How can biomimicry benefit power distribution networks ?

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Paper number

84

Working Group Number

Conference name

CIRED 2019

Conference date

3-6 June 2019

Conference location

Madrid, Spain

Peer-reviewed

Yes

Short title

Convener

Authors

Barbarin, Georges, Schneider Electric, France
Schmitt, Pierre-Michael, Schneider Electric, France

Abstract

What do human biology and electrical power distribution systems have in common? Perhaps surprisingly, quite a lot. These similarities can inspire electrical distribution networks’ design and management and risk minimization efforts. To understand why biomimicry helps utilities build smarter electrical substations, consider the functions of the human body.Our bodies are innately designed to mitigate the danger of a shutdown (death), run optimally, self maintain, and protect themselves from risk to give us the best chance of continued operation (life). Electrical distribution equipment and networks are designed in the same way, so employing biomimicry for switchgear modernization and maintenance and in the deployment of sensors and connected substation technology makes sense.The central nervous system integrates information from the entire body to coordinate activity, while the peripheral nervous system acts as a relay that connects the central nervous system to the limbs and organs.Likewise, an analogous ecosystem in the electrical distribution context also has similar layers that must communicate with each other. There’s the physical grid – the hardware, equipment, and assets in operation in the field – that is capable of upstream communication. This is fundamental for the grid’s survival and operations and functions much like a human heart. At the next level is edge control – systems that connect to, coordinate, and manage the way field equipment works – similar to how the autonomic nervous system communicates with downstream organs. At the highest position are the grid apps, analytics, and services that function like the brain

Table of content

Keywords

Publisher

AIM

Date

2019-06-03

Permanent link to this record

https://cired-repository.org/handle/20.500.12455/238
http://dx.doi.org/10.34890/467

ISSN

2032-9644

ISBN

978-2-9602415-0-1