WaterBox

A testbed for monitoring and controlling smart water networks

Conference Paper (2015)
Author(s)

Sokratis Kartakis (Imperial College London)

Edo Abraham (Imperial College London)

Julie A. McCann (Imperial College London)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/2738935.2738939
More Info
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Publication Year
2015
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
ISBN (electronic)
9781450334853

Abstract

Smart water distribution networks are a good example of a large scale Cyber-Physical System that requires monitoring for precise data analysis and network control. Due to the critical nature of water distribution, an extensive simulation of decision making and control algorithms are required before their deployment. Although some aspects of water network behaviour can be simulated in software such as hydraulic responses in valve changes, software simulators are unable to include dynamic events such as leakages or bursts in physical models. Furthermore, due to safety concerns, contemporary large-scale testbeds are limited to the monitoring processes or control methods with well established safety guarantees. Sophisticated algorithms for dynamic and optimal water network reconfiguration are not yet widespread. This paper presents a small-scale testbed, WaterBox, which allows the simulation of emerging/advanced monitoring and control algorithms in a fail-safe environment. The flexible hydraulic, hardware, and software infrastructure enables a substantial number of experiments. On-going experiments are related to in-node data processing and decision making, energy optimization, event-driven communication, and automatic control.

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