US20060271244A1 - Methods and apparatus for retrieving energy readings from an energy monitoring device - Google Patents

Methods and apparatus for retrieving energy readings from an energy monitoring device Download PDF

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Publication number
US20060271244A1
US20060271244A1 US11/497,218 US49721806A US2006271244A1 US 20060271244 A1 US20060271244 A1 US 20060271244A1 US 49721806 A US49721806 A US 49721806A US 2006271244 A1 US2006271244 A1 US 2006271244A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
energy
power
monitoring device
devices
communications
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Abandoned
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US11/497,218
Inventor
Daniel Cumming
J. Forth
Arthur Wynans
Eric Haight
Douglas Ransom
Martin Hancock
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Power Measurement Ltd
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Power Measurement Ltd
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Publication date
Priority claimed from US10/752,467 external-priority patent/US7188003B2/en
Priority claimed from PCT/CA2004/000705 external-priority patent/WO2004099723A1/en
Application filed by Power Measurement Ltd filed Critical Power Measurement Ltd
Priority to US11/497,218 priority Critical patent/US20060271244A1/en
Publication of US20060271244A1 publication Critical patent/US20060271244A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R22/00Arrangements for measuring time integral of electric power or current, e.g. electricity meters
    • G01R22/06Arrangements for measuring time integral of electric power or current, e.g. electricity meters by electronic methods
    • G01R22/10Arrangements for measuring time integral of electric power or current, e.g. electricity meters by electronic methods using digital techniques
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01DMEASURING NOT SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR A SPECIFIC VARIABLE; ARRANGEMENTS FOR MEASURING TWO OR MORE VARIABLES NOT COVERED IN A SINGLE OTHER SUBCLASS; TARIFF METERING APPARATUS; MEASURING OR TESTING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G01D4/00Tariff metering apparatus
    • G01D4/002Remote reading of utility meters
    • G01D4/004Remote reading of utility meters to a fixed location
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R21/00Arrangements for measuring electric power or power factor
    • G01R21/133Arrangements for measuring electric power or power factor by using digital technique
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F21/00Security arrangements for protecting computers, components thereof, programs or data against unauthorised activity
    • G06F21/60Protecting data
    • G06F21/64Protecting data integrity, e.g. using checksums, certificates or signatures
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R19/00Arrangements for measuring currents or voltages or for indicating presence or sign thereof
    • G01R19/25Arrangements for measuring currents or voltages or for indicating presence or sign thereof using digital measurement techniques
    • G01R19/2513Arrangements for monitoring electric power systems, e.g. power lines or loads; Logging
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R22/00Arrangements for measuring time integral of electric power or current, e.g. electricity meters
    • G01R22/06Arrangements for measuring time integral of electric power or current, e.g. electricity meters by electronic methods
    • G01R22/061Details of electronic electricity meters
    • G01R22/063Details of electronic electricity meters related to remote communication
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02BCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO BUILDINGS, e.g. HOUSING, HOUSE APPLIANCES OR RELATED END-USER APPLICATIONS
    • Y02B90/00Enabling technologies or technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
    • Y02B90/20Smart grids as enabling technology in buildings sector
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y04INFORMATION OR COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES HAVING AN IMPACT ON OTHER TECHNOLOGY AREAS
    • Y04SSYSTEMS INTEGRATING TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO POWER NETWORK OPERATION, COMMUNICATION OR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES FOR IMPROVING THE ELECTRICAL POWER GENERATION, TRANSMISSION, DISTRIBUTION, MANAGEMENT OR USAGE, i.e. SMART GRIDS
    • Y04S20/00Management or operation of end-user stationary applications or the last stages of power distribution; Controlling, monitoring or operating thereof
    • Y04S20/30Smart metering, e.g. specially adapted for remote reading

Definitions

  • these units may include the different tenants within the building or the common loads for the facility, such as the elevators or HVAC systems.
  • these units may include the different production lines, machines or processes within the facility.
  • an allocation based on actual measurements using appropriate monitoring devices may result in more accurate and useful information as well as a more equitable cost distribution.
  • monitoring devices may be read manually, which does not increase the installation cost, manual data collection may increase on-going/operational costs.
  • monitoring devices may be interconnected and be automatically read via a communications link.
  • typical communication links require wiring to interconnect the devices which increases the installation cost.
  • a particular tenant in the building may wish to verify that they are being billed correctly by reading the energy meter or other energy monitoring device that is accumulating their energy usage. This may be a straightforward, although labor intensive and cumbersome, process with a typical energy meter which provides a display viewable by the tenant.
  • mesh is a network topology in which devices are connected with many redundant interconnections between network nodes. Effectively, each network node acts as a repeater/router with respect to received communications where the device is not the intended recipient in order to facilitate communications between devices across the network.
  • wireless interconnections permits simpler and cost-effective implementation of mesh topologies wherein each device is a node and wirelessly interconnects with at least some of the other devices within its proximity using RF based links.
  • Mesh networking technologies generally fall into two categories: high-speed, high bandwidth; and low speed, low bandwidth, low power. The first category of devices are typically more complex and costly that the second. Since energy monitoring does not typically require high speed/high bandwidth communication, the second category of devices is often sufficient in terms of data throughput.
  • Energy monitoring devices may include electrical energy meters that measure at least one of kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVA demand, kVAR demand, voltage, current, etc. Energy monitoring devices may also include devices that measure the consumption of water, air, gas and/or steam.
  • FIG. 1 depicts a block diagram of a commercial building incorporating the system of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 depicts a block diagram of the internal circuitry of an example of an energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 depicts a block diagram of a first procedure retrieving a verified energy reading from the energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 depicts a block diagram of a second procedure retrieving a verified energy reading from the energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 5-6 depict an exemplary method of mounting a monitoring device according to one embodiment.
  • FIGS. 7-8 depict exemplary commissioning reports according to one embodiment.
  • FIGS. 9A-9C depict an exemplary CT locking device.
  • FIG. 10 depicts exemplary voltage waveforms and time relationships for several possible current waveforms according to one embodiment.
  • FIG. 11 depicts an exemplary voltage displacement device for use with the disclosed embodiments.
  • FIG. 12 depicts a block diagram of an alternate commercial building incorporating the system of the present invention.
  • FIG. 13 depicts an exemplary process for using assumed data values in computations according to one embodiment.
  • the phrase “coupled with” is defined to mean directly connected to or indirectly connected through one or more intermediate components. Such intermediate components may include both hardware and software based components. Further, to clarify the use in the pending claims and to hereby provide notice to the public, the phrases “at least one of ⁇ A>, ⁇ B>, . . . and ⁇ N>” or “at least one of ⁇ A>, ⁇ B>, . . . ⁇ N>, or combinations thereof” are defined by the Applicant in the broadest sense, superceding any other implied definitions herebefore or hereinafter unless expressly asserted by the Applicant to the contrary, to mean one or more elements selected from the group comprising A, B, . . . and N, that is to say, any combination of one or more of the elements A, B, . . . or N including any one element alone or in combination with one or more of the other elements which may also include, in combination, additional elements not listed.
  • a public key is a number, formula, algorithm, function, etc. that is made, or intended to be, publicly available, i.e. made available to any user that wants it.
  • a private key is a number, formula, algorithm, function, etc. that is intended to be kept private and is protected in some way from access. This protection may be in the form of secrecy, an enclosure, encryption, difficulty in access, etc. The more difficult it is to circumvent the protection, the better, however it will be appreciated that the utility of the disclosed examples is not dependent on the quality of the protection the private key.
  • An energy monitoring device that is designed to transmit its measurement values may not be accessible to be manually read by a person. This may be due to the fact that the energy monitoring device does not have a display or is otherwise physically inaccessible, and although the device may provide a communications pathway (wired or wireline) allowing it to be accessed by the energy provider, the device may not provide a direct communications pathway for the user. This causes a problem in that the user/consumer of the energy being monitored by the energy monitoring device may be left with no way of verifying that they are being billed accurately for the usage that their respective energy monitoring device is measuring. For instance, a configuration error may result in the user being billed based on an incorrect or mis-configured energy monitoring device or the user may simply not trust the energy provider to provide an accurate accounting of energy consumed.
  • Public/private keys may be used for authenticating a message sent from one computer to another computer over communications pathways such as the Internet.
  • a message can be authenticated by performing a function (such as a hash) on the message data with a private key of one computer.
  • a second computer can then verify the origin of the message by performing a corresponding function on the results of the first function and the message data using the first computer's public key.
  • FIG. 1 depicts an exemplary commercial office building 100 for use with the disclosed embodiments.
  • the commercial office building 100 has a number of floors 110 .
  • Each floor may contain an electrical room 130 .
  • Within each electrical room 130 there may be one or more energy monitoring devices 120 within an energy monitoring system 101 . It will be appreciated that the location of the energy monitoring devices 120 is implementation dependent and that they need not be located in an electrical room 130 .
  • the energy monitoring devices 120 communicate among each other to form a mesh network, depicted in FIG. 1 by multiple communications links 140 shown between the energy monitoring devices 120 .
  • communications links 140 may be used between monitoring devices 120 and that the availability of a communications link 140 between any two monitoring devices 120 may fluctuate depending upon conditions such as interference, etc.
  • Repeaters 155 may also be provided to facilitate communications between two devices 120 which may not otherwise be able to communicate due to distance, interference, etc.
  • one device 120 may have two antennas which operate at different power levels, gains, frequencies, modulation schemes, etc. to overcome interference, distance, etc.
  • One of the antennas may be connected to a long cable (such as a coaxial cable) in order that the antenna may be located remotely from the device 120 in a more effective location for transmission/reception than the device 120 .
  • the architecture may provide a wireline segment 156 where communications between two devices are not possible otherwise.
  • the mesh network may use the wireline segment 156 in a similar fashion to the communication links 140 .
  • the wireline segment 156 may be implemented using power line carrier techniques over the office building 100 power lines or using standard wireline communications/networking architectures such as RS-485, RS-232, Ethernet, etc.
  • the device 120 may facilitate the replacement of its antennas such that for a given installation location, flexible, such as rubber encased or flexible wire, adjustable, directional, high gain, or different propagation pattern antennas may be substituted to facilitate more reliable communications. Further, antenna enhancing devices or devices which enhance RF transmission by utilizing proximate structural elements such as metal casings, glass windows, etc., may also be used
  • the mesh network also encompasses a gateway 150 which facilitates communications with a computer 160 or other computing device.
  • the computer 160 may communicate energy data and other data over a LAN 170 .
  • the computer 160 and gateway 150 communicate over a serial or other form of communication link.
  • the gateway 150 may interface with the LAN 170 directly and the computer 160 may be connected to the LAN 170 in a different part of the building 100 and communicate with the gateway 150 over the LAN 170 .
  • the computer 160 may receive a time reference from a GPS satellite 185 .
  • the GPS satellite 185 signal may be received by an energy monitoring device 120 , gateway 150 or repeater 155 within the mesh network. In this alternate case, the time within the alternate device becomes the reference for the energy monitoring system 101 .
  • the LAN 170 may interface to a WAN 171 such as the Internet.
  • the gateway 150 may, for example, be located in a chief engineer's office where a connection to the LAN 170 is readily available. There may be more than one gateway 150 in the energy monitoring system 101 facilitating extraction of data from the system at more than one point in the mesh network.
  • the gateways 150 may communicate over the LAN 170 to a concentrator that aggregates information from all the gateways.
  • a data aggregation device which may be a portable communications device 180 , or other device coupled with the mesh network such as the gateway 150 or computer 160 , or software executing thereon, provides the ability to gather network status/statistical information from the mesh network via self/automated reporting by the devices which make up the network.
  • self-reported data may include perceived signal strength, delivery delays, multiple or confusing responses, non-responsive or slow responding nodes, communications errors, etc. Further, this data may include both current and historical data collected over a period of time. Such reporting facilitates the identification of weak network links, failing nodes, redundant paths, etc.
  • the reporting may also take place via the display or local communications connection of the particular device to allow a physically proximate user to assess and view the network status as perceived by that particular device.
  • each device may report the status information of other devices as well, such as other nodes/devices which are proximate to the particular device.
  • this reported data may be collected/aggregated and reported to a user to present an overall network status of the entire network, or a particular portion thereof, such as by a graphical presentation or the like which shows failing links, links with high error rates, low signal strength, etc. possibly using colors or other visual indicators.
  • diagnostic packets may be sent or requested from each node over the wireless link containing data used by the gateway to identify weak or failing links or nodes in the radio network.
  • the diagnostic packets may contain such information as signal strength of all neighboring nodes in priority of use and number of redundant paths. This data would then be used by the gateway to determine if additional repeaters are needed in specific locations.
  • diagnostic packets are capable of being directed over particular network paths of the mesh network to focus diagnostic activity on particular areas of the network.
  • the capability to generate an automated commissioning report from the different devices is provided.
  • the commissioning report is generated by first obtaining assorted real time device data from all of the operating devices and then analyzing the real time values for validity.
  • the real time device data may include RMS current and voltage readings, frequency, apparent (VA) power, real (W) power and reactive (VAR) power and power factor.
  • VA apparent
  • W real
  • VAR reactive
  • angles can be determined between voltage and current phases. For example, if the real power is negative and in the installation it is known to be positive, i.e. since power is being delivered, this may indicate that the current transformer (“CT”) could be reversed.
  • CT current transformer
  • a warning would be provided indicating that the CT phase is reversed.
  • every device in the installation is automatically interrogated when the device is initially detected in order to provide an entry for the commissioning report.
  • Expert system software is provided at the point of data aggregation which uses common sense relationships to analyze the data and determine if the readings are reasonable. The installer will go over the commissioning report and evaluate each error or warning for validity. For example, if voltage and current from I 2 are reported to be zero on a floor/panel, and the installer knows there are no loads on the circuit, then the reading is reasonable. However if there is expected to be a reading, then there is something wrong with the CT, connections or configuration and the installer can take corrective action.
  • An exemplary table based commissioning report is shown in FIG. 7 .
  • the commissioning report may be further enhanced by providing relative phase angles between all the current and voltage phases.
  • This information may be provided by a device such as the ION 6100 power meter, manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd., located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada. Using the phase angles, swapped current or voltage phases may be easily determined.
  • the commissioning report may simply provide a vector diagram (as found on ION 7500 power meter, also manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd.) for each device with an appropriate OK, WARNING or ERROR message. This would reduce the clutter of a large number of real time reading values.
  • FIG. 8 shows an exemplary vector based commissioning report.
  • the operating conditions of a mesh network radio can change due to near body effects, temperature, interference, fading and multi-path, etc. If node reception, i.e. signal strength or connection quality, is close to the operating limit of the radio, then small changes of the operating conditions may render a node non-communicating.
  • the use of a variable power mesh network node is provided to validate the correct operation of the system at a reduced power level.
  • the system is switched to a lower power mode which operates the radios at a lower power level than the radios are normally capable of.
  • the system is switched to the normal operating mode at the normal radio power.
  • the mesh network node power will be increased to a higher (normal) power level assuring that the reception and transmission of mesh network data is well above any marginal radio operating parameter.
  • the monitoring devices feature the capability to be located a inside or proximate to a circuit breaker with the monitoring device's current transducers being coupled with the breaker's loads and sending data to the monitoring device/meter.
  • the current transducers also feature mesh network capability, i.e. RF communications capabilities as described herein, and communications between the device/meter and the current transducers is accomplished via a mesh communications network or other medium.
  • the device/meter is physically configured to fit within a particular form-factor of the breaker panel.
  • the mesh network may include nodes mounted to elevators, or other moving mechanical systems, and utilizing the movement of the elevator to bring the elevator-mounted node within a communications-proximity to portions of the mesh network which are otherwise inaccessible.
  • the elevator mounted node may act as a store and forward device facilitating communications between other network devices as connections are established and lost due to its movement.
  • the elevator mounted node may store data from particular devices until the elevator moves to another location where forwarding of the data is possible or alternatively, the elevator mounted node may use alternate communications means such as higher power RF or wireline communications to forward the data.
  • the mesh network of monitoring devices further include a capability to share common area usage charges based on actual or more closely approximated usage of common areas.
  • the monitoring devices or central aggregation device may feature the capability to discern usage of common areas by particular tenants, or at least make approximations of such usage. Where reasonable approximations of particular tenant usage may be determined and associated with particular consumption, that consumption may be appropriately charged to the particular tenant. For example, power consumption by the elevators may be apportioned to tenants by the floors which they occupy such that a tenant which occupies multiple floors or is a frequent elevator user is apportioned a more appropriate amount of the charges associated with operating the elevators.
  • a user 190 may transport a portable communication device 180 around the building 100 .
  • This portable communication device 180 may be used to read energy registers from the various energy monitoring devices.
  • the portable communication device 180 and the energy monitoring device 120 may both have indicators (such as LEDs) on them that light, or otherwise signal, when communication is established between the two devices. This indicates to the user that they are in communication with the correct energy monitoring device 120 .
  • the portable communication device 180 may read a secondary register from the energy monitoring device 120 which is a hash of the energy registers and a pattern such as the private key of the energy monitoring device 120 . If the pattern is known only to the energy monitoring device and a system such as a billing system within a utility, the registers within the portable communication device will be difficult to tamper with without detection.
  • the secondary register may appear to the user of the portable communication device 180 as just another register such that the user is not aware that the secondary register may be used for tamper detection.
  • the portable communication device 180 may be a handheld meter reader.
  • a handheld device for performing network/device related tasks, such as optimizing monitoring device (or antenna) locations for optimal communication performance, performing routine monitoring of network status, determining or monitoring for specific device availability or activity, determining device locations (by proximity or by using GPS capabilities), communicating with devices via the mesh network and/or direct/local device interfaces, such as for setting up/initializing devices, and acting as a mesh enabled data display.
  • network/device related tasks such as optimizing monitoring device (or antenna) locations for optimal communication performance, performing routine monitoring of network status, determining or monitoring for specific device availability or activity, determining device locations (by proximity or by using GPS capabilities), communicating with devices via the mesh network and/or direct/local device interfaces, such as for setting up/initializing devices, and acting as a mesh enabled data display.
  • the handheld radio When installing wireless meters/nodes it may be advantageous for the electrician or commissioning engineer to have a separate handheld radio that is used to determine suitable positioning of the devices being installed.
  • the handheld radio would be able to communicate with the network being installed and have a faster rate of communication with the gateway 150 .
  • the rate of communication with the gateway 150 could be configurable to suit all sizes of networks.
  • the handheld radio may have a display or some other user interface such as LED's to help determine radio link quality into the network.
  • each device being installed could have a deployment mode where its rate of communication to the gateway 150 would be faster for a period of time, thereby giving the installer more feedback as to the success and quality of the installation.
  • the device could have a button that is used to activate the deployment mode for this period of time.
  • the installer would then be able to move the device around until a suitable position is found, with the device and/or gateway determining and reporting the status of the communications link at a more frequent rate than might be had in the normal operating mode.
  • the installer would be aware of a suitable position through data reported by the device, such as via LED's or the display on device.
  • Deployment mode may only last for a period of time that is sufficient to find acceptable location and communicate with the network.
  • the deployment mode may automatically shut off to prevent installed devices being left in deployment mode.
  • the gateway 150 is installed.
  • Devices can then be installed from the gateway 150 out so that as each device is installed, they are able to communicate with the gateway 150 ;
  • the gateway 150 may have a deployment mode where statistics are gathered for each node in the network.
  • the gateway may perform ping statistics on nodes, request diagnostic packets containing such things as signal strength, # of hops etc. After meters are installed, the gateway would then have to be taken out of deployment mode to gather energy information.
  • Locating installed devices may prove to be difficult especially if a meter is installed in a location different than the intended location.
  • each meter could be outfitted with GPS chips. The location of the device could then be reported through the wireless link. A handheld GPS unit could then be used to assist in locating the device.
  • FIG. 2 shows a block diagram of an energy monitoring device 120 according to one embodiment.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 includes electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270 .
  • the electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270 are operative to interface with power conductors which supply electrical energy to a certain load or area of the building 100 . This interface may be direct or through appropriate current or voltage transformers. In alternative embodiments, the energy monitoring device may lack either the electrical current or electrical voltage interfaces 210 , 270 depending upon the implementation and monitoring requirements of the device 120 .
  • the energy monitoring device 120 further includes an analog to digital converter 220 , a micro-controller 230 coupled with the analog to digital converter 220 , and RF communications circuitry 240 coupled with the microcontroller 230 .
  • the electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270 scale the signals from the power conductors to voltage levels compatible with the analog to digital converter 220 .
  • the analog to digital converter 220 provides digital representations of the voltage and current in the power conductors to microcontroller 230 .
  • the microcontroller 230 uses these signals, calculates at least one power parameter such as kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVA demand, kVAR demand, etc.
  • the microcontroller 230 transmits this power parameter through RF communications circuitry 240 through the mesh network and gateway 150 to computer 160 .
  • the computer 150 may send configuration and command data (such as demand reset) to the energy monitoring devices 120 through the mesh network.
  • the microcontroller 230 also maintains time for the energy monitoring device 100 in a memory register 280 which may be internal to and/or external to the microcontroller 230 .
  • the microcontroller 230 also maintains a private key 281 in internal and/or external memory.
  • the energy monitoring device 100 also contains a power supply 260 which may interface to the same voltage signals as the voltage interface circuitry 270 or to an alternative power source.
  • the power supply 260 may incorporate a battery or capacitor to facilitate operation when operating power is lost.
  • the power supply 260 may also incorporate crystal radio type circuitry as an alternate source of operating power such that RF power present from local AM radio stations may be utilized to power the energy monitoring device 120 .
  • Additional circuitry 250 such as wireline communications, I/O circuitry, etc.
  • a label 282 is provided on the outside of the energy monitoring device 120 .
  • the label may provide the public key corresponding to the private key 281 .
  • the public key may be shown on a display coupled to the microcontroller 230 or periodically broadcast over the communications links 140 forming the mesh network, either automatically or in response to a request.
  • the public key and associated private key may be periodically changed by the microcontroller 230 .
  • the microcontroller 230 may use A/D 220 readings, RF noise readings, etc. as random numbers to generate these public/private key pairs or, alternatively, the key pairs may be inserted during manufacture or may be input to the energy monitoring device 120 using other methods.
  • a voltage displacement device is utilized to allow any piece of monitoring equipment to be connected to a voltage conductor without the need to power down the line to be monitored.
  • This piece of equipment could be an integral part of the monitoring devices voltage leads or a separate device that would allow for a galvanic connection between the voltage source and the monitoring device.
  • An exemplary voltage displacement device 1102 is shown in FIG. 11 attached to a power line 1104 .
  • the voltage displacement device 1102 pierces the power conductor 1104 , in a safe and insulated manner, to provide a means of powering the monitoring device as well as providing a signal to monitor and/or measure.
  • the device 1102 is clamped and locked to the power conductor 1104 utilizing a locking/clamping mechanism 1106 in a manner that would require a tool for removal, thereby preventing unauthorized persons from tampering or removing the connection. Even when local electrical codes, procedures and/or standards require powering down a conductor before adding a connection to it, the voltage displacement device may save installation time and cost since no splicing, terminal connections, etc. are necessary to make the connection.
  • a power meter which includes multiple radios for redundant operation in case of a failure or to facilitate communications over multiple RF channels simultaneously.
  • a low power and a high power radio possibly similar to the low/high power radio described above for device installation, may be provided, wherein the device determines the optimum radio to use based on ambient environmental conditions, time of day or other trigger.
  • nodes in the main radio network stop communicating energy/power data there may be an alternate method to extract data manually or through some other low cost method.
  • Due to the nature of mesh networks if nodes in the middle of the network lose power, all nodes that communicate through those nodes may also stop communicating.
  • Using a point to point radio technology would enable a person to go from floor to floor collecting energy/power data from the non-communicating devices until the mesh wireless network problem is resolved.
  • the second radio technology could be Bluetooth, 802.11x (a, b or g), infrared, or similar networking technology, so that the data collector could use a handheld device to communicate with a single device if the address is known (point-to-point).
  • the gateway device 150 may provide a firewall capability, or this capability may provided by a separate device logically located so as to be able to control and contain network traffic, which prevents unauthorized access to the mesh network from an external network, such as via the gateway device.
  • the firewall device may further permit limited unauthenticated wireless access or limit access based on the level of security or level of trust in a given entity or method of access.
  • the department responsible for internal networks will be wary of attaching devices to their internal network. However, this department may be receptive to providing a network connection to a demilitarized zone or directly to the internet.
  • the firewall within or coupled to the gateway protects the gateway 150 and mesh network devices from unauthorized access.
  • the gateway may report to the computer (which may be within the corporate network) through protocols such as SMTP, HTTP, etc. which most corporate firewalls do not block.
  • WI-FI wireless technology
  • the capability for a monitoring device or other node to act as a gateway for legacy devices, which do not feature the capability to communicate via the mesh network is provided.
  • the gateway-enabled device may act as a simple conduit allowing bi-directional communications with the legacy device as if the legacy device were itself on the network. This may be accomplished via protocol encapsulation.
  • the gateway-enabled device may act as a master device, server or other intermediary which mediates communications between the network and the legacy device(s). For example, the gateway-enabled device may aggregate data retrieved from multiple legacy devices and pass the aggregate onto the network.
  • a gateway device that supports both wireless technology and multiple/single RS-485 connections for legacy devices or in areas were wireless does not work.
  • the gateway device may act as a single data collector for multiple nodes communicating via RS-485 and wireless links.
  • the gateway device may be an application specific device for bridging other devices onto the mesh network or may be an additional function provided by a mesh network node, such as the monitoring device described above.
  • a monitoring device or other node device is provided with flexible power options allowing it to draw operating power from various sources, without interfering with those power sources. This adds to the flexibility of the device to be placed in locations which may not have convenient sources of operating power, the sources of operating power may not be reliable or stable, and/or the sources of operating power are the same as that being monitored and isolation of the device is desirable.
  • sources of electrical power may include emergency power sources such as power for exit or emergency lighting systems, solar power (via a window or ambient lighting), telephone system power, battery power, RF power (similar to the operation of Radio Frequency Identification Devices (“RFID”) or crystal radio sets) or combinations thereof. In this way, there is reasonable assurance that the device will receive a constant uninterrupted supply of operating power.
  • RFID Radio Frequency Identification Devices
  • Such devices may be further provided with flexible mounting options such as the ability to be mounted to a light bulb socket or wall socket/outlet. The ability to lock the device in place and draw operating power therefrom may also be provided.
  • An example repeater 155 that may be plugged into a wall 506 outlet 502 having one or more power sockets 504 is shown in FIGS. 5 and 6 .
  • the repeater features an antenna 508 and power connectors 510 .
  • the repeater 155 draws power from at least one of the sockets 504 and is secured in place with a replacement screw 514 for the wall outlet 502 .
  • the repeater 155 can thus not easily be removed either accidentally or intentionally.
  • the screw 514 may incorporate a one-directional drive engagement to further discourage removal.
  • the repeater 155 may also provide pass through outlets 512 such that the outlet 502 can still be used. In an embodiment which fits into a light socket, a pass through socket may be provided to allow the socket to be used for illumination purposes.
  • FIGS. 9A-9C depicts an exemplary CT 900 having a revenue lock mechanism 955 .
  • the CT includes two interlocking portions 925 930 , each of which come together to encircle the power line 903 to measure the current passing there-through.
  • the interlocking portions 925 930 each feature a locking hole 955 .
  • each portion come into alignment when the portions 925 930 are assembled around the power line 903 thereby allowing a sealing device 950 , such as a lock or locking wire, to be fed through both holes 955 preventing removal of the CT without breaking the locking mechanism 950 and/or causing indication of tampering.
  • a sealing device 950 such as a lock or locking wire
  • the capability to update and/or modify the firmware of a monitoring device or other mesh network node via a mesh network is provided.
  • the particular monitoring device(s) or other mesh network node(s) to be upgrade/modified may be instructed to enter an upgrade/modify mode. Upgraded or modified software/firmware may then be transmitted via the network to the device as one or more packets.
  • the device(s) receives and assembles these packets into a memory, re-requesting packets that are received with errors and determining and re-requesting missing packets. Once the new code has been fully transferred, the device is instructed to begin executing the new code.
  • the device may validate or otherwise authenticate the code and may further perform functions to ensure that the device can recover should an error occur, such as by performing a data backup operation.
  • the special upgrade mode is unnecessary.
  • the packets of new code contain an indicator to the device as such. When the device sees such packets, it writes them to its memory store and assembles the complete code, re-requesting errant packets and tracking and re-requesting missing packets. Once all of the packets have been received, as determined by an indicator which tells the device how many were to be received or by an packet denoted as the last packet sent, the device automatically switches over to the new code. Prior to switching over to the new code, the device may validate the new code, or otherwise perform an authentication. Further, the device may perform a backup operation of any stored data to ensure that recovery is possible if an error occurs.
  • a monitoring device which is capable of utilizing assumed voltage readings in situations where it is not possible to determine actual voltage readings from the circuit being monitored. This capability allows the monitoring device to operate until it becomes possible to connect it to the voltage terminals of the circuit to be monitored, or operate indefinitely without connection to the voltage terminals, depending upon the application.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 it is often necessary to power down the circuit to be monitored so that voltage connections can be made to the energy monitoring device. Otherwise, the installer may be exposed to hazardous voltages and/or the device 120 may experience an unexpected power surge on its inputs upon connection, thereby damaging the device.
  • installation of the current connections can often be accomplished with the circuit energized when using non-contact sensors, such as “clamp-on” CTs which rely on induced current flow, as the risk of injury or damage is lessened.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 provides the ability to estimate power and/or energy readings when only the current inputs are connected. As described, this estimated-operation may be used on a temporary or permanent basis. If used on a permanent basis, the energy monitoring device 120 may be provided without voltage inputs so as to lower manufacturing costs. This may occur, for example, where the application demands may be met using assumed voltage values and, accordingly, the user does not wish to pay for or install fully functional devices 120 .
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may be programmed with an assumed voltage and/or power factor based on the particular load it is monitoring ( 1302 ).
  • the device 120 may be programmed prior to, or after, connecting the current inputs to the circuit to be monitored ( 1304 ).
  • the assumed value(s) is/are stored in a memory within the device and used by the processor as the basis for computing other data regarding the monitored circuit, as will be described.
  • Programming assumed values into the device 120 may be accomplished directly using direct communications inputs provided by the device 120 or through the mesh network or other network communications input. Once programmed, the device switches into an assumed-value mode of operation, either manually or automatically, as described above ( 1306 ).
  • the assumed voltage and/or power factor values may then be utilized by the device 120 to perform the requisite power and/or energy calculations ( 1308 ).
  • the computed results may then be reported as per the normal operation of the device 120 ( 1310 ).
  • the reported results may include an indicator which indicates that the calculations were based on assumed values and may further indicate a margin of error as such.
  • multiple power factors, for different load currents are provided and the energy monitoring device 120 interpolates between these power factors based on the current present in the circuit being monitored.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may be provided with an assumed voltage of 480 VAC, and an assumed power factor of 0.84 at full load current (e.g.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may then interpolate the power factor to provide interpolated values for use in power and/or energy calculations based on actual current values which may range between the programmed assumed values or outside of them.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may be programmed with an assumed voltage waveform and time relationship to the actual waveform representative of the actual current present in the circuit being monitored.
  • FIG. 10 shows several example voltage waveforms and tine relationships 890 for several possible current waveforms 895 .
  • the energy monitoring device may use techniques such as fuzzy logic, artificial intelligence, point by point comparison, etc. to determine the closest match current waveform in a stored suite of waveforms and then use the corresponding voltage waveform including the assumed phase or time relationship to the current waveform in power and/or energy calculations.
  • an assumed voltage magnitude may be programmed into the energy monitoring device 120 over the mesh network or the energy monitoring device 120 may be manufactured for a given voltage.
  • This voltage magnitude may then be applied to the assumed voltage waveform during the calculation of power and/or energy (ie., each point in the assumed voltage waveform may be multiplied by a constant such that the rms value of the voltage waveform used in the power/energy calculations is the same as the voltage magnitude provided).
  • an indicator may be appended to all calculation results to indicate to a user or a data aggregation system that the data that the monitoring device 120 is producing is based on assumed values. Further, a visual indicator on the monitoring device 120 itself may indicate such operation as well.
  • the assumed values are stored in a memory within the device 120 and referenced by the device 120 for performing calculations as described when the device 120 is placed in a “assumed voltage” mode of operation, either automatically or manually by a user via the device's 120 user interface or remotely over a network.
  • This mode of operation may automatically be activated when the device 120 is suitably programmed with assumed data values and the device receives inputs on its current inputs but not on its voltage inputs, such as when the voltage inputs are not connected or the inputs or connections to the circuit fail or otherwise become disconnected.
  • assumed values may be stored as digital values which bypass the device's 120 analog to digital converter to be directly input into the processor of the device 120 or the assumed values may be stored in an analog form and act as pseudo inputs to the analog to digital converter when actual voltage measurements are not present.
  • assumed voltage values are input into the monitoring device 120 by attaching a dummy voltage generator to the voltage inputs of the device 120 to feed an assumed voltage value to the device 120 . This has the advantage of allowing the use of assumed voltage values on older devices 120 which lack the capability to be programmed to do so.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may analyze current waveforms during startup conditions, transients, surges or sags in current level to determine the type(s) of loads that are being powered. Assumed steady state voltage waveforms/phase relationships may be selected based on these conditions only or in combination with steady state current readings.
  • FIG. 3 shows a first procedure for retrieving energy related data from an energy monitoring device 120 .
  • the energy monitoring device 120 may be installed and interfaced to voltage and current signals (block 300 ) in order to monitor or measure at least one power parameter (block 310 ).
  • the power parameter may be kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVAR demand, kVA demand, voltage, current, etc.
  • the energy monitoring device contains a number of registers which store various measured and computed data values. This installation may be in electrical room 130 or any other appropriate installation location.
  • the energy monitoring device creates a security register data (block 320 ) and stores this data in a security register in the device 120 .
  • This security register data is created by the operation of the private key 281 on the measured power parameter(s), for example, the private key 281 may be hashed together with the measured power parameter(s).
  • the private key 281 may be any of the pieces of information described above.
  • the register (including the security register) contents are then retrieved from the energy monitoring device 120 (block 325 ).
  • the registers may be retrieved using any appropriate method. Some example methods include reading with a portable computing device 180 over a wireless link, manual recording on paper or into a handheld device or direct communication over a communication link to a central computer.
  • the retrieved register contents are then returned to the utility or other entity that bills for energy usage (block 330 ).
  • the register contents including the security register data from the security register, are then downloaded into a computer (block 340 ) where the register contents are authenticated using an appropriate public key (block 350 ) or using a shared private key.
  • the public key may be any of the pieces of information described above.
  • FIG. 4 shows a second procedure for retrieving power parameters from an energy monitoring device 120 .
  • This procedure may be appropriate for use when a consumer of energy wishes to verify that they are being billed correctly for energy usage.
  • the energy monitoring device is installed and monitors at least one power parameter (blocks 300 , 310 ) in a similar fashion as described in the previous procedure.
  • the energy monitoring device 120 signs the power parameter(s) (block 400 ) utilizing a digital signature and transmits the power parameter(s) and signature over the network (block 410 ).
  • to “sign”, or alternatively, “digitally sign”, a message/document means to generate or otherwise append a “digital signature” to the message/document.
  • a digital signature is an electronic signature appended to a message/document that can be used to authenticate the identity of the sender of a message/document, the signer of a document/message, ensure that the original content of the message/document that has been sent is unchanged and/or prevent repudiation of the document's/message's contents by the sender.
  • the signed document/message, with or without the digital signature may, but need not, be encrypted, either before or after signing.
  • a digital signature is typically generated based on the contents of the document/message and the sender's private key of the public/private key pair. Upon receipt, the receiver of the message “authenticates” the message contents using the sender's public key.
  • the network may be the mesh network previously described wherein the packets are transmitted via other energy monitoring devices or any other appropriate communications means.
  • This information is received by a computer which makes the information available to a consumer of energy (or other entity that wishes to verify energy readings). For example, the information may be made available by way of a website hosted on an appropriate server.
  • the consumer of energy (or other entity that wishes to verify energy readings) retrieves a public key from the device (block 420 ). This public key may be on a label 282 or may be provided by any other appropriate mechanism as described above.
  • the user may then use the public key to authenticate the information on the website (block 430 ) and retrieve the authenticated energy readings (block 440 ).
  • the energy monitoring devices 120 may use a shared key.
  • the originating energy monitoring device 120 encrypts the packet (or portion thereof) with the shared key.
  • the receiving energy monitoring device 120 then decrypts the packet (or portion thereof) and only forwards the packet on to the next energy monitoring device 120 if the decryption process results in valid information. In this way, energy monitoring devices 120 or rogue devices may not insert themselves into the mesh network unless they know the shared key (or defeat the encryption/decryption algorithm).
  • the energy monitoring devices 120 may incorporate a GPS receiver or other mechanism for determining position (such as RF triangulation techniques). The position of each energy monitoring device 120 may be incorporated and secured in packets transmitted from the energy monitoring device using techniques such as those previously described. Any receiving device may then ignore data from a device that is not in an expected geographical location. This information may also be used to detect tampering such as for instance an energy monitoring device 120 being moved from its expected location.
  • the portable communication device 180 may also incorporate a GPS receiver. The portable communication device may then compare its position to that of the energy monitoring device it is querying in order to verify it is querying the correct meter. This comparison may also be performed later after the data from the portable communication device 180 has been transferred to a computer.
  • At least one of the energy monitoring devices 120 may use pattern recognition or other techniques to scan packets they are forwarding to additional energy monitoring devices 120 . These techniques may be used to detect rogue packets or packets containing malicious code. This may help prevent tampering with the system and may help prevent viruses from propagating through the system.
  • a mesh network provides redundancy in communications between devices. For enhanced reliability of the network it is desirable to have more than once communications path from each device.
  • the computer 160 of the present invention may receive diagnostic information from the devices in the mesh network such that identification of devices with only one communications path leading from them may be identified to the user. Additional repeaters 155 , gateways 150 or energy monitoring devices 120 may then be added to the system to improve reliability.
  • FIG. 12 shows an alternative exemplary commercial office building 100 a for use with the disclosed embodiments.
  • the office building 100 a receives main power from a grid intertie 1200 which interconnects the building's 100 a internal power distribution network with the utility's power distribution grid.
  • a service entrance infrastructure 1210 couples to the grid intertie and provides multiple 3 phase buses 1220 for powering various loads in the office building 100 a .
  • only one energy meter is provided in the building to measure power parameters of power flow from the grid intertie 1200 to the service entrance infrastructure 1210 .
  • Most of the shared building loads 1230 of the commercial office building 100 a are located on the roof. These loads include air conditioners, elevator motors, etc.
  • the lease management office 1250 and engineering office floor 1240 are typically the only areas where the building owner or operator has office space. Therefore, gateways 150 , computers 160 , LAN 170 and WAN 171 connections for energy monitoring use are typically also located on these floors.
  • Energy consumption information may flow from the mesh networked devices (energy monitoring devices 120 , repeaters 155 and gateways 150 ) through the computers 160 , LAN 170 , WAN 171 to a remote data processing center 1260 where usage information such as bills may be generated.
  • This usage information 1270 is then returned to the building users 1280 through appropriate communication means.
  • This information may also be delivered to corporate users 1290 such as the building owners/operators.
  • a mesh network or other communications connection may be made to the service entrance meter 1215 in order that the computer 160 and/or remote data processing center 1260 may correlate the readings therefrom with those from the various energy monitoring devices 120 . For instance if all loads within the office building 100 a are monitored with energy monitoring devices 120 , the combination of the energy monitoring devices readings should correlate with those of the service entrance meter 1215 .
  • the building users may be presented with billing information that categorizes their actual energy usage and share of common loads by the remote data processing center 1260 by using the information from the energy monitoring devices 120 .
  • Three phase transformers 1205 may be provided at various points in the office building 100 a . In these cases it may be desirable to have energy monitoring devices 120 on both the inputs and outputs of the transformers to account for loses therein.
  • the office building 100 a may contain one or more than one electrical closet shafts 1225 . These shafts may split or be widely separated from one another. It may therefore be necessary to have multiple mesh networks within the building that comprises separate sets of energy monitoring devices 120 , repeaters 155 , gateways 150 and computers 160 . Wireline segments or other means of bridging gaps in the mesh network may alternatively or in addition be used as described above.
  • battery powered mesh networking devices such as battery powered repeaters 155 may be temporarily installed in the building in order to “prove” out the network and identify areas where particular attention will have to be paid to establishing network links.
  • the low power RF signals of the mesh network may have difficulty traveling in a horizontal direction from the associated antennas of the devices 120 due to inherent limitations in the transmissive properties of such signals. Such limitations may result in a restricted transmission range. However, typically the vertical transmissive properties of the RF signals are acceptable.
  • the mesh network is formed via the vertical electrical shafts which allow for the vertically radiated RF signals to travel relatively unimpeded. The mesh network is carried to the roof of the facility or to another area having no substantial RF impediments, where the mesh network is bridged, either via a wired or wireless connection to other electrical shafts which have similarly formed mesh networks.
  • the vertical transmissive properties of the RF signals are advantageously utilized and reliance on the horizontal transmissive properties are minimized.
  • mounting devices 120 and/or repeaters 155 to form the mesh network along the roof also provides for an efficient network structure.
  • Devices 120 monitoring rooftop loads such as air conditioners may perform “double duty” by extending the mesh network as well as monitoring a load.
  • Repeaters 155 may be solar powered when mounted in rooftop locations or otherwise as described herein.
  • One exemplary implementation which employs one or more of the disclosed embodiments, utilizes the ION 6100 Wireless Metering System, manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd., located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada, which offers outstanding quality, versatility, and functionality in a low-cost wireless power and energy metering system ideal for sub-billing applications.
  • This system is based on the PML ION 6100 Wireless Power Meter/monitoring device 120 and meets ANSI C12.16 Class 1 energy accuracy.
  • This system may be utilized by Commercial (Office & Retail) Properties market in North America, and is ideal for customers who need revenue-accurate measurements for tenant sub-billing.
  • the system includes wireless metering devices, non-intrusive current transformers (CTs), and a central gateway that gathers, aggregates and logs meter data and exports it in an industry-standard XML format for integration into any software or billing system (including Power Measurement's ION EEM software).
  • CTs non-intrusive current transformers
  • a central gateway that gathers, aggregates and logs meter data and exports it in an industry-standard XML format for integration into any software or billing system (including Power Measurement's ION EEM software).
  • the meters collect time-stamped, interval-based consumption data (kWh) from key sub-metering or sub-billing points throughout a building, then communicate the information to the central gateway (PC) via a proprietary wireless 900 MHz radio network. All meters are time-aligned with the gateway clock, so the system can also provide coincident demand readings.
  • PC central gateway
  • the system offers customers a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) because: wireless communications eliminate the need to run costly communication wire and conduit throughout a facility; easy-to-use, split-core, current transformers (CTs) simply clamp onto existing wires for non-intrusive current measurements, simplifying installation; the ultra-compact meter design can attach to virtually any enclosure more than four inches deep with a single bolt; and automated gathering of meter data removes the need for manual meter reading.
  • TCO total cost of ownership
  • the exemplary ION 6100 Wireless Metering System offers: high quality and accuracy, low installation costs (contributing to a lower Total Cost of Ownership); a complete system (meters, communications, gateway) (contributing to a lower Total Cost of Ownership); industry-standard XML data export for easy integration into any software system (such as the ION enterprise energy management system (“EEM”), manufactured by Power Measurement Ltd, located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada); and time synchronized for coincident demand calculations.
  • EEM ION enterprise energy management system
  • this device is made available as part of a larger sub-billing solution for the commercial property market in North America.
  • the exemplary ION 6100 power meter offers:
  • Exemplary relevant applications of the exemplary system include Primary Application: Sub-Billing
  • ION 6100 Metering Device Feature Advantage Benefit ION 6100 meter, All the metering pieces Simple to purchase, NICTs, wireless in one neat little package inexpensive to install and communications operate - Installed costs of gateway $300 to $500 per metering point as compared with traditional sub-metering solutions
  • Non-intrusive The ION 6100 meters Low installation cost, no current & voltage can be installed without installation disruption transformers requiring an outage in (NICVTs/NICTs) power to the load and/or voltage displacement connections Wireless radio No holes to drill, no Low installation costs, no network conduit or wires to run, communication configura- communications instant and automatic tion on the device - network configuration
  • Reliable “self-healing” network communications Exceeds ANSI Accuracy is verified to Costs can be fairly C12.16 (1%) national sub-metering accounted for and accuracy standards apportioned appropriately standards or appropriate local standard.
  • 24 hour internal Data is stored on the Low risk of data loss data storage device as a backup in case of a temporary com- munication interruption Devices are time Independent device Building demand charges synchronized to clocks are coordinated to can be accurately the ION 6100 enable accurate coinci- apportioned among tenants Gateway for dent demand calculations coincident demand calculation
  • Gateway software can be Data can be used for sub- collected configured to export data to billing, as an input to building in a multiple systems automation and control central systems, etc. data file and exported as required Diagnostic Other power, energy, The gateway can be used to data can communication and other capture a quick snapshot of be diagnostic data can be viewed overall operating performance requested on the gateway from any and / or identify power from device in the network problems at a particular load. devices

Abstract

An energy monitoring device including procedures for secure communication of data from the device is disclosed. The energy monitoring device includes a public/private key pair used to encrypt and/or digitally sign communications by the device. This allows the receivers of these communications to authenticate the communications to ensure that the device and/or communications have not been compromised. The energy monitoring device is further capable of communications via an ad-hoc “mesh” network, thereby facilitating communications among devices which are substantially inaccessible due to either physical or economic limitations.

Description

    RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • The present patent document is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/892,837, filed Jul. 16, 2004 (Attorney Ref. No. 6270/147), which claims the benefit of the filing date under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of Provisional U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/488,700, filed Jul. 18, 2003 (Attorney Ref. No 6270/115) and Ser. No. 60/554,188, filed Mar. 18, 2004 (Attorney Ref. No 6270/116) and this application is a continuation in part under 35 U.S.C. §120 and § 365(c) of PCT International Patent Application Designating the U.S. Ser. No. PCT/CA/000705 entitled “Time Coordinated Energy Monitoring System Utilizing Communications Links” filed May 11, 2004 which claimed the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of Provisional U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/469,766, filed May 12, 2003, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
  • The present patent document is also a continuation in part under 35 U.S.C. § 120 of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/752,467 filed Jan. 5, 2004, now U.S. Pat No. ______, which claimed the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of Provisional U.S. Patent Application Ser. Nos. 60/459,182 entitled “Access Control for Energy Management Components”, filed Mar. 31, 2003 and 60/459,152 entitled “Techniques for Securing Energy Management Systems” filed Mar. 31, 2003, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
  • PCT International Patent Application Designating the U.S. Ser. No. PCT/CA2004/000705 incorporated by reference the following U.S. Patent Application which is also incorporated by reference herein:
  • U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/843,256, “Wireless Communications System Incorporating Intelligent Electronic Devices”, (Attorney Ref. No. 6270/142), filed May 11, 2004, now U.S. Pat No. ______.
  • BACKGROUND
  • In facilities, e.g. buildings or installations, where a significant amount of power is used among a variety of units, it would be desirable to allow the building owner to allocate energy costs to the different units, i.e. consumers, within the facility. For a commercial office building, these units may include the different tenants within the building or the common loads for the facility, such as the elevators or HVAC systems. For an industrial facility, these units may include the different production lines, machines or processes within the facility. As opposed to allocating costs based on a fixed or formulaic approach (such as pro-rata, e.g. dollars per square foot or based on the theoretical consumption of a process/machine), an allocation based on actual measurements using appropriate monitoring devices may result in more accurate and useful information as well as a more equitable cost distribution.
  • Both installation and ongoing, i.e. operational and maintenance, costs for these monitoring devices are important considerations in deciding whether a monitoring system is worth the investment. While monitoring devices may be read manually, which does not increase the installation cost, manual data collection may increase on-going/operational costs. Alternatively, monitoring devices may be interconnected and be automatically read via a communications link. However, typical communication links require wiring to interconnect the devices which increases the installation cost. In addition, a particular tenant in the building may wish to verify that they are being billed correctly by reading the energy meter or other energy monitoring device that is accumulating their energy usage. This may be a straightforward, although labor intensive and cumbersome, process with a typical energy meter which provides a display viewable by the tenant.
  • Emerging wireless mesh (or ad-hoc) networking technologies can be used to reduce the installation costs of monitoring devices while providing for automated data collection. Also called mesh topology or a mesh network, mesh is a network topology in which devices are connected with many redundant interconnections between network nodes. Effectively, each network node acts as a repeater/router with respect to received communications where the device is not the intended recipient in order to facilitate communications between devices across the network. Using wireless interconnections permits simpler and cost-effective implementation of mesh topologies wherein each device is a node and wirelessly interconnects with at least some of the other devices within its proximity using RF based links. Mesh networking technologies generally fall into two categories: high-speed, high bandwidth; and low speed, low bandwidth, low power. The first category of devices are typically more complex and costly that the second. Since energy monitoring does not typically require high speed/high bandwidth communication, the second category of devices is often sufficient in terms of data throughput.
  • Energy monitoring devices may include electrical energy meters that measure at least one of kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVA demand, kVAR demand, voltage, current, etc. Energy monitoring devices may also include devices that measure the consumption of water, air, gas and/or steam.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 depicts a block diagram of a commercial building incorporating the system of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 depicts a block diagram of the internal circuitry of an example of an energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 depicts a block diagram of a first procedure retrieving a verified energy reading from the energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 depicts a block diagram of a second procedure retrieving a verified energy reading from the energy monitoring device of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 5-6 depict an exemplary method of mounting a monitoring device according to one embodiment.
  • FIGS. 7-8 depict exemplary commissioning reports according to one embodiment.
  • FIGS. 9A-9C depict an exemplary CT locking device.
  • FIG. 10 depicts exemplary voltage waveforms and time relationships for several possible current waveforms according to one embodiment.
  • FIG. 11 depicts an exemplary voltage displacement device for use with the disclosed embodiments.
  • FIG. 12 depicts a block diagram of an alternate commercial building incorporating the system of the present invention.
  • FIG. 13 depicts an exemplary process for using assumed data values in computations according to one embodiment.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENTLY PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Herein, the phrase “coupled with” is defined to mean directly connected to or indirectly connected through one or more intermediate components. Such intermediate components may include both hardware and software based components. Further, to clarify the use in the pending claims and to hereby provide notice to the public, the phrases “at least one of <A>, <B>, . . . and <N>” or “at least one of <A>, <B>, . . . <N>, or combinations thereof” are defined by the Applicant in the broadest sense, superceding any other implied definitions herebefore or hereinafter unless expressly asserted by the Applicant to the contrary, to mean one or more elements selected from the group comprising A, B, . . . and N, that is to say, any combination of one or more of the elements A, B, . . . or N including any one element alone or in combination with one or more of the other elements which may also include, in combination, additional elements not listed.
  • In general herein, a public key is a number, formula, algorithm, function, etc. that is made, or intended to be, publicly available, i.e. made available to any user that wants it. A private key is a number, formula, algorithm, function, etc. that is intended to be kept private and is protected in some way from access. This protection may be in the form of secrecy, an enclosure, encryption, difficulty in access, etc. The more difficult it is to circumvent the protection, the better, however it will be appreciated that the utility of the disclosed examples is not dependent on the quality of the protection the private key.
  • An energy monitoring device that is designed to transmit its measurement values may not be accessible to be manually read by a person. This may be due to the fact that the energy monitoring device does not have a display or is otherwise physically inaccessible, and although the device may provide a communications pathway (wired or wireline) allowing it to be accessed by the energy provider, the device may not provide a direct communications pathway for the user. This causes a problem in that the user/consumer of the energy being monitored by the energy monitoring device may be left with no way of verifying that they are being billed accurately for the usage that their respective energy monitoring device is measuring. For instance, a configuration error may result in the user being billed based on an incorrect or mis-configured energy monitoring device or the user may simply not trust the energy provider to provide an accurate accounting of energy consumed.
  • The following description details various mechanisms for verifying the integrity of readings taken from electrical monitoring devices which are in communication with a central computer through a mesh network. It will be clear to those skilled in the art that the mechanisms defined herein are also applicable to monitoring other parameters indicative of energy consumption.
  • Public/private keys may be used for authenticating a message sent from one computer to another computer over communications pathways such as the Internet. In general, a message can be authenticated by performing a function (such as a hash) on the message data with a private key of one computer. A second computer can then verify the origin of the message by performing a corresponding function on the results of the first function and the message data using the first computer's public key.
  • FIG. 1 depicts an exemplary commercial office building 100 for use with the disclosed embodiments. The commercial office building 100 has a number of floors 110. Each floor may contain an electrical room 130. Alternatively there may be more than one electrical room 130 per floor or only one electrical room 130 per a number of floors. Within each electrical room 130 there may be one or more energy monitoring devices 120 within an energy monitoring system 101. It will be appreciated that the location of the energy monitoring devices 120 is implementation dependent and that they need not be located in an electrical room 130. The energy monitoring devices 120 communicate among each other to form a mesh network, depicted in FIG. 1 by multiple communications links 140 shown between the energy monitoring devices 120. It will be appreciated that fewer or more communications links 140 may be used between monitoring devices 120 and that the availability of a communications link 140 between any two monitoring devices 120 may fluctuate depending upon conditions such as interference, etc. Repeaters 155 may also be provided to facilitate communications between two devices 120 which may not otherwise be able to communicate due to distance, interference, etc. Alternatively, one device 120 may have two antennas which operate at different power levels, gains, frequencies, modulation schemes, etc. to overcome interference, distance, etc. One of the antennas may be connected to a long cable (such as a coaxial cable) in order that the antenna may be located remotely from the device 120 in a more effective location for transmission/reception than the device 120. Alternatively, the architecture may provide a wireline segment 156 where communications between two devices are not possible otherwise. This may happen due to distance, interference, shielding, etc. The mesh network may use the wireline segment 156 in a similar fashion to the communication links 140. The wireline segment 156 may be implemented using power line carrier techniques over the office building 100 power lines or using standard wireline communications/networking architectures such as RS-485, RS-232, Ethernet, etc.
  • The device 120 may facilitate the replacement of its antennas such that for a given installation location, flexible, such as rubber encased or flexible wire, adjustable, directional, high gain, or different propagation pattern antennas may be substituted to facilitate more reliable communications. Further, antenna enhancing devices or devices which enhance RF transmission by utilizing proximate structural elements such as metal casings, glass windows, etc., may also be used
  • The mesh network also encompasses a gateway 150 which facilitates communications with a computer 160 or other computing device. The computer 160 may communicate energy data and other data over a LAN 170. The computer 160 and gateway 150 communicate over a serial or other form of communication link. Alternatively, the gateway 150 may interface with the LAN 170 directly and the computer 160 may be connected to the LAN 170 in a different part of the building 100 and communicate with the gateway 150 over the LAN 170. The computer 160 may receive a time reference from a GPS satellite 185. Alternatively, the GPS satellite 185 signal may be received by an energy monitoring device 120, gateway 150 or repeater 155 within the mesh network. In this alternate case, the time within the alternate device becomes the reference for the energy monitoring system 101. The LAN 170 may interface to a WAN 171 such as the Internet. The gateway 150 may, for example, be located in a chief engineer's office where a connection to the LAN 170 is readily available. There may be more than one gateway 150 in the energy monitoring system 101 facilitating extraction of data from the system at more than one point in the mesh network. The gateways 150 may communicate over the LAN 170 to a concentrator that aggregates information from all the gateways.
  • With present mesh networks it is often difficult to determine the health/status of the network. Typically, only basic information is available from any given node, such as the ability of the node to communicate with the gateway and the signal strength for closest node, both of which give no indication of redundant paths or communication error rates, or other more detailed status information. Often after a network is installed, unhealthy networks, e.g. network with one or faulty links or devices, are identified through missing data or low percentage of responses to requests. The need exists to have an easy low cost way to determine health/status of the network especially during installation of a system.
  • In one embodiment, a data aggregation device, which may be a portable communications device 180, or other device coupled with the mesh network such as the gateway 150 or computer 160, or software executing thereon, provides the ability to gather network status/statistical information from the mesh network via self/automated reporting by the devices which make up the network. Such self-reported data may include perceived signal strength, delivery delays, multiple or confusing responses, non-responsive or slow responding nodes, communications errors, etc. Further, this data may include both current and historical data collected over a period of time. Such reporting facilitates the identification of weak network links, failing nodes, redundant paths, etc. The reporting may also take place via the display or local communications connection of the particular device to allow a physically proximate user to assess and view the network status as perceived by that particular device. In an alternate embodiment, each device may report the status information of other devices as well, such as other nodes/devices which are proximate to the particular device. At the point of data aggregation, this reported data may be collected/aggregated and reported to a user to present an overall network status of the entire network, or a particular portion thereof, such as by a graphical presentation or the like which shows failing links, links with high error rates, low signal strength, etc. possibly using colors or other visual indicators.
  • In an alternate embodiment, rather than rely on a self reporting mechanism, or in addition thereto, diagnostic packets may be sent or requested from each node over the wireless link containing data used by the gateway to identify weak or failing links or nodes in the radio network. The diagnostic packets may contain such information as signal strength of all neighboring nodes in priority of use and number of redundant paths. This data would then be used by the gateway to determine if additional repeaters are needed in specific locations. In one embodiment, diagnostic packets are capable of being directed over particular network paths of the mesh network to focus diagnostic activity on particular areas of the network.
  • Where weak links or troublesome nodes are discovered, measures could be taken to increase communication reliability. For nodes that have weak links to the rest of mesh network, for example communications may be attempted more often in an effort to effectively increase the chances that some of the communications will get through during periods of reliable connectivity and causing the mesh network to seek better links with this device.
  • Many issues with mesh networks occur upon installation of the network and may be resolved at that time, prior to actual use and reliance on the network. For example, during the installation of a large number of meters, such as can be found on a commercial building meter installation (typically 100 meters or more), a fairly high probability exists that one or more of the devices will be installed incorrectly. Furthermore, some devices may have limited error detection capability due to limitations in their memory capacity/code space and are only be able to detect simple and obvious errors. Typical errors which simpler devices typically detect include: wrong phase connections, reversed CT connection or bad CT and phase connections (open/shorted).
  • In one embodiment, the capability to generate an automated commissioning report from the different devices is provided. The commissioning report is generated by first obtaining assorted real time device data from all of the operating devices and then analyzing the real time values for validity. The real time device data may include RMS current and voltage readings, frequency, apparent (VA) power, real (W) power and reactive (VAR) power and power factor. Using a combination of these values, in conjunction with the measuring mode (delta or wye), angles can be determined between voltage and current phases. For example, if the real power is negative and in the installation it is known to be positive, i.e. since power is being delivered, this may indicate that the current transformer (“CT”) could be reversed. For devices that can automatically compensate for a reversed CT, a warning would be provided indicating that the CT phase is reversed.
  • In this embodiment, every device in the installation is automatically interrogated when the device is initially detected in order to provide an entry for the commissioning report. Expert system software is provided at the point of data aggregation which uses common sense relationships to analyze the data and determine if the readings are reasonable. The installer will go over the commissioning report and evaluate each error or warning for validity. For example, if voltage and current from I2 are reported to be zero on a floor/panel, and the installer knows there are no loads on the circuit, then the reading is reasonable. However if there is expected to be a reading, then there is something wrong with the CT, connections or configuration and the installer can take corrective action. An exemplary table based commissioning report is shown in FIG. 7.
  • The commissioning report may be further enhanced by providing relative phase angles between all the current and voltage phases. This information may be provided by a device such as the ION 6100 power meter, manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd., located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada. Using the phase angles, swapped current or voltage phases may be easily determined. To simplify the presentation, the commissioning report may simply provide a vector diagram (as found on ION 7500 power meter, also manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd.) for each device with an appropriate OK, WARNING or ERROR message. This would reduce the clutter of a large number of real time reading values. FIG. 8 shows an exemplary vector based commissioning report.
  • The installation of mesh networks using monitoring devices, such as the ION 6100 mesh network based power meter, can be complicated by intermittent network connections due to marginal transmission and reception of data over the network. Typically, during the commissioning of the system, all that can normally be done is to verify that each device in the network communicates with a central gateway. This verification simply tells the installer that the system is currently working properly, but it does not tell how much operating margin the radios have. For low cost devices, it is usually not feasible to include measurement of signal strength.
  • The operating conditions of a mesh network radio can change due to near body effects, temperature, interference, fading and multi-path, etc. If node reception, i.e. signal strength or connection quality, is close to the operating limit of the radio, then small changes of the operating conditions may render a node non-communicating.
  • In one embodiment, the use of a variable power mesh network node is provided to validate the correct operation of the system at a reduced power level. During commissioning, the system is switched to a lower power mode which operates the radios at a lower power level than the radios are normally capable of. Once the system has been verified to be fully operational (which may require the installation of appropriate routers to complete the network), the system is switched to the normal operating mode at the normal radio power. During normal operation, the mesh network node power will be increased to a higher (normal) power level assuring that the reception and transmission of mesh network data is well above any marginal radio operating parameter.
  • In yet another embodiment, the monitoring devices feature the capability to be located a inside or proximate to a circuit breaker with the monitoring device's current transducers being coupled with the breaker's loads and sending data to the monitoring device/meter. The current transducers also feature mesh network capability, i.e. RF communications capabilities as described herein, and communications between the device/meter and the current transducers is accomplished via a mesh communications network or other medium. In this embodiment, the device/meter is physically configured to fit within a particular form-factor of the breaker panel.
  • In yet another embodiment, the mesh network may include nodes mounted to elevators, or other moving mechanical systems, and utilizing the movement of the elevator to bring the elevator-mounted node within a communications-proximity to portions of the mesh network which are otherwise inaccessible. The elevator mounted node may act as a store and forward device facilitating communications between other network devices as connections are established and lost due to its movement. The elevator mounted node may store data from particular devices until the elevator moves to another location where forwarding of the data is possible or alternatively, the elevator mounted node may use alternate communications means such as higher power RF or wireline communications to forward the data.
  • In yet another embodiment, the mesh network of monitoring devices further include a capability to share common area usage charges based on actual or more closely approximated usage of common areas. The monitoring devices or central aggregation device may feature the capability to discern usage of common areas by particular tenants, or at least make approximations of such usage. Where reasonable approximations of particular tenant usage may be determined and associated with particular consumption, that consumption may be appropriately charged to the particular tenant. For example, power consumption by the elevators may be apportioned to tenants by the floors which they occupy such that a tenant which occupies multiple floors or is a frequent elevator user is apportioned a more appropriate amount of the charges associated with operating the elevators. Other methods of approximating particular tenant usage of common areas may rely on building access identifications cards and their use at particular access points throughout the facility or RF enabled identification badges which permit tracking of tenant movement throughout the facility. Further, temperature sensors, or other coupling with environmental control systems, may be provided to measure HVAC usage in particular areas to properly apportion those costs.
  • A user 190 may transport a portable communication device 180 around the building 100. This portable communication device 180 may be used to read energy registers from the various energy monitoring devices. The portable communication device 180 and the energy monitoring device 120 may both have indicators (such as LEDs) on them that light, or otherwise signal, when communication is established between the two devices. This indicates to the user that they are in communication with the correct energy monitoring device 120. In addition, the portable communication device 180 may read a secondary register from the energy monitoring device 120 which is a hash of the energy registers and a pattern such as the private key of the energy monitoring device 120. If the pattern is known only to the energy monitoring device and a system such as a billing system within a utility, the registers within the portable communication device will be difficult to tamper with without detection. The secondary register may appear to the user of the portable communication device 180 as just another register such that the user is not aware that the secondary register may be used for tamper detection. The portable communication device 180 may be a handheld meter reader.
  • In one embodiment, a handheld device is provided for performing network/device related tasks, such as optimizing monitoring device (or antenna) locations for optimal communication performance, performing routine monitoring of network status, determining or monitoring for specific device availability or activity, determining device locations (by proximity or by using GPS capabilities), communicating with devices via the mesh network and/or direct/local device interfaces, such as for setting up/initializing devices, and acting as a mesh enabled data display.
  • When installing wireless meters/nodes it may be advantageous for the electrician or commissioning engineer to have a separate handheld radio that is used to determine suitable positioning of the devices being installed. The handheld radio would be able to communicate with the network being installed and have a faster rate of communication with the gateway 150. The rate of communication with the gateway 150 could be configurable to suit all sizes of networks. The handheld radio may have a display or some other user interface such as LED's to help determine radio link quality into the network.
  • Alternatively each device being installed could have a deployment mode where its rate of communication to the gateway 150 would be faster for a period of time, thereby giving the installer more feedback as to the success and quality of the installation. The device could have a button that is used to activate the deployment mode for this period of time. The installer would then be able to move the device around until a suitable position is found, with the device and/or gateway determining and reporting the status of the communications link at a more frequent rate than might be had in the normal operating mode. The installer would be aware of a suitable position through data reported by the device, such as via LED's or the display on device. Deployment mode may only last for a period of time that is sufficient to find acceptable location and communicate with the network. The deployment mode may automatically shut off to prevent installed devices being left in deployment mode.
  • In both of the cases above the network would have to be installed as follows:
  • The gateway 150 is installed.
  • 1. Devices can then be installed from the gateway 150 out so that as each device is installed, they are able to communicate with the gateway 150; and
  • 2. If it is not possible to install the devices, then temporary repeaters are put in place of where devices or repeaters will have to be installed to complete the network.
  • Alternatively, the gateway 150 may have a deployment mode where statistics are gathered for each node in the network. The gateway may perform ping statistics on nodes, request diagnostic packets containing such things as signal strength, # of hops etc. After meters are installed, the gateway would then have to be taken out of deployment mode to gather energy information.
  • Locating installed devices may prove to be difficult especially if a meter is installed in a location different than the intended location. To assist in locating devices each meter could be outfitted with GPS chips. The location of the device could then be reported through the wireless link. A handheld GPS unit could then be used to assist in locating the device.
  • FIG. 2 shows a block diagram of an energy monitoring device 120 according to one embodiment. The energy monitoring device 120 includes electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270. The electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270 are operative to interface with power conductors which supply electrical energy to a certain load or area of the building 100. This interface may be direct or through appropriate current or voltage transformers. In alternative embodiments, the energy monitoring device may lack either the electrical current or electrical voltage interfaces 210, 270 depending upon the implementation and monitoring requirements of the device 120. The energy monitoring device 120 further includes an analog to digital converter 220, a micro-controller 230 coupled with the analog to digital converter 220, and RF communications circuitry 240 coupled with the microcontroller 230. The electrical current interface circuitry 210 and electrical voltage interface circuitry 270 scale the signals from the power conductors to voltage levels compatible with the analog to digital converter 220. The analog to digital converter 220 provides digital representations of the voltage and current in the power conductors to microcontroller 230. Using these signals, the microcontroller 230 calculates at least one power parameter such as kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVA demand, kVAR demand, etc. The microcontroller 230 transmits this power parameter through RF communications circuitry 240 through the mesh network and gateway 150 to computer 160. The computer 150 may send configuration and command data (such as demand reset) to the energy monitoring devices 120 through the mesh network. The microcontroller 230 also maintains time for the energy monitoring device 100 in a memory register 280 which may be internal to and/or external to the microcontroller 230. The microcontroller 230 also maintains a private key 281 in internal and/or external memory. The energy monitoring device 100 also contains a power supply 260 which may interface to the same voltage signals as the voltage interface circuitry 270 or to an alternative power source. The power supply 260 may incorporate a battery or capacitor to facilitate operation when operating power is lost. The power supply 260 may also incorporate crystal radio type circuitry as an alternate source of operating power such that RF power present from local AM radio stations may be utilized to power the energy monitoring device 120. Additional circuitry 250, such as wireline communications, I/O circuitry, etc. may also be provided in the energy monitoring device 120. A label 282 is provided on the outside of the energy monitoring device 120. The label may provide the public key corresponding to the private key 281. Alternatively, the public key may be shown on a display coupled to the microcontroller 230 or periodically broadcast over the communications links 140 forming the mesh network, either automatically or in response to a request. In one embodiment, the public key and associated private key may be periodically changed by the microcontroller 230. The microcontroller 230, may use A/D 220 readings, RF noise readings, etc. as random numbers to generate these public/private key pairs or, alternatively, the key pairs may be inserted during manufacture or may be input to the energy monitoring device 120 using other methods.
  • In one embodiment, a voltage displacement device is utilized to allow any piece of monitoring equipment to be connected to a voltage conductor without the need to power down the line to be monitored. This piece of equipment could be an integral part of the monitoring devices voltage leads or a separate device that would allow for a galvanic connection between the voltage source and the monitoring device. An exemplary voltage displacement device 1102 is shown in FIG. 11 attached to a power line 1104. The voltage displacement device 1102 pierces the power conductor 1104, in a safe and insulated manner, to provide a means of powering the monitoring device as well as providing a signal to monitor and/or measure. The device 1102 is clamped and locked to the power conductor 1104 utilizing a locking/clamping mechanism 1106 in a manner that would require a tool for removal, thereby preventing unauthorized persons from tampering or removing the connection. Even when local electrical codes, procedures and/or standards require powering down a conductor before adding a connection to it, the voltage displacement device may save installation time and cost since no splicing, terminal connections, etc. are necessary to make the connection.
  • In one embodiment, a power meter is provided which includes multiple radios for redundant operation in case of a failure or to facilitate communications over multiple RF channels simultaneously. Alternatively, a low power and a high power radio, possibly similar to the low/high power radio described above for device installation, may be provided, wherein the device determines the optimum radio to use based on ambient environmental conditions, time of day or other trigger.
  • If, for some reason, nodes in the main radio network stop communicating energy/power data there may be an alternate method to extract data manually or through some other low cost method. Due to the nature of mesh networks if nodes in the middle of the network lose power, all nodes that communicate through those nodes may also stop communicating. Using a point to point radio technology would enable a person to go from floor to floor collecting energy/power data from the non-communicating devices until the mesh wireless network problem is resolved. In particular the second radio technology could be Bluetooth, 802.11x (a, b or g), infrared, or similar networking technology, so that the data collector could use a handheld device to communicate with a single device if the address is known (point-to-point).
  • In one embodiment, the gateway device 150 may provide a firewall capability, or this capability may provided by a separate device logically located so as to be able to control and contain network traffic, which prevents unauthorized access to the mesh network from an external network, such as via the gateway device. The firewall device may further permit limited unauthenticated wireless access or limit access based on the level of security or level of trust in a given entity or method of access.
  • Often in establishments, the department responsible for internal networks will be wary of attaching devices to their internal network. However, this department may be receptive to providing a network connection to a demilitarized zone or directly to the internet. In this case the firewall within or coupled to the gateway protects the gateway 150 and mesh network devices from unauthorized access. The gateway may report to the computer (which may be within the corporate network) through protocols such as SMTP, HTTP, etc. which most corporate firewalls do not block.
  • Often there is no Ethernet connection where the gateway is to be installed. Instead of running a wired connection to the demilitarized zone, a secure wireless technology such as WI-FI may be used.
  • In yet another alternative embodiment, the capability for a monitoring device or other node to act as a gateway for legacy devices, which do not feature the capability to communicate via the mesh network, is provided. The gateway-enabled device may act as a simple conduit allowing bi-directional communications with the legacy device as if the legacy device were itself on the network. This may be accomplished via protocol encapsulation. Alternatively, the gateway-enabled device may act as a master device, server or other intermediary which mediates communications between the network and the legacy device(s). For example, the gateway-enabled device may aggregate data retrieved from multiple legacy devices and pass the aggregate onto the network.
  • In RF challenged zones, i.e. where RF based communications are difficult, or for supporting legacy devices, it may be desirable to communicate to meters via the RS-485 serial bus. In one embodiment, a gateway device is provided that supports both wireless technology and multiple/single RS-485 connections for legacy devices or in areas were wireless does not work. The gateway device, as described, may act as a single data collector for multiple nodes communicating via RS-485 and wireless links. The gateway device may be an application specific device for bridging other devices onto the mesh network or may be an additional function provided by a mesh network node, such as the monitoring device described above.
  • In yet another embodiment, a monitoring device or other node device is provided with flexible power options allowing it to draw operating power from various sources, without interfering with those power sources. This adds to the flexibility of the device to be placed in locations which may not have convenient sources of operating power, the sources of operating power may not be reliable or stable, and/or the sources of operating power are the same as that being monitored and isolation of the device is desirable. Such sources of electrical power may include emergency power sources such as power for exit or emergency lighting systems, solar power (via a window or ambient lighting), telephone system power, battery power, RF power (similar to the operation of Radio Frequency Identification Devices (“RFID”) or crystal radio sets) or combinations thereof. In this way, there is reasonable assurance that the device will receive a constant uninterrupted supply of operating power. Such devices may be further provided with flexible mounting options such as the ability to be mounted to a light bulb socket or wall socket/outlet. The ability to lock the device in place and draw operating power therefrom may also be provided. An example repeater 155 that may be plugged into a wall 506 outlet 502 having one or more power sockets 504 is shown in FIGS. 5 and 6. The repeater features an antenna 508 and power connectors 510. In this configuration, the repeater 155 draws power from at least one of the sockets 504 and is secured in place with a replacement screw 514 for the wall outlet 502. The repeater 155 can thus not easily be removed either accidentally or intentionally. The screw 514 may incorporate a one-directional drive engagement to further discourage removal. The repeater 155 may also provide pass through outlets 512 such that the outlet 502 can still be used. In an embodiment which fits into a light socket, a pass through socket may be provided to allow the socket to be used for illumination purposes.
  • In one embodiment, mesh network enabled current transducers or transformers (“CT's”) include a physical security mechanism to prevent or indicate tampering and/or removal of the CT from the power line being monitored. FIGS. 9A-9C depicts an exemplary CT 900 having a revenue lock mechanism 955. Effectively, the CT includes two interlocking portions 925 930, each of which come together to encircle the power line 903 to measure the current passing there-through. The interlocking portions 925 930 each feature a locking hole 955. The locking holes 955 of each portion come into alignment when the portions 925 930 are assembled around the power line 903 thereby allowing a sealing device 950, such as a lock or locking wire, to be fed through both holes 955 preventing removal of the CT without breaking the locking mechanism 950 and/or causing indication of tampering.
  • In yet another alternative embodiment, the capability to update and/or modify the firmware of a monitoring device or other mesh network node via a mesh network is provided. In operation, the particular monitoring device(s) or other mesh network node(s) to be upgrade/modified may be instructed to enter an upgrade/modify mode. Upgraded or modified software/firmware may then be transmitted via the network to the device as one or more packets. The device(s) receives and assembles these packets into a memory, re-requesting packets that are received with errors and determining and re-requesting missing packets. Once the new code has been fully transferred, the device is instructed to begin executing the new code. Prior to executing the new code, the device may validate or otherwise authenticate the code and may further perform functions to ensure that the device can recover should an error occur, such as by performing a data backup operation. In an alternate embodiment, the special upgrade mode is unnecessary. In this case, the packets of new code contain an indicator to the device as such. When the device sees such packets, it writes them to its memory store and assembles the complete code, re-requesting errant packets and tracking and re-requesting missing packets. Once all of the packets have been received, as determined by an indicator which tells the device how many were to be received or by an packet denoted as the last packet sent, the device automatically switches over to the new code. Prior to switching over to the new code, the device may validate the new code, or otherwise perform an authentication. Further, the device may perform a backup operation of any stored data to ensure that recovery is possible if an error occurs.
  • In one embodiment, a monitoring device is provided which is capable of utilizing assumed voltage readings in situations where it is not possible to determine actual voltage readings from the circuit being monitored. This capability allows the monitoring device to operate until it becomes possible to connect it to the voltage terminals of the circuit to be monitored, or operate indefinitely without connection to the voltage terminals, depending upon the application. When installing the energy monitoring device 120, it is often necessary to power down the circuit to be monitored so that voltage connections can be made to the energy monitoring device. Otherwise, the installer may be exposed to hazardous voltages and/or the device 120 may experience an unexpected power surge on its inputs upon connection, thereby damaging the device. However, installation of the current connections can often be accomplished with the circuit energized when using non-contact sensors, such as “clamp-on” CTs which rely on induced current flow, as the risk of injury or damage is lessened.
  • Therefore, the energy monitoring device 120 according to the present embodiment provides the ability to estimate power and/or energy readings when only the current inputs are connected. As described, this estimated-operation may be used on a temporary or permanent basis. If used on a permanent basis, the energy monitoring device 120 may be provided without voltage inputs so as to lower manufacturing costs. This may occur, for example, where the application demands may be met using assumed voltage values and, accordingly, the user does not wish to pay for or install fully functional devices 120.
  • In order to estimate power and/or energy readings, several techniques may be used. In one embodiment shown in FIG. 13, the energy monitoring device 120 may be programmed with an assumed voltage and/or power factor based on the particular load it is monitoring (1302). The device 120 may be programmed prior to, or after, connecting the current inputs to the circuit to be monitored (1304). The assumed value(s) is/are stored in a memory within the device and used by the processor as the basis for computing other data regarding the monitored circuit, as will be described. Programming assumed values into the device 120 may be accomplished directly using direct communications inputs provided by the device 120 or through the mesh network or other network communications input. Once programmed, the device switches into an assumed-value mode of operation, either manually or automatically, as described above (1306). The assumed voltage and/or power factor values may then be utilized by the device 120 to perform the requisite power and/or energy calculations (1308). The computed results may then be reported as per the normal operation of the device 120 (1310). As noted above, the reported results may include an indicator which indicates that the calculations were based on assumed values and may further indicate a margin of error as such. In an alternate embodiment, multiple power factors, for different load currents, are provided and the energy monitoring device 120 interpolates between these power factors based on the current present in the circuit being monitored. For example, the energy monitoring device 120 may be provided with an assumed voltage of 480 VAC, and an assumed power factor of 0.84 at full load current (e.g. 40 Amps), an assumed power factor of 0.8 at ¾ load current and an assumed power factor of 0.72 at ½ load current. The energy monitoring device 120 may then interpolate the power factor to provide interpolated values for use in power and/or energy calculations based on actual current values which may range between the programmed assumed values or outside of them.
  • Alternatively, the energy monitoring device 120 may be programmed with an assumed voltage waveform and time relationship to the actual waveform representative of the actual current present in the circuit being monitored. FIG. 10 shows several example voltage waveforms and tine relationships 890 for several possible current waveforms 895. The energy monitoring device may use techniques such as fuzzy logic, artificial intelligence, point by point comparison, etc. to determine the closest match current waveform in a stored suite of waveforms and then use the corresponding voltage waveform including the assumed phase or time relationship to the current waveform in power and/or energy calculations. In yet another alternative embodiment, an assumed voltage magnitude may be programmed into the energy monitoring device 120 over the mesh network or the energy monitoring device 120 may be manufactured for a given voltage. This voltage magnitude may then be applied to the assumed voltage waveform during the calculation of power and/or energy (ie., each point in the assumed voltage waveform may be multiplied by a constant such that the rms value of the voltage waveform used in the power/energy calculations is the same as the voltage magnitude provided).
  • Further, when the monitoring device 120 is operating using assumed voltage data, an indicator may be appended to all calculation results to indicate to a user or a data aggregation system that the data that the monitoring device 120 is producing is based on assumed values. Further, a visual indicator on the monitoring device 120 itself may indicate such operation as well.
  • In one embodiment, the assumed values are stored in a memory within the device 120 and referenced by the device 120 for performing calculations as described when the device 120 is placed in a “assumed voltage” mode of operation, either automatically or manually by a user via the device's 120 user interface or remotely over a network. This mode of operation may automatically be activated when the device 120 is suitably programmed with assumed data values and the device receives inputs on its current inputs but not on its voltage inputs, such as when the voltage inputs are not connected or the inputs or connections to the circuit fail or otherwise become disconnected. Further, the assumed values may be stored as digital values which bypass the device's 120 analog to digital converter to be directly input into the processor of the device 120 or the assumed values may be stored in an analog form and act as pseudo inputs to the analog to digital converter when actual voltage measurements are not present. In one alternative embodiment, assumed voltage values are input into the monitoring device 120 by attaching a dummy voltage generator to the voltage inputs of the device 120 to feed an assumed voltage value to the device 120. This has the advantage of allowing the use of assumed voltage values on older devices 120 which lack the capability to be programmed to do so.
  • In addition to using the steady state current waveform to determine an appropriate voltage waveform and/or phase relationship to assume, the energy monitoring device 120 may analyze current waveforms during startup conditions, transients, surges or sags in current level to determine the type(s) of loads that are being powered. Assumed steady state voltage waveforms/phase relationships may be selected based on these conditions only or in combination with steady state current readings. Refer to PCT International Patent Application Designating the U.S. Ser. No. PCT/US/______ entitled “METHODS AND APPARATUS FOR MONITORING POWER FLOW IN A CONDUCTOR”, (Attorney Ref. No. 6270/149) filed Jul. 16, 2004, herein incorporated by reference.
  • Several procedures for retrieving energy related data from energy monitoring devices 120 in the building 100 will now be discussed. It will be appreciated that the described procedures may be used alone or in combination without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
  • FIG. 3 shows a first procedure for retrieving energy related data from an energy monitoring device 120. The energy monitoring device 120 may be installed and interfaced to voltage and current signals (block 300) in order to monitor or measure at least one power parameter (block 310). The power parameter may be kWh, kVAh, kVARh, kW demand, kVAR demand, kVA demand, voltage, current, etc. The energy monitoring device contains a number of registers which store various measured and computed data values. This installation may be in electrical room 130 or any other appropriate installation location. The energy monitoring device creates a security register data (block 320) and stores this data in a security register in the device 120. This security register data is created by the operation of the private key 281 on the measured power parameter(s), for example, the private key 281 may be hashed together with the measured power parameter(s). The private key 281 may be any of the pieces of information described above. The register (including the security register) contents are then retrieved from the energy monitoring device 120 (block 325). The registers may be retrieved using any appropriate method. Some example methods include reading with a portable computing device 180 over a wireless link, manual recording on paper or into a handheld device or direct communication over a communication link to a central computer. The retrieved register contents are then returned to the utility or other entity that bills for energy usage (block 330). This may be accomplished by returning the paper or portable computing device 180, or storage media therefrom, to the utility or receiving the register contents over a communications link at the utility. The register contents, including the security register data from the security register, are then downloaded into a computer (block 340) where the register contents are authenticated using an appropriate public key (block 350) or using a shared private key. The public key may be any of the pieces of information described above.
  • Using this procedure, the possibility of an individual (such as a meter reader) tampering with energy readings is reduced due to the fact that the individual would either have to know the private key of the device, or be able to compromise the particular public/private key algorithm used in order to change the energy readings without detection.
  • FIG. 4 shows a second procedure for retrieving power parameters from an energy monitoring device 120. This procedure may be appropriate for use when a consumer of energy wishes to verify that they are being billed correctly for energy usage. The energy monitoring device is installed and monitors at least one power parameter (blocks 300, 310) in a similar fashion as described in the previous procedure. The energy monitoring device 120 signs the power parameter(s) (block 400) utilizing a digital signature and transmits the power parameter(s) and signature over the network (block 410). As used herein, to “sign”, or alternatively, “digitally sign”, a message/document means to generate or otherwise append a “digital signature” to the message/document. A digital signature is an electronic signature appended to a message/document that can be used to authenticate the identity of the sender of a message/document, the signer of a document/message, ensure that the original content of the message/document that has been sent is unchanged and/or prevent repudiation of the document's/message's contents by the sender. The signed document/message, with or without the digital signature may, but need not, be encrypted, either before or after signing. A digital signature is typically generated based on the contents of the document/message and the sender's private key of the public/private key pair. Upon receipt, the receiver of the message “authenticates” the message contents using the sender's public key. The network may be the mesh network previously described wherein the packets are transmitted via other energy monitoring devices or any other appropriate communications means. This information is received by a computer which makes the information available to a consumer of energy (or other entity that wishes to verify energy readings). For example, the information may be made available by way of a website hosted on an appropriate server. The consumer of energy (or other entity that wishes to verify energy readings) retrieves a public key from the device (block 420). This public key may be on a label 282 or may be provided by any other appropriate mechanism as described above. The user may then use the public key to authenticate the information on the website (block 430) and retrieve the authenticated energy readings (block 440).
  • In order to secure packets transmitted between them, the energy monitoring devices 120 may use a shared key. In this example, before sending a packet to the next energy monitoring device 120, the originating energy monitoring device 120 encrypts the packet (or portion thereof) with the shared key. The receiving energy monitoring device 120 then decrypts the packet (or portion thereof) and only forwards the packet on to the next energy monitoring device 120 if the decryption process results in valid information. In this way, energy monitoring devices 120 or rogue devices may not insert themselves into the mesh network unless they know the shared key (or defeat the encryption/decryption algorithm).
  • The energy monitoring devices 120 may incorporate a GPS receiver or other mechanism for determining position (such as RF triangulation techniques). The position of each energy monitoring device 120 may be incorporated and secured in packets transmitted from the energy monitoring device using techniques such as those previously described. Any receiving device may then ignore data from a device that is not in an expected geographical location. This information may also be used to detect tampering such as for instance an energy monitoring device 120 being moved from its expected location. In addition, the portable communication device 180 may also incorporate a GPS receiver. The portable communication device may then compare its position to that of the energy monitoring device it is querying in order to verify it is querying the correct meter. This comparison may also be performed later after the data from the portable communication device 180 has been transferred to a computer.
  • At least one of the energy monitoring devices 120 may use pattern recognition or other techniques to scan packets they are forwarding to additional energy monitoring devices 120. These techniques may be used to detect rogue packets or packets containing malicious code. This may help prevent tampering with the system and may help prevent viruses from propagating through the system.
  • A mesh network provides redundancy in communications between devices. For enhanced reliability of the network it is desirable to have more than once communications path from each device. The computer 160 of the present invention may receive diagnostic information from the devices in the mesh network such that identification of devices with only one communications path leading from them may be identified to the user. Additional repeaters 155, gateways 150 or energy monitoring devices 120 may then be added to the system to improve reliability.
  • FIG. 12 shows an alternative exemplary commercial office building 100 a for use with the disclosed embodiments. The office building 100 a receives main power from a grid intertie 1200 which interconnects the building's 100 a internal power distribution network with the utility's power distribution grid. A service entrance infrastructure 1210 couples to the grid intertie and provides multiple 3 phase buses 1220 for powering various loads in the office building 100 a. In typical installation, only one energy meter is provided in the building to measure power parameters of power flow from the grid intertie 1200 to the service entrance infrastructure 1210.
  • Subsequent to the service entrance metering, power is distributed inside the building through various vertical shafts either with traditional conductors (older buildings) or via bus ducts (newer installations). The shafts are much like elevator shafts, vertically on top of each other spanning multiple floors, except that the shaft is only physically big enough to allow the conductors to pass through the floors (whereas an elevator shaft is completely open).
  • On each floor the power is distributed further to provide energy for lighting, plugs and other tenant loads.
  • Most of the shared building loads 1230 of the commercial office building 100 a are located on the roof. These loads include air conditioners, elevator motors, etc. The lease management office 1250 and engineering office floor 1240 are typically the only areas where the building owner or operator has office space. Therefore, gateways 150, computers 160, LAN 170 and WAN 171 connections for energy monitoring use are typically also located on these floors.
  • Energy consumption information may flow from the mesh networked devices (energy monitoring devices 120, repeaters 155 and gateways 150) through the computers 160, LAN 170, WAN 171 to a remote data processing center 1260 where usage information such as bills may be generated. This usage information 1270 is then returned to the building users 1280 through appropriate communication means. This information may also be delivered to corporate users 1290 such as the building owners/operators. A mesh network or other communications connection may be made to the service entrance meter 1215 in order that the computer 160 and/or remote data processing center 1260 may correlate the readings therefrom with those from the various energy monitoring devices 120. For instance if all loads within the office building 100 a are monitored with energy monitoring devices 120, the combination of the energy monitoring devices readings should correlate with those of the service entrance meter 1215.
  • The building users may be presented with billing information that categorizes their actual energy usage and share of common loads by the remote data processing center 1260 by using the information from the energy monitoring devices 120.
  • Three phase transformers 1205 may be provided at various points in the office building 100 a. In these cases it may be desirable to have energy monitoring devices 120 on both the inputs and outputs of the transformers to account for loses therein.
  • In one embodiment, the office building 100 a, may contain one or more than one electrical closet shafts 1225. These shafts may split or be widely separated from one another. It may therefore be necessary to have multiple mesh networks within the building that comprises separate sets of energy monitoring devices 120, repeaters 155, gateways 150 and computers 160. Wireline segments or other means of bridging gaps in the mesh network may alternatively or in addition be used as described above.
  • When commissioning the system, battery powered mesh networking devices such as battery powered repeaters 155 may be temporarily installed in the building in order to “prove” out the network and identify areas where particular attention will have to be paid to establishing network links.
  • In addition, in some implementations, the low power RF signals of the mesh network may have difficulty traveling in a horizontal direction from the associated antennas of the devices 120 due to inherent limitations in the transmissive properties of such signals. Such limitations may result in a restricted transmission range. However, typically the vertical transmissive properties of the RF signals are acceptable. In one embodiment, the mesh network is formed via the vertical electrical shafts which allow for the vertically radiated RF signals to travel relatively unimpeded. The mesh network is carried to the roof of the facility or to another area having no substantial RF impediments, where the mesh network is bridged, either via a wired or wireless connection to other electrical shafts which have similarly formed mesh networks. In this way, the vertical transmissive properties of the RF signals are advantageously utilized and reliance on the horizontal transmissive properties are minimized. Alternatively, for buildings such as malls with a small number of floors, but a wide horizontal expanse, mounting devices 120 and/or repeaters 155 to form the mesh network along the roof also provides for an efficient network structure. Devices 120 monitoring rooftop loads such as air conditioners may perform “double duty” by extending the mesh network as well as monitoring a load. Repeaters 155 may be solar powered when mounted in rooftop locations or otherwise as described herein.
  • The following describes one exemplary implementation of a system incorporating aspects of the present invention. One exemplary implementation, which employs one or more of the disclosed embodiments, utilizes the ION 6100 Wireless Metering System, manufactured by Power Measurement, Ltd., located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada, which offers outstanding quality, versatility, and functionality in a low-cost wireless power and energy metering system ideal for sub-billing applications. This system is based on the PML ION 6100 Wireless Power Meter/monitoring device 120 and meets ANSI C12.16 Class 1 energy accuracy. This system may be utilized by Commercial (Office & Retail) Properties market in North America, and is ideal for customers who need revenue-accurate measurements for tenant sub-billing.
  • The system includes wireless metering devices, non-intrusive current transformers (CTs), and a central gateway that gathers, aggregates and logs meter data and exports it in an industry-standard XML format for integration into any software or billing system (including Power Measurement's ION EEM software).
  • The meters collect time-stamped, interval-based consumption data (kWh) from key sub-metering or sub-billing points throughout a building, then communicate the information to the central gateway (PC) via a proprietary wireless 900 MHz radio network. All meters are time-aligned with the gateway clock, so the system can also provide coincident demand readings.
  • The system offers customers a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) because: wireless communications eliminate the need to run costly communication wire and conduit throughout a facility; easy-to-use, split-core, current transformers (CTs) simply clamp onto existing wires for non-intrusive current measurements, simplifying installation; the ultra-compact meter design can attach to virtually any enclosure more than four inches deep with a single bolt; and automated gathering of meter data removes the need for manual meter reading.
  • The exemplary ION 6100 Wireless Metering System offers: high quality and accuracy, low installation costs (contributing to a lower Total Cost of Ownership); a complete system (meters, communications, gateway) (contributing to a lower Total Cost of Ownership); industry-standard XML data export for easy integration into any software system (such as the ION enterprise energy management system (“EEM”), manufactured by Power Measurement Ltd, located in Saanichton, British Columbia, Canada); and time synchronized for coincident demand calculations.
  • Unlike other power meters, which are sold separately and to a wide range of markets, this device is made available as part of a larger sub-billing solution for the commercial property market in North America.
  • The exemplary ION 6100 power meter offers:
      • Sub-Billing and Cost Allocation
        • Costs (including usage and demand charges) can be fairly accounted for and apportioned among tenants appropriately, increasing tenant satisfaction and lowering operating costs.
      • Low Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)
        • The system offers customers a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) because:
          • All necessary components can be purchased at once, on a single P.O.;
          • Wireless communications eliminate the need to run costly communication wire and conduit throughout a facility;
          • Easy-to-use, split-core, current transformers (CTs) simply clamp onto existing wires for non-intrusive current measurements, simplifying installation;
          • Simple installation ensures no disruptions to regular business processes;
          • Ultra-compact meter design can attach to virtually any enclosure more than two inches deep through a standard knockout with a ½″ threaded conduit lock ring;
          • Automated gathering of meter data removes the need for manual meter reading.
      • Reliability
        • The ION 6100 offers a reliable “self-healing” approximately 900 MHz wireless radio network.
      • Each meter can relay a signal to the next closest meter, allowing signals to be easily transmitted from one end of a building to another. If a meter becomes unavailable, the other meters can communicate “around” it, so that there is no significant disruption in data transmission.
      • Useful Data
        • Besides sub-billing and cost allocation, data can be also used as an input to building automation and control systems, leveraging and maximizing the value of existing systems. The gateway can be used to capture a quick snapshot of overall operating performance and/or identify power problems at a particular load.
        • The ION 6100 Wireless Metering System is currently aimed at the North American commercial office and retail properties market, for buildings with greater than 500,000 square feet of leasable space and at least 20 tenants.
        • The key application for this system is sub-billing, but many commercial enterprises are also beginning to leverage these systems as core elements of a more comprehensive EEM solution focused on reducing energy costs and improving their net operating income (NOI) and overall asset value.
      • Value Proposition
        • For commercial building managers and owners in North America who need an accurate and automated system for fairly recovering energy costs from tenants. This system combines an accurate and reliable meter with a robust wireless communication network to create an automated sub-billing system with a low installation cost and a low total cost of ownership (TCO). Unlike traditional sub-metering devices, which must be manually read or that may lack the software required for efficient sub-billing or more powerful enterprise energy management. The ION 6100 Wireless Metering System is an integrated end-to-end solution for tenant sub-metering and a key piece of a comprehensive Enterprise Energy Management (EEM) system
  • Exemplary relevant applications of the exemplary system include Primary Application: Sub-Billing
  • Typical scenario before installing ION 6100 Wireless Metering System solution:
    Existing No Metering Existing Metering -
    Situation No System
    Desired The property owner needs The property owner needs
    Outcome to recover the costs of to recover the costs of
    supplying electricity to the supplying electricity to the
    individual tenants for the individual tenants for the
    lowest cost possible. lowest cost possible.
    Attempted Energy and demand costs Meters are manually read
    Approach are either not passed either by a sub-billing
    through to the tenants, or service provider or by a
    costs are allocated to the designated individual or
    tenants based on a common individuals employed by
    formula - normally based the property management
    on the square footage of the company.
    tenant relative to the total
    leasable space of the
    building.
    Interfering Some States prohibit Even with existing metering
    Factors allocation methods of cost that has communications
    recovery (Note: some ability the cost of
    prohibit sub-billing as implementing
    well). Traditionally, the communications can be
    costs to implement a sub- high.
    metering system are high.
    Economic Tenants are getting smarter The labor and data integrity
    Consequences and asking to be billed only costs of managing these
    for their own usage. manual systems are high.
    Allocation methods are The lack of resolution in
    inaccurate and generally the data (i.e. one monthly
    considered unfair. Accurate kWh reading) provides no
    and reliable sub-billing is insight into the
    somewhere between being a opportunities that may be
    competitive and a de-facto available to better manage
    standard. costs.
    Allocation of coincident
    demand costs is not
    possible.
  • Typical scenario after installing the exemplary ION 6100 Wireless Metering System solution:
    New A low TCO, highly accurate A low TCO, highly accurate
    Approach and reliably automated sub- and reliably automated sub-
    billing system billing system
    Enabling Low cost metering devices Low cost metering devices
    Factors that are inexpensive to install that are inexpensive to install
    (non-intrusive CTs, wireless (non-intrusive CTs, wireless
    communications) and communications) and
    maintain. maintain.
    Powerful and user-friendly Powerful and user-friendly
    data collection and billing data collection and billing
    software for providing software for providing
    detailed cost data. detailed cost data.
    Economic Enables energy cost recovery Competitive or sustained
    Rewards in States that do not allow advantage relative to tenant
    allocation methods. satisfaction. Reduces costs
    Competitive or sustained due to manual reading and
    advantage relative to tenant potential data entry errors.
    satisfaction. Detailed interval Detailed interval data enables
    data enables accurate accurate coincident demand
    coincident demand cost cost recovery. Detailed
    recovery. Detailed interval interval data enables insight to
    data enables insight to identify identify energy savings
    energy savings opportunities. opportunities.
  • Secondary Applications include: Contract and Bill Validation, which can help customers verify that energy management improvements are generating the projected payback, high-accuracy measurements can also be used for utility bill verification; and Cost Allocation which can help monitor cost centers right down to the tool level, identify opportunities for demand control, and check energy consumption patterns.
  • The following tables describe features and benefits of the exemplary ION 6100 monitoring device as both a metering device and as a gateway device.
  • ION 6100 Metering Device
    Feature Advantage Benefit
    ION 6100 meter, All the metering pieces Simple to purchase,
    NICTs, wireless in one neat little package inexpensive to install and
    communications operate - Installed costs of
    gateway $300 to $500 per metering
    point as compared with
    traditional sub-metering
    solutions
    Non-intrusive The ION 6100 meters Low installation cost, no
    current & voltage can be installed without installation disruption
    transformers requiring an outage in
    (NICVTs/NICTs) power to the load
    and/or voltage
    displacement
    connections
    Wireless radio No holes to drill, no Low installation costs, no
    network conduit or wires to run, communication configura-
    communications instant and automatic tion on the device -
    network configuration Reliable “self-healing”
    network communications
    Exceeds ANSI Accuracy is verified to Costs can be fairly
    C12.16 (1%) national sub-metering accounted for and
    accuracy standards apportioned appropriately
    standards or
    appropriate local
    standard.
    24 hour internal Data is stored on the Low risk of data loss
    data storage device as a backup in
    case of a temporary com-
    munication interruption
    Devices are time Independent device Building demand charges
    synchronized to clocks are coordinated to can be accurately
    the ION 6100 enable accurate coinci- apportioned among tenants
    Gateway for dent demand calculations
    coincident
    demand
    calculation
  • ION 6100 Gateway
    Feature Advantage Benefit
    All data is Gateway software can be Data can be used for sub-
    collected configured to export data to billing, as an input to building
    in a multiple systems automation and control
    central systems, etc.
    data file
    and
    exported
    as
    required
    Diagnostic Other power, energy, The gateway can be used to
    data can communication and other capture a quick snapshot of
    be diagnostic data can be viewed overall operating performance
    requested on the gateway from any and / or identify power
    from device in the network problems at a particular load.
    devices
  • It is therefore intended that the foregoing detailed description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that it be understood that it is the following claims, including all equivalents, that are intended to define the spirit and scope of this invention.

Claims (1)

1. An energy monitoring device for securely reporting energy consumption, comprising:
current interface circuitry operative to sense current flow in at least one power line and generate a first analog signal indicative thereof;
at least one analog to digital converter coupled with said current interface circuitry and operative to convert said first analog signal to a digital representation of said sensed current flow;
a processor coupled with said at least one analog to digital converter, and operative to calculate at least one measure of energy consumption based on said digital representation and store said calculated at least one measure of energy consumption as at least one energy consumption message;
a memory register coupled with said processor and operative to store a private key, wherein said processor is further operative to generate a digital signature based on said at least one energy consumption message and said private key and sign said at least one energy consumption message utilizing said digital signature; and
a radio frequency interface coupled with said processor and operative to transmit said signed at least one energy consumption message, via at least a second and a third energy monitoring device, to a remote device.
US11/497,218 2003-03-31 2006-07-31 Methods and apparatus for retrieving energy readings from an energy monitoring device Abandoned US20060271244A1 (en)

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US46976603P 2003-05-12 2003-05-12
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US10/752,467 US7188003B2 (en) 1994-12-30 2004-01-05 System and method for securing energy management systems
US55418804P 2004-03-18 2004-03-18
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US10/892,837 US7089089B2 (en) 2003-03-31 2004-07-16 Methods and apparatus for retrieving energy readings from an energy monitoring device
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