A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

A Low Latency Secure Communication Architecture for Microgrid Control




AuthorsKondoro Aron, Ben Dhaou Imed, Tenhunen Hannu, Mvungi Nerey

PublisherMDPI

Publication year2021

JournalEnergies

Journal name in sourceENERGIES

Journal acronymENERGIES

Article numberARTN 6262

Volume14

Issue19

Number of pages26

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/en14196262

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/67649301


Abstract
The availability of secure, efficient, and reliable communication systems is critical for the successful deployment and operations of new power systems such as microgrids. These systems provide a platform for implementing intelligent and autonomous algorithms that improve the power control process. However, building a secure communication system for microgrid purposes that is also efficient and reliable remains a challenge. Conventional security mechanisms introduce extra processing steps that affect performance by increasing the latency of microgrid communication beyond acceptable limits. They also do not scale well and can impact the reliability of power operations as the size of a microgrid grows. This paper proposes a low latency secure communication architecture for control operations in an islanded IoT-based microgrid that solves these problems. The architecture provides a secure platform that optimises the standard CoAP/DTLS implementation to reduce communication latency. It also introduces a traffic scheduler component that uses a fixed priority preemptive algorithm to ensure reliability as the microgrid scales up. The architecture is implemented on a lab-scale IoT-based microgrid prototype to test for performance and security. Results show that the proposed architecture can mitigate the main security threats and provide security services necessary for power control operations with minimal latency performance. Compared to other implementations using existing secure IoT protocols, our secure architecture was the only one to satisfy and maintain the recommended latency requirements for power control operations, i.e., 100 ms under all conditions.


Downloadable publication

This is an electronic reprint of the original article.
This reprint may differ from the original in pagination and typographic detail. Please cite the original version.





Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 14:13