general, les observacions i avenços assolits en aquesta tesi contribueixen a augmentar la comprensió del funcionament de la QoS en les NGN i a preparar aquests sistemes per afrontar problemes del món real de gran complexitat.A medida que Internet y las redes IP se han ido integrando dentro de la sociedad y las corporaciones, han ido creciendo las expectativas de nuevos servicios convergentes así como las expectativas de calidad en las comunicaciones. Las Next Generation Networks (NGN) dan respuesta a las nuevas necesidades y representan el nuevo paradigma de Internet a partir de la convergencia IP. Uno de los aspectos menos desarrollados de las NGN es el control de la Calidad del Servicio (QoS), especialmente crítico en las comunicaciones multimedia a través de redes heterogéneas y/o de diferentes operadores. Además, las NGN incorporan nativamente el protocolo IPv6 que, a pesar de las deficiencias y agotamiento de direcciones IPv4, aún no ha tenido el impulso definitivo.Esta tesis está enfocada desde un punto de vista práctico. Así pues, con tal de poder hacer investigación sobre redes de prueba (o testbeds) que suporten IPv6 con garantías de funcionamiento, se hace un estudio en profundidad del protocolo IPv6, de su grado de implementación y de los tests de conformancia e interoperabilidad existentes que evalúan la calidad de estas implementaciones. A continuación se evalua la calidad de cinco sistemas operativos que soportan IPv6 mediante un test de conformancia y se implementa el testbed IPv6 básico, a partir del cual se realizará la investigación, con la implementación que ofrece más garantías.El QoS Broker es la aportación principal de esta tesis: un marco integrado que incluye un sistema automatitzado para gestionar el control de la QoS a través de sistemas multi-dominio/multi-operador siguiendo las recomendaciones de las NGN. El sistema automatiza los mecanismos asociados a la configuración de la QoS dentro de un mismo dominio (sistema autónomo) mediante la gestión basada en políticas de QoS y automatiza la negociación dinámica de QoS entre QoS brokers de diferentes dominios, de forma que permite garantizar QoS extremo-extremo sin fisuras. Esta arquitectura se valida sobre un testbed de pruebas multi-dominio que utiliza el mecanismo DiffServ de QoS y soporta IPv6. La arquitectura definida en las NGN permite gestionar la QoS tanto a nivel 3 (IP) o como a nivel 2 (Ethernet, WiFi, etc.) de forma que permite gestionar también redes PLC. Esta tesis propone una aproximación teórica para aplicar esta arquitectura de control, mediante un QoS Broker, a las noves redes PLC que se están acabando de estandardizar, y discute las posibilidades de aplicación sobre las futuras redes de comunicación de las Smart Grids.Finalmente, se integra en el QoS Broker un módulo para gestionar la ingeniería del tráfico optimizando los dominios mediante técnicas de inteligencia artificial. La validación en simulaciones y sobre un testbed con routers Cisco demuestra que los algoritmos genéticos híbridos son una opción eficaz en este campo.En general, las observaciones y avances i avances alcanzados en esta tesis contribuyen a augmentar la comprensión del funcionamiento de la QoS en las NGN y en preparar estos sistemas para afrontar problemas del mundo real de gran complejidad.The steady growth of Internet along with the IP networks and their integration into society and corporations has brought with it increased expectations of new converged services as well as greater demands on quality in communications. The Next Generation Networks (NGNs) respond to these new needs and represent the new Internet paradigm from the IP convergence. One of the least developed aspects in the NGNs is the Quality of Service (QoS) control, which is especially critical in the multimedia communication through heterogeneous networks and/or different operators. Furthermore, the NGNs natively incorporate the IPv6 protocol which, despite its shortcomings and the depletion of IPv4 addresses has not been boosted yet.This thesis has been developed with a practical focus. Therefore, with the aim of carrying out research over testbeds supporting the IPv6 with performance guarantees, an in-depth study of the IPv6 protocol development has been conducted and its degree of implementation and the existing conformance and interoperability tests that evaluate these implementations have been studied. Next, the quality of five implementations has been evaluated through a conformance test and the basic IPv6 testbed has been implemented, from which the research will be carried out. The QoS Broker is the main contribution to this thesis: an integrated framework including an automated system for QoS control management through multi-domain/multi-operator systems according to NGN recommendations. The system automates the mechanisms associated to the QoS configuration inside the same domain (autonomous system) through policy-based management and automates the QoS dynamic negotiation between peer QoS Brokers belonging to different domains, so it allows the guarantee of seamless end-to-end QoS. This architecture is validated over a multi-domain testbed which uses the QoS DiffServ mechanism and supports IPv6.The architecture defined in the NGN allows QoS management at level 3 (IP) as well as at level 2 (e.g. Ethernet, WiFi) so it also facilitates the management of PLC networks. Through the use of a QoS Broker, this thesis proposes a theoretical approach for applying this control architecture to the newly standardized PLC networks, and discusses the possibilities of applying it over the future communication networks of the Smart Grids.Finally, a module for managing traffic engineering which optimizes the network domains through artificial intelligence techniques is integrated in the QoS Broker. The validations by simulations and over a Cisco router testbed demonstrate that hybrid genetic algorithms are an effective option in this area.Overall, the advances and key insights provided in this thesis help advance our understanding of QoS functioning in the NGNs and prepare these systems to face increasingly complex problems, which abound in current industrial and scientific applications

    Internet of Things Applications - From Research and Innovation to Market Deployment

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    The book aims to provide a broad overview of various topics of Internet of Things from the research, innovation and development priorities to enabling technologies, nanoelectronics, cyber physical systems, architecture, interoperability and industrial applications. It is intended to be a standalone book in a series that covers the Internet of Things activities of the IERC – Internet of Things European Research Cluster from technology to international cooperation and the global "state of play".The book builds on the ideas put forward by the European research Cluster on the Internet of Things Strategic Research Agenda and presents global views and state of the art results on the challenges facing the research, development and deployment of IoT at the global level. Internet of Things is creating a revolutionary new paradigm, with opportunities in every industry from Health Care, Pharmaceuticals, Food and Beverage, Agriculture, Computer, Electronics Telecommunications, Automotive, Aeronautics, Transportation Energy and Retail to apply the massive potential of the IoT to achieving real-world solutions. The beneficiaries will include as well semiconductor companies, device and product companies, infrastructure software companies, application software companies, consulting companies, telecommunication and cloud service providers. IoT will create new revenues annually for these stakeholders, and potentially create substantial market share shakeups due to increased technology competition. The IoT will fuel technology innovation by creating the means for machines to communicate many different types of information with one another while contributing in the increased value of information created by the number of interconnections among things and the transformation of the processed information into knowledge shared into the Internet of Everything. The success of IoT depends strongly on enabling technology development, market acceptance and standardization, which provides interoperability, compatibility, reliability, and effective operations on a global scale. The connected devices are part of ecosystems connecting people, processes, data, and things which are communicating in the cloud using the increased storage and computing power and pushing for standardization of communication and metadata. In this context security, privacy, safety, trust have to be address by the product manufacturers through the life cycle of their products from design to the support processes. The IoT developments address the whole IoT spectrum - from devices at the edge to cloud and datacentres on the backend and everything in between, through ecosystems are created by industry, research and application stakeholders that enable real-world use cases to accelerate the Internet of Things and establish open interoperability standards and common architectures for IoT solutions. Enabling technologies such as nanoelectronics, sensors/actuators, cyber-physical systems, intelligent device management, smart gateways, telematics, smart network infrastructure, cloud computing and software technologies will create new products, new services, new interfaces by creating smart environments and smart spaces with applications ranging from Smart Cities, smart transport, buildings, energy, grid, to smart health and life. Technical topics discussed in the book include: • Introduction• Internet of Things Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda• Internet of Things in the industrial context: Time for deployment.• Integration of heterogeneous smart objects, applications and services• Evolution from device to semantic and business interoperability• Software define and virtualization of network resources• Innovation through interoperability and standardisation when everything is connected anytime at anyplace• Dynamic context-aware scalable and trust-based IoT Security, Privacy framework• Federated Cloud service management and the Internet of Things• Internet of Things Application

    A critical analysis of research potential, challenges and future directives in industrial wireless sensor networks

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    In recent years, Industrial Wireless Sensor Networks (IWSNs) have emerged as an important research theme with applications spanning a wide range of industries including automation, monitoring, process control, feedback systems and automotive. Wide scope of IWSNs applications ranging from small production units, large oil and gas industries to nuclear fission control, enables a fast-paced research in this field. Though IWSNs offer advantages of low cost, flexibility, scalability, self-healing, easy deployment and reformation, yet they pose certain limitations on available potential and introduce challenges on multiple fronts due to their susceptibility to highly complex and uncertain industrial environments. In this paper a detailed discussion on design objectives, challenges and solutions, for IWSNs, are presented. A careful evaluation of industrial systems, deadlines and possible hazards in industrial atmosphere are discussed. The paper also presents a thorough review of the existing standards and industrial protocols and gives a critical evaluation of potential of these standards and protocols along with a detailed discussion on available hardware platforms, specific industrial energy harvesting techniques and their capabilities. The paper lists main service providers for IWSNs solutions and gives insight of future trends and research gaps in the field of IWSNs

    BLE Connectivity and its Multi-hop Extension for IoT Applications

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 공과대학 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2017. 8. 박세웅.Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) is one of the representative low-power communication protocols that are being used to provide wireless connectivity for resource constrained devices as part of Internet of Things (IoT). Despite its commercial adoption, BLE's current use is limited to short-range applications due to the lack of research about its coverage extension. In this dissertation, we investigate two issues that need to be addressed for BLE's network coverage extension and also consider a new application scenario using a BLE-based multi-hop network. First, we tackle the BLE connection maintenance and energy consumption problems by adaptively controlling one of BLE's link layer parameters (TCI ) under dynamic channel condition. We formulate an optimization problem to find an optimal TCI and design a connection interval adaptation mechanism for BLE to achieve high energy efficiency while maintaining robust connectivity. We evaluate our proposed solutions through testbed experiments and simulation which shows that it reduces energy consumption of BLE in dynamic channel environments. Secondly, we consider a protocol architecture that aims to run IPv6 routing protocol for low power and lossy networks (RPL) over BLE to construct BLE-based multi-hop networks. We design an adaptation layer between BLE and RPL which tightly couples RPL and BLE operation. We implement the adaptation layer in a Linux kernel to realize RPL over BLE. Through extensive experiments in an indoor testbed, we evaluate the performance of RPL over BLE and compare the performance results with that of RPL over IEEE 802.15.4 which shows signicant improvement. Lastly, we consider a new application scenario of BLE using the coverage extension of BLE based on multi-hop networking. We propose a novel layered architecture of Wi-Fi and BLE that constructs an energy efficient and high data rate supportable ad-hoc network for disaster communication. We implement the proposed architecture in Linux kernel and evaluate the performance through our indoor testbed. The result shows that our proposed solution reduces the average power consumption of nodes in the testbed compared to a conventional Wi-Fi ad-hoc network.1 Introduction 1  1.1 Motivation 1  1.2 Related Work 4  1.2.1 Low power consumption of BLE 4  1.2.2 BLE multi-hop networking 5  1.3 Contributions and Outline 6  2 CABLE: Connection Interval Adaptation for BLE in Dynamic Wireless Environments 10  2.1 Introduction 10  2.2 Background and Problem Statement 14  2.2.1 Link layer operation 14  2.2.2 Connection loss due to supervision timeout 16  2.2.3 BLE protocol stack and connection interval set- ting 17  2.2.4 Problem of BLE with xed connection interval 19  2.3 Connection Interval Optimization 22  2.3.1 Problem formulation 22  2.3.2 Problem solution 26  2.4 CABLE System Design 29  2.4.1 PER estimator 30  2.4.2 TCI adjuster 33  2.5 Performance Evaluation 34  2.5.1 Simulation results 35  2.5.2 Experimental results 40  2.6 Summary 41  3 A Synergistic Architecture for RPL over BLE 43  3.1 Introduction 43  3.2 Background 47 3.2.1 RPL operation 47  3.2.2 BLE link layer operation 48  3.2.3 6LoWPAN for BLE 50  3.3 Design of RPL over BLE 52  3.3.1 Synergistic Network Architecture for RPL over BLE 52  3.3.2 DIO broadcast over advertising channels 54   3.3.3 Routing metric for RPL over BLE 57  3.3.4 RPL parent change with BLE connection man- agement 60  3.4 ALBER Implementation 61  3.5 Performance Evaluation 64  3.5.1 Testbed environments 64  3.5.2 Comparison of RPL over BLE vs. RPL over 802.15.4 65  3.5.3 Eect of varying connection interval 70  3.5.4 Eect of ECI-based routing metric 71  3.6 Summary 73  4 Wi-BLE: A Novel Layered Architecture of Wi-Fi & BLE Networks for Disaster Communications 74  4.1 Introduction 74  4.2 Background 78  4.2.1 Application requirements of ad-hoc networks for disaster communications 78  4.2.2 Candidate wireless interfaces for ad-hoc networks 79  4.2.3 Wi-BLE use scenario 79  4.3 Wi-BLE System Overview 80  4.3.1 Protocol Architecture 80  4.3.2 Operation Overview 81  4.4 MABLE: Mobile Ad-hoc for BLE 82  4.4.1 Routing protocol selection for MABLE 82  4.4.2 BLE Channel Usage for AODV over BLE 84  4.5 Wi-BLE: Wi-Fi Ad-hoc over BLE networks 88  4.5.1 Wi-BLE control packet delivery over BLE path 88  4.5.2 Routing protocol for Wi-BLE 89  4.5.3 Wi-Fi on/o control for energy saving 92  4.6 Implementation 92  4.7 Performance Evaluation 94  4.7.1 Testbed Environments 94  4.7.2 Hop distance &Throughput 95  4.7.3 Power Consumption 97  4.8 Summary 98  5 Conclusion 100  5.1 Research Contributions 100  5.2 Further Research Direction 102Docto
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