BS EN IEC 62746-10-3:2018
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Systems interface between customer energy management system and the power management system – Open automated demand response. Adapting smart grid user interfaces to the IEC common information model
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2018 | 34 |
IEC 62746-10-3:2018 defines and describes methods and example XML artefacts that can be used to build a conformant adapter to enable interoperation between a utility distributed automation or demand response (DR) system based on the IEC common information model (CIM) and a utility smart grid user interface (SGUI) bridge standard (e.g., IEC 62746-10-1) to a customer facility. The scope is restricted to a method to define payload mappings between any specific CIM profile that contains DR/DER information models and the SGUI bridge standards including IEC 62746-10-1.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | undefined |
5 | Annex ZA(normative)Normative references to international publicationswith their corresponding European publications |
7 | English CONTENTS |
9 | FOREWORD |
11 | INTRODUCTION |
12 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references |
13 | 3 Terms and definitions |
15 | 4 Abbreviated terms 5 Connecting facility management and grid operations 5.1 Business and functional requirements for the adapter 5.2 Adapter benefits |
16 | 5.3 Interoperation overview 5.3.1 General 5.3.2 Grid operations standards 5.3.3 Customer facility standards 5.3.4 Smart grid user interface (SGUI) |
17 | 5.3.5 Role of the bridge and adapter Figures Figure 1 – The smart grid user interface (SGUI) as a blue bar betweengrid operations and customer facility management and control |
18 | 5.4 Interaction model for interoperability Figure 2 – Adapter and IEC 62746-10-1 as an example SGUI bridge Tables Table 1 – Actors and key standards |
19 | 5.5 Adapter deployments Figure 3 – Actors in grid, adapter, and facility domains, usingIEC 62746-10-1 as the SGUI bridge standard |
20 | 6 Constructing the adapter 6.1 General considerations Figure 4 – Grouping adapters with grid actor (left hand side) orwith a facility actor (right hand side) |
21 | Figure 5 – Two transformation paths from CIM DR profile (upper left)to SGUI bridge standard (lower right) |
22 | 6.2 Adapter protocol and message type 6.3 Namespace and version management 6.4 Subjects of the adapter Figure 6 – Transforming CIM DR model profiles into XML schema |
23 | 6.5 Implementing the adapter 6.5.1 General 6.5.2 Step one: Determine information model for SGUI end 6.5.3 Step two: Determine information model for grid operations end 6.5.4 Step three: Build XML schema for CIM DR profile 6.5.5 Step four: Build XML transformation between grid operations and SGUI |
24 | 6.5.6 Step five: Develop, test and deploy the adapter 6.5.7 Changing the adapter implementation to use the UML-to-UML-first path 7 Example transformation (informative) 7.1 General |
25 | 7.2 Notes on transformation 7.2.1 General Figure 7 – Graphical XSLT mapping between CIM ResourceDeployment sample messagebased on IEC 62325-301:2018 and IEC 62746-10-1 EiEvent |
26 | 7.2.2 Transformation functions that do not draw on the CIM DR schema 7.2.3 Transformation functions that draw on business and implementation context |
27 | 7.2.4 Transformation functions for detailed signal name, type, and ID 7.2.5 Transformation function that converts CIM date time intervals to the equivalent SGUI bridge standard intervals 7.2.6 Other information mapping issues |
28 | Annex A (informative)XML artefacts for standard adapters A.1 General A.2 Adapter example CIM XML artefacts A.3 Adapter example OpenADR XML artefacts A.4 XSLT transform xml artefact |
29 | Annex B (informative)Details for mapping and adaptation B.1 Time interval mapping function B.2 Mapping functions related to mRIDs B.3 Business context mapping functions B.4 Other mapping functions |
30 | Annex C (informative)Considerations for adapter implementers C.1 Overview C.2 Notes on information model for CIM endpoint C.3 Notes on information model for SGUI-facing endpoint C.4 Interfaces and protocols C.5 Service requests and verbs in IEC 61968-100 and SGUI standards |
31 | Table C.1 – Verbs comparison (source: OASIS Energy Interoperation 1.0) Table C.2 – Message type comparison |
32 | Bibliography |