Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)
by R. Anandan, Suseendran Gopalakrishnan, Souvik Pal, Noor Zaman
3Smart Automation, Smart Energy, and Grid Management Challenges
J. Gayathri Monicka1 and C. Amuthadevi2*
1Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, SRMIST, Ramapuram, India
2Department of Computer Science and Engineering, SRMIST, Kattankulatur, India
Abstract
Energy production is transformed dynamically, and the basic infrastructure containing information and technology is gradually being built. The Internet of Things (IoT) can be an assembly of individual objects at anytime, anywhere, to anyone, to everything, by means of any network and service. Consequently, IoT can denote an enormous, active international configuration of a network of Internet-connected objects through network tools. The further most significant and important claims of IoT are smart grid (SG). SG can be a data net united into the power grid to assemble and analyze data that cannot be inherited as of transmission lines, distribution, and customer substations. With the development and modernization of smart electronic devices in traditional energy grids and their revolution in SGs, there is a prerequisite for retrieving and processing information from these devices in real time or near real time. In addition, data mining requires that field devices can also communicate with each other through a central reference point. Owing to the interoperability of the IoT within smart networks, communication between devices not normally designed for the fullest possible exchange of information, information ...