Developing a Common Language for Communication between Disparate IoT Devices and Applications across Various Wireless Technologies Phil Beecher - President, Wi-Sun Alliance Matthew Michael - Sr. Director Product Management, Qualcomm Connected Experiences, Inc. - Chairman of AllSeen Alliance Gary Stuebing President, Avnu Alliance, IOT Standards Management, CTAO office, Cisco Systems December 6-8, 2015 Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Standards Based Interoperable Communications Networks Phil Beecher, Wi-SUN Alliance December 6-8, 2015 Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Wi-SUN Alliance Organization Established in April 2012 Incorporated as Not for Profit Organization (501c) in USA Regional organizations in Japan, Singapore, Europe 90+ member companies including Utilities, Government Institutions, Product Vendors, Silicon Vendors and Software Companies 60+ certified products 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 3
Wi-SUN Alliance Scope Define Communications Profiles based on Open Standards for Smart Utility Networks, Smart Cities, and related IoT networks Current focus is Peer to Peer Wireless communications based on IEEE 802.15.4g and ipv6 Implement a Testing and Certification program to ensure interoperable products 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 4
Wi-SUN Alliance HEMS Profile Adopted by Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) for wireless connection from Smart Meter to Home Energy Management system Now adopted by all Japanese Electric Utilities Deployment in approximately 60 million meters by 2020 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 5
FAN Wi-SUN Alliance Field Area Network (FAN) Profile Network Operations Center Public or Private WAN Backhaul (Cellular, WiMAX, Fiber/Ethernet) WAN IEEE 802.15.4g/e RF Mesh IEEE 802.15.4g/e RF Mesh IEEE 802.15.4g/e RF Mesh AMI Metering Transformer Monitoring Distribution Automation EV Charging Infrastructure Direct Load Control Outdoor Lighting Gas / Water Meters Distributed Generation SCADA Protection and Control Network 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 6
Wi-SUN Alliance Summary Wi-SUN Alliance defines communications profiles based on open standards Wi-SUN communications profiles are applicable to a range of IoT application areas Interoperability enables users to choose best of breed products 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 7
Developing a Common Language for Communication between Disparate IoT Devices and Applications across Various Wireless Technologies Matthew Michael Sr. Director Product Management Qualcomm Connected Experiences, Inc. Chairman of AllSeen Alliance December 6-8, 2015 Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Expectations for IoT are HUGE Connect Everything Devices (1) 30B by 2020 10B 2014 Industrial Health Revenue (1) $3T by 2020 Education Enterprise $1.5T 2014 Data (2) 44ZB by 2020 Automotive Consumers 4 ZB 2013 Sources: IDC 14 (1), EMC 14 (2) 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 9
Maximizing the Opportunity Extending Reach and Connectivity at the Edge Common Frameworks Flexible Secure / private Open 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 10
Developing a Common Language for IoT Service Layer Collaborative open source Secure edge discovery, connectivity and communication 200+ member companies 260+ individual contributors Certification program Works across verticals Examples: DSB, Gateway Agent, MQTT transport Application Layer Connectivity Framework Network Device & Edge IOT STACK (simplified view) 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 11
Device System Bridge Extending Interoperability Across Ecosystems Non-AllJoyn Devices Endpoints Z-Wave Devices Plugin Virtual AllJoyn Device Other Devices BACnet Stack Plugin Plugin Device System Bridge (DSB) Virtual AllJoyn Device Virtual AllJoyn Device Apps and Devices Pluggable design; BacNET, Z-Wave, BT bridge AllJoyn is a registered trademark of AllSeen Alliance, Inc. 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 12
Gateway Agent Enabling Secure Interactions Between Proximal & External / Cloud / /Remote Access Proximal network IoT Cloud Apps & Services Edge Devices GA DSB Note: GA & DSB are logical entities and can share a common HW platform or run independently Managed IoT Firewall 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 13
Summary Opportunity is huge Key foundational technologies are in place Extending reach and connectivity at the edge with a common language for IoT allows us to take full advantage of the opportunity Collaborative open development is key to achieve that goal 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 14
Developing a Common Language for Communication Between Disparate IoT Devices Practical Implementation Gary Stuebing IoT Standards, Cisco December 6-8, 2015 Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Real world IoT using Wireless Technologies What if? We could reduce stranded assets and extend the life of field devices even as technology and functional requirements change? Analytics could happen in the field, instead of datacenter? Field devices could monitor their own or other device s health and report (or self-heal) when there are issues? Field devices and systems could automatically announce themselves and securely interact with each other? New field devices could automatically provision themselves and discover other relevant systems to get necessary data from? Field devices could detect security intrusions and autonomously react to protect system from cascading events Material Published with Permission from Duke Energy 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 16
1 st Generation Smart Grid Deployment (2007) Connectivity to multiple devices w/ 3G backhaul IP-based node solution with multiple radios LV PLC AMI & 900MHz RF AMR Wi-Fi MV Sensors & Serial DA devices ~500k PLC meters ~150k Nodes w/ 3G, PLC, WiFi, 900Mhz ~10k WiFi MV Line Sensors 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 17
1 st Generation Smart Grid Deployment (2010) Streetlight Control LTE Node Retrofit for Cap-bank Weather Sensor w/ LTE Node Partial Discharge & Secondary Load Monitoring Wi-Fi Voltage Regulators w/ Multi-Carrier 3G Node 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 18
SUPPLY ELECTRIC GRID DEMAND Internet of Things Utility Platform Next Generation Smart Assets Smart Meter Transformer Other Nodes Line Sensor Distributed Energy Resources Capacitor Bank Intelligent Switch Street Light Smart Generation Continuous Emission Monitoring Weather Sensor X Open Field Message Bus (OpenFMB) Open Standards Node Radio CPU IP Network Internet Connectivity Distributed Intelligence Technology Approach 1. Internet Protocol 2. Translation 3. Common Dictionary 4. Security 5. Analytics UTILITY DATA CENTER Network Router Head End A Head End B Head End N 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 19 Data Center Message Bus
Coalition of the Willing Duke Energy is working with 26 vendors for 2016 DistribuTECH Launch At least 2 vendors per function 3 dynamic use-cases: Microgrid Optimization Seamless Island Transition Successful Reconnection Wired & Wireless Comms MQTT, DDS, AMQP Common Data Model (CIM: IEC 61868/70) 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 20
Coalition of the Willing Partners 2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 21
2015 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 22