Abstract

In this paper, we look into smart water metering infrastructures that enable continuous, on-demand and bidirectional data exchange between metering devices, water flow equipment, utilities and end-users. We focus on the design, development and deployment of such infrastructures as part of larger, smart city, infrastructures. Until now, such critical smart city infrastructures have been developed following a cloud-centric paradigm where all the data are collected and processed centrally using cloud services to create real business value. Cloud-centric approaches need to address several performance issues at all levels of the network, as massive metering datasets are transferred to distant machine clouds while respecting issues like security and data privacy. Our solution uses the fog computing paradigm to provide a system where the computational resources already available throughout the network infrastructure are utilized to facilitate greatly the analysis of fine-grained water consumption data collected by the smart meters, thus significantly reducing the overall load to network and cloud resources. Details of the system’s design are presented along with a pilot deployment in a real-world environment. The performance of the system is evaluated in terms of network utilization and computational performance. Our findings indicate that the fog computing paradigm can be applied to a smart grid deployment to reduce effectively the data volume exchanged between the different layers of the architecture and provide better overall computational, security and privacy capabilities to the system.

Highlights

  • The concept of a smart water grid refers to augmenting existing water distribution grids by introducing continuous, on-demand and bidirectional data exchange between metering devices, water flow equipment, utilities and end-users [1]

  • Both the smart metering devices and the Mox nodes were fixed in specific locations, but the quality of the communication was severely influenced by external parameters and installation characteristics

  • This paper presented an Internet of Things (IoT)-enabled platform, designed based on the fog computing paradigm, for monitoring and controlling water distribution grids

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Summary

A Smart Water Metering Deployment Based on the

Dimitrios Amaxilatis 1, *,† , Ioannis Chatzigiannakis 2 , Christos Tselios 3 , Nikolaos Tsironis 1 , Nikos Niakas 4 and Simos Papadogeorgos 4. Current address: 74 High Street, Swadlincote, Derbyshire DE11 8HS, UK. Featured Application: Smart water metering enabling continuous, on-demand and bidirectional data exchange between metering devices, water flow equipment and utilities within a smart city context

Introduction
Deploying Intelligence on the Network Edge
Multi-Access Edge Computing
Fog Computing
Deploying Low-Power Long-Range Networks
Deploying in Heterogeneous Computing Environments
Hierarchical Network Architecture
Fog Computing-Based Data Processing Hierarchy
Data Engineering on the Fog Layer
Generic Data Processing
Continuous Data Analysis
Application-Specific Processing
Cloud-Based Services
Identity Management
Historic Events
Telemetry
Asynchronous Notifications
Evaluation and Benchmarking
LoRaWAN Connectivity Evaluation
Edge Data Processing Evaluation
Conclusions
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