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Posts Tagged ‘Energy Harvesting’

Contrary to what you might believe (after all it is officially the sunniest place in Britain), the sun does not always shine for hotel owners in Weymouth, in Dorset. They are not only feeling the present economic downturn, but the price of electricity is soaring and obviously shows as a big red minus on their balance sheet. So instead of watching their profits diminish because of the price of power, the management of one leading Dorset hotel looked for a way of cutting cost and reducing their energy consumption. The answer was simple and their Contractor introduced them to EnOcean‘s self-powered wireless technology.

Project Type

The project involved retrofitting 106 rooms with energy saving solutions that work on alternative sources. A new energy management system  was required that would enable the hotel to both reduce its overall power consumption and help do something against climate change. If they could achieve a 20% decrease in total power consumption, it will enable the hotel to reduce their annual carbon emissions by over 14o,000 kg.

Customer Expectations

They wanted the hotel rooms fitted with wireless key card switches, presence detectors and door sensors. The wireless key card switch will function as a master switch for the hotel rooms. A presence detector automatically cuts out the HVAC as soon as a guest takes their key card out of the dock and leaves their room. A door sensor, powered by a solar cell, recognizes the status of doors and windows and will also switches off the HVAC after a set length of time if the door to a balcony is open. Signals for the cableless and batteryless light switches and sensors are converted into switching functions by relay receivers.

Customer Comment

Given the financial and environmental benefits, we were happy to accept a short term shutdown for the purpose of installation. The hotel didn’t have to be closed for any lengthy period because attachment of the EnOcean-enabled cable-less sensors and switches is so fast and straightforward. Almost all rooms were pre-booked, so the loss through installing cabled switches and sensors would have cancelled out the immediate gain resulting from the project. Not forgetting all the effort, discomfort, inconvenience and not to mention mess involved in routing cables through concrete walls and ceilings. A further advantage of the new EnOcean technology is the fact that the sensors and switches are self-powered, so they need no maintenance, i.e. battery replacement, for their entire lifetime.

Top Features

  1. Power consumption down and carbon footprint smaller
  2. Speed of installation prevented operating loss
  3. An investment that pays back
  4. The ecological advantages of course, through less air pollution and reduced consumption of raw materials
  5. Wireless key card switches
  6. Presence detectors that automatically cut out the HVAC
EnOcean Logo

 

Bottomless power generation comes from ambient sources such as linear motion, light and temperature differentials. Wires run through buildings like veins run through our bodies. Wires are pervasive and vital to day-to-day operations; however, today’s brave new ‘green’ world warrants consideration for solutions that reach beyond the confines of wires. As one decade comes to a close, EnOcean asserts that the next decade will feature wireless and batteryless controls that will carry building energy initiatives where wires fall short.

Widespread Smart Building integration has been stalled by installation costs and ominous tasks such as pulling wires through walls and ceilings. Battery-dependent wireless solutions can overcome some installation barriers, but the market has indicated it will not tolerate the maintenance issues tied to them. If the goal is to reduce energy consumption and CO2 emissions, then integrators need non-invasive installation means and payback data that tips the scale in favor of spending the money to modernize existing buildings. Now that more than 100,000 buildings have been fitted with EnOcean-based products and energy reductions are in the books, a case is being made that wireless energy harvesting controls provide a radically easy form of Smart Building integration.

The Power of Unused Energy

The hallmark of the EnOcean wireless standard is batteryless and wireless communications. The technology stems from a simple observation – where sensors capture measured values, the energy state is constantly changing. For example, when a switch is pressed; temperatures and luminance levels change. These rudimentary operations generate enough energy to transmit radio signals that automate lighting and HVAC control. Instead of batteries or line power, EnOcean uses miniaturized energy converters and capacitors that power sensors and switches. EnOcean’s bottomless power generation comes from ambient sources such as linear motion, light and temperature differentials.

Energy harvesting enables the generation of radio signals from extremely small amounts of energy. Using just 50 micro watts of harvested power, an EnOcean-based control can transmit a radio signal 1,000 feet (150 feet is typically indoors – through walls and ceilings). An important part of the patented secret is using short signal durations – the entire radio transmission process starts, executes and completes in less than one thousandth of a second.

3rd Generation Wireless Energy Harvesting

EnOcean recently released its 3rd generation suite of energy harvesting wireless modules. The modules are based upon the Dolphin ASIC, the world’s first platform that supports self-powered two-way wireless communications, ultra low power sleep modes and the ability to self-power actuators such as water valves and air vents. Wireless building automation devices spend much of their time asleep; so EnOcean engineered the lowest sleep current in the industry (200 nA). Dolphin-based modules consume approximately 1/10th the power of common low power radio modules. The platform allows OEMs to create energy-autonomous controls that are able to draw power from multiple ambient sources, such as solar, linear motion and thermal energies.

EnOcean modules are often referred to as ‘application modules’ and these modules ship out-of-the-box with extensive firmware functionalities built-in – such as basic switching, dimming, measuring, etc. – and can go straight into an application without additional programming. EnOcean developed highly efficient methods of synchronizing sensors, supporting RF acknowledgments as well as integrated sensing/control functions. Application-specific functions reduce product development times and are embedded in each module; however, integrators can now also develop their own firmware using EnOcean’s new Dolphin Studio – support software for custom firmware development, RF packet monitoring and C-based code sampling.

The new Dolphin platform conforms to the open, interoperable EnOcean Alliance protocol and enables manufacturers to rapidly develop solutions to suit today’s ‘green’ economy. EnOcean’s Dolphin system architecture is also backward compatible with earlier EnOcean products and installations. In addition to the introduction of new platform, the company has also further enhanced wireless capabilities with remote commissioning and wireless routing creating new opportunities previously not possible with energy harvesting. Dolphin-based radio modules are now available direct from EnOcean or through and its distribution channels.

HVAC Energy Management

Radio waves are in the thick of the race to make buildings more energy efficient. Integrators can reduce installation costs and recoup those installations costs via energy usage reductions over time. Older buildings are often guilty of wasting giant sums of power. The Government estimates that 80% of buildings constructed prior to 1980 are energy-inefficient and do not house and Smart Building Technology. Additionally, older buildings often have little or inadequate insulation.

Speedy Implementation

Entire installation can be carried out with minimum interruption – Virtually impossible to achieve using a cabled solution because of the need to break open walls (duct work and cabling). Implementation of the system in even a large office complex can take just one week — including installation of the central control engineering to monitor and govern energy consumption. The biggest challenge is the right positioning of the room sensors because you’re dealing with thick walls made of concrete and steel. However, choosing EnOcean’s self-powered wireless technology can save up to 20 percent in installation costs alone and significant energy savings.

Lighting Energy Management

Buildings account for 38% of this country’s CO2 emission and lighting accounts for 40% of the energy consumed by buildings. Buildings therefore present an important place to start improving energy management via things like occupancy-based lighting control systems. Occupancy Sensors have been identified as the primary means for conserving energy.

Installation

Because the controls do not require wiring or batteries, installation can be completed in just three steps.

  1. Replace existing light switches with line-powered receiver light switches (wiring is the same as a standard switch).
  2. Program the light switch receiver to respond to occupancy sensor and self-powered light switch. The devices are factory set to manual-ON, auto-OFF (custom to suit California Title 24) – no extra setup was necessary; however, an “auto-ON, auto-OFF” mode is also supported.
  3. Mount sensors and light switch – anywhere! Since they are self-powered and wireless, the controls were mounted according to building owner preferences.

The EnOcean Alliance

More than 120 automation solution manufacturers formed the EnOcean Alliance to promote sustainable buildings via batteryless and wireless controls. The Alliance is committed to interoperability through 1 wireless standard. Collectively, Alliance members have manufactured 300+ building automation products that are on the shelf today – more than any other wireless standard.

Interoperability is an important key to the Alliance’s success:

  • Between Products – All EnOcean-based sensors and switches are interoperable – regardless of the manufacturer. For example, an occupancy sensor manufactured by Vendor A can communicate to a controller manufactured by Vendor Z.
  • Between Applications – EnOcean-based solutions support multiple applications (ie. a single wireless light switch can communicate to lighting systems as well as HVAC systems).
  • As Gateways & Interfaces (LonMark, BACnet, DMX, 802.11, TCP/IP Ethernet, KNX, RS-232/485 Serial, etc.)

To find out more, please visit http://www.enocean-alliance.org.

 

BACnet International and the EnOcean Alliance, an international consortium of 130 companies from the building sector, recently announced its cooperation with BACnet’s Wireless Networking-Working Group (WN-WG) to develop a vendor independent gateway specification for integrating EnOcean-based wireless energy-harvesting nodes into the world’s leading data communications protocol for building automation and control. As the only wireless standard offering self-powered operation, EnOcean technology requires neither batteries nor maintenance, thus opening the floodgates to wide-scale deployment of wireless sensing-solutions in commercial buildings, including BACnet-based building automation systems.

Recent meetings between the two organizations have opened the door to the full integration of wireless EnOcean and wired BACnet-enabled technologies, with the result that an EnOcean interoperability proposal has been drafted for the BACnet committee meeting at AHR Expo in Orlando, Florida. BACnet – a data communication protocol for building automation and control networks is defined in the ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 135 – 2008 and also the international standard ISO 16484-5.

The working group’s current standardization efforts aim to ensure the interoperability of multiple EnOcean and BACnet solutions available today or in development, as well as future implementations. “The task at hand is to define common implementation rules for an EnOcean/BACnet gateway,” said Dave Robin, Chairman of the BACnet Technical Working Group. “This will entail a number of issues, including specifying the network topology and the BACnet/EnOcean objectives needed to define a single model so that all implementations will be interoperable.”

As the organization responsible for promoting the use of BACnet technologies for building automation, BACnet International sees this as a significant achievement. “The world has evolved towards a wired and wireless infrastructure, and it is a significant step to bridge these together with a standard mechanism for building automation suppliers and users,” said Andy McMillan, President of BACnet International and President/CEO of Teletrol Systems. He added, “In the IT world, wired and wireless interoperability has long since been accomplished. I am very happy to be involved in the effort to make this available for the building automation industry.”

Leveraging the strengths of both technologies will create long-term value by allowing the existing wired BACnet infrastructure to seamlessly add wireless devices for additional functionality and greater energy savings. “As a practical, wireless extension of BACnet solutions, EnOcean technology is ideal for lowering cost of ownership in retrofits and new buildings,” said Graham Martin, Chairman and CEO of EnOcean Alliance. “As a field-proven solution for the BACnet environment, many facilities have already successfully deployed wireless solutions in which EnOcean and BACnet technologies are interoperating to reduce installation and maintenance costs, along with providing energy savings beyond 30 percent.”

A number of EnOcean Alliance partners will be exhibiting a range of interoperable EnOcean wireless devices for the BACnet platform at AHR Expo (Orlando, FL, Jan 25-27), including Distech Controls, winner of an AHR Honorary Mention Award for this platform.

About ASHRAE

Founded in 1894, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) is a nonprofit technical organization whose 51,000 members influence the direction of heating, ventilation, air-conditioning and refrigeration (HVAC&R) technology by creating industry standards and recommended procedures and guidelines, developing research and writing technical information.

For the latest information, visit: ashrae.org.

About BACnet

Developed under the auspices of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), BACnet is an ASHRAE, ANSI and ISO data communications protocol for building automation and control networks. Tracing its development back to 1987, the BACnet protocol allows heating, ventilating, air-conditioning, lighting, security, fire detection and other building automation and control systems to communicate and exchange information, regardless of service performed.

For the latest information, visit: bacnet.org.

About BACnet International

BACnet International is an industry association that facilitates the successful use of the BACnet protocol in building automation and control systems through interoperability testing, educational programs, and promotional activities. The BACnet standard was developed by ASHRAE and has been made publicly available so that manufacturers can create interoperable systems of products. BACnet International complements the work of the ASHRAE standards committee and BACnet-related interest groups around the world. BACnet International members include building owners, consulting engineers and facility managers, as well as companies involved in the design, manufacturing installation, commissioning, and maintenance of control equipment that uses BACnet for communication.

For more information, please visit bacnetinternational.org.

About the EnOcean Alliance

EnOcean Alliance, a consortium of currently 130 international corporations, shares the common goal of standardizing wireless control systems for sustainable building applications. The core technology of the Alliance centers around EnOcean’s patented energy harvesting and radio-frequency technology offering self-powered wireless operation in the form of flexibly positioned, maintenance-free sensor solutions. The goal of the EnOcean Alliance is to standardize and internationalize EnOcean wireless technology through the creation of true interoperability between all products produced by the Alliance’s OEM partners. EnOcean Alliance is a California 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation headquartered in San Ramon, CA.

For more information, please visit enocean-alliance.org.

Self-powered wireless sensor modules win IDTechEx Energy Harvesting 2009 Award

EnOcean Logo

EnOcean, the inventor of energy harvesting wireless sensor networks, was awarded the top prize for “Best Application of Energy Harvesting” by IDTechEx’s panel of independent experts.

EnOcean’s energy harvesting radio modules were recognized for their role in simplifying the integration of building energy management systems via self-powered wireless sensors and switches. While buildings account for approximately 40 percent of all energy consumed and 50 percent of greenhouse gas emissions; EnOcean has taken giant strides towards reducing the amount of energy lost to unnecessary lighting, heating and cooling of buildings. BAS (Building Automation Systems) have proven to be a reliable means of reducing energy consumption in buildings by up to 40%. Self-powered sensors and switches, enabled by EnOcean, overcome the integration barriers that have stalled widespread BAS retrofitting.

EnOcean technology has already been deployed in more than 100,000 buildings worldwide – wirelessly linking energy autonomous sensor networks. All EnOcean-based sensors, switches and controllers are interoperable – regardless of the manufacturer. For example, an EnOcean-based occupancy sensor manufactured by Vendor A will communicate to any lighting or HVAC controller manufactured by Vendor Z. Currently, more than 100 manufacturers have joined the EnOcean Alliance and have manufactured solutions that can anchor BAS. EnOcean-based sensors and switches are powered by ambient sources of energy – such as light, temperature and motion.

EnOcean modules, often referred to as “application modules”, ship out-of-box with extensive firmware functionalities built-in – such as basic switching, dimming, measuring, etc. – and can go straight into an application without additional programming. The EnOcean Alliance’s open, interoperable wireless standard enables manufacturers to rapidly develop solutions to suit today’s “green” economy. OEMs can now create solutions that transform structures into energy-efficient, responsive and sustainable buildings. EnOcean-based controls simplify the installation of BAS and also provide flexible and effective means of collecting and disseminating utility information such as Demand Response events and meter consumption. Once received from the utility, batteryless controls can seamlessly propagate DR signals throughout a building while reducing energy consumption according to occupancy statuses and daylighting potential.

The award distinguishes EnOcean as having actual commercial success with its end product using energy harvesting. The panel included Virginia Tech Professor, Shashank Priya, and Dr. Peter Harrop from IDTechEx. Judging criteria were based on success in terms of products sold and revenues generated.

About EnOcean

No Batteries. No Wires. EnOcean (www.enocean.com), the inventor of energy harvesting wireless sensor networks, manufactures self-powered radio modules and energy harvesters that enable OEMs to develop wireless sensors & switches for new and retrofit BAS (Building Automation Systems). The batteryless radio modules convert ambient solar, thermal and motion energy into useable electrical energy that powers building network communications. These ‘peel-n-stick’ devices reduce the time, cost and occupant disruption of energy conservation retrofits; and provide unparalleled flexibility in new construction. The company is a spin-off of Siemens AG and U.S. operations are based in Boston, MA.

EnOcean Logo

EnOcean, the inventor of energy harvesting wireless sensor networks, manufactures self-powered radio modules and energy harvesters that enable OEMs to develop wireless sensors & switches for new and retrofit BAS (Building Automation Systems).

Their battery-less radio modules convert ambient solar, thermal and motion energy into useable electrical energy that powers building network communications. These “peel-n-stick” devices reduce the time, cost and occupant disruption of energy conservation retrofits; and provide unparalleled flexibility in new construction. The company is a spinoff of Siemens AG and U.S. operations are based in Boston, Mass.

The EnOcean technology is a proprietary environment not yet set out for international, European or national standardisation. However, EnOcean GmbH ist offering its technology and licenses for the patented features under license with the EnOcean Alliance framework. The concept was developed to enable e.g. battery-free switches for building equipment. The economical perspective let Siemens decide to spin the operation out of the company combine. Actual shareholders are not disclosed.

EnOcean Technology

EnOcean has developed a technology that is based on the energetically efficient exploitation of applied slight mechanical excitation and other potentials from the ambiance using the principles of energy harvesting. In order to transform such energy fluctuations into usable electrical energy, electromagnetic, piezogenerators, solar cells, thermocouples, and other energy converters are used.

The EnOcean products (such as sensors and radio switches) need no battery and are engineered to operate maintenance-free. The signals from these sensors and switches can be transmitted wireless over a distance of up to 300 meters. Early designs from the company used piezo generators, later replaced with electromagnetic energy sources to reduce the operating pressure (7 newtons), and increase the service life to 50,000 operations.

The most pervasive example of a product making use of a proprietary RF protocol is a battery-free wireless light switch. This product has gone to market with the competitive advantage that it saves time and material not to install wires between the switch and e.g. a light effector. It also saves switched circuits as the switching is performed locally at the load itself when enhanced with a local switch on permanent supply.

Packets of data are transmitted at 120 kbit/s with the packet being 14 bytes long with a four byte data payload. RF energy is only transmitted for the 1′s on the data, reducing the amount of power required. Three packets are sent at pseudo-random intervals reducing the possibility of packet collisions. Push switches also transmit a further three data packets on release of the switch push-button, enabling other features such as light dimming to be implemented.

The EnOcean technology may be used also for wireless mesh networking (proprietary mesh protocol).

Switch signals and sensor information are transmitted – interference from other signals is no threat. Every device has a unique 32-bit serial number, so local ambiguity is avoided by ‘training’ a receiver to its specific transmitters. The transmission frequency used for the devices is 868.3 MHz.

Application Examples

One application of the technology is an audience voting system developed by EnOcean’s UK distributor. Each member of the audience is given a four-button remote with an EnOcean transmitter, and the signals are decoded by a receiver connected to a PC. This avoids the need to manage batteries in many remote handsets, and each handset is uniquely identified, so the ‘quizmaster’ or presenter can see each individual answer from each member of the audience.

EnOcean Company

EnOcean GmbH is a spin-off company of Siemens AG founded in 2001, that is venture funded. It is a German company headquartered in Oberhaching, near Munich, which currently employs 35 staff. It is a technology supplier of self-powered modules (transmitters, receivers, transceivers, energy converter) to companies (e.g. Siemens, Distech Controls, Zumtobel, Omnio, Osram, Wieland Electric, Peha, Thermokon, Wago, Herga), which develop and manufacture products used in building automation (light, shading, hvac), industrial automation, and automotive industry (replacement of the conventional battery in tyre pressure sensors).

The company has won awards for the technology and company performance, e.g. the Bavarian Innovation Prize 2002 for its globally unique technology, the award “Technology Pioneer 2006″ by the renowned World Economic Forum and the award BuildingGreen Top-10 Product for 2007. The standard switch modules produced by EnOcean employ electro-magnetic generation techniques.

EnOcean Alliance

A group of companies across Europe and North America (e.g. Omnio, Thermokon, Masco, MK Electric, Distech Controls and EnOcean) formed the EnOcean Alliance in April 2008 as a non-profit, mutual benefit corporation which has the formal purpose of initially developing the specifications for the interoperability of the sensor profiles for the wireless products operating in unlicensed frequency bands and subsequently to apply for ratification as an international standard at the appropriate standardization committee, and of helping to bring about the existence of a broad range of interoperable wireless monitoring and controlling products for use in and around residential, commercial and industrial buildings.

EnOcean Licensees

EnOcean technologies also appear in other products such as ‘Navatis’ from Herga. In July 2007, the company announced technology to allow transmitters to be powered from Peltier devices with a minimum of 2 degrees Celsius temperature difference on each side of a 15 mm square Peltier panel. In November 2007, MK Electric, the largest manufacturer of consumer electrical fitments in the UK, adopted EnOcean technology for a new range of wireless switches.

To find out more, please visit EnOcean-Alliance.org.

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