Breaking News - Networking:
IEEE To Support Broadband Communications Over Local Power Lines
The ability to send high-speed digital data over the power lines between
substations and homes and offices is attracting increasing attention because
it can make every wall outlet a portal to the Internet. In seeking to help
realize this potential, the IEEE has begun to develop IEEE P1675, "Standard
for Broadband over Power Line Hardware."
When finished, IEEE P1675 will give electric utilities a comprehensive
standard for installing the required hardware on distribution lines, both
underground and overhead, which provide the infrastructure for
broadband-over-power-line (BPL) systems. It also will include installation
requirements for the protection of those who work on BPL equipment and to
ensure such systems do not place the public at risk. The standard is targeted
for completion in mid 2006.
"By turning the local power grid into a broadband conduit, we create another
option for universal access to the Internet," said Terrence Burns, chair of
the IEEE BPL Standards Working Group. "This technology offers a neat solution
to the 'last-mile' quandary of how to bring information from long-distance
fiber optic cables to individual computers without investing in costly
infrastructure.
"Nearly all electrical utilities are exploring BPL because the potential
benefits are so substantial. Power companies face a number of issues in doing
this, for example, how to assess the performance and safety of
repeaters/routers, medium- and low-voltage coupling hardware, and other
equipment before buying. Other issues include how best to put this equipment
in place and how to keep the overall system operating well and prevent it from
interfering with power delivery. The new standard will help them deal with
these concerns."
Adding broadband capability to a local power distribution system is relatively
straightforward. A computer-router combination and a coupler take the signal
from an optical fiber cable as it enters a substation and imposes it on the
electric current. The signal travels over the medium-voltage lines, with
repeaters placed every .5 to 1 mile to keep the signal viable.
A repeater/router near a residence or business extracts the signal off the
medium voltage just before the transformer and injects it onto the low-voltage
wiring on the other side of the transformer. The signal is now on all of the
low voltage wiring within the structure and can be accessed at any outlet by
plugging in a modem.
Anyone from the utility, Internet service provider and BPL equipment sectors
who wants to help develop this standard is invited to join the IEEE 1675
Working Group. For more information on this standard and its working group,
visit grouper.ieee.org/groups/bop.
IEEE 1675 is sponsored by the IEEE Power Engineering Society, Power System
Communications Committee.
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