September 2016 |
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Low Cost Powerful Hybrid Edge Controllers
One affordable, flexible device that can serve as either a global controller or a field DDC will go a long way to better HVAC system designs. |
Ken Sinclair, |
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My five decades in the building automation industry have made it
crystal clear that we are always moving towards or away from
centralization, and I love this article theme that sees us moving in
both directions at the same time. This is important because the
success of our industry and all other industries is embedded in the
balance of cloud, edge, and self-learning devices.
Very pleased to have this evolutionary article: “Data Flow Will Mirror Air Flow in the Era of Hybrid Edge Controllers.” One
affordable, flexible device that can serve as either a global
controller or a field DDC will go a long way to better HVAC system
designs — Alper Üzmezler, BASSG LLC and Therese Sullivan,
BuildingContext Ltd.
It dawned on me that this is not just true for air but all building
systems processes. Chilled water, hot water, demand response,
integration of renewables, etc. — everything. And that the same
data may flow differently for different processes. This is part of the
exciting message, all self learned, from Haystack tagging.
You need to read this article to grasp the significance of this change; here are some quotes from article.
As hybrid devices enter the market,
the near future will be a transition time. Two characteristics of newer
controls architectures are that:
The on site PC supervisor is becoming
a thing of the past. Now, AHU controllers are more likely communicating
to a cloud-hosted BMS via secured Ethernet connections.
Customers are demanding that data be
freed from walled gardens protected by proprietary protocols. More and
more, controls designers can count on data interoperability from their
equipment through full implementations of BACnet or other industry
standards.
The biggest change yet, however, will
be the introduction of hybrid controllers. These will have the full
stack of resources needed to host applications for graphics, trending,
alarming, control logic, and advanced analytics. To a large part, they
will eliminate the need for a conventional global controller. VAVs will
communicate directly with their own hybrid controllers.
More recently, in March of this year, this article set the scene: “Energy Analytics Controllers.” Edge
devices now have the intelligence and data storage they need for local
analytics and machine decision-making. They’ll soon be the thing that
the rest of the BAS universe revolves around — Alper Üzmezler, BASSG LLC
Lots of very well read articles last month about the power of the edge
for control as well a data storage and self learning. Here are the July
Top Reads:
“The Strategy and Payoffs of Meta-Data Tagging.” Value
creation is happening in the buildings industry as systems integrators
transition to an open, industry-standard methodology for meta-data
tagging and data modeling — B. Scott Muench, vice president of
marketing and business development, J2 Innovations.
“What’s More Important to the Building? The Device or the Cloud?” Greg Barnes, Vice President, Activelogix LLC
“Grundfos Living Lab.” Commercial
building insights through Azure IoT Suite and Beckhoff standard devices
— Sven Goldstein, Product Manager, TwinCAT Connectivty & IoT,
Beckhoff Automation GmbH & Co. KG
“Infusing Machine Learning with Artificial Intelligence.” As
anyone who endures a call with an automated customer “help line”
quickly learns, robots have a frustrating inability to understand
sarcasm — Sophie Loire, Ph.D., research and technology fellow,
Chris Tagge, Ph.D., CEO, Igor Mezic, Ph.D., chief scientific and
technical advisor, co-founder, Ecorithm, Inc.
“Controls Industry is Ripe For Disruption.” A
wave of next-generation low-cost, easily deployed devices and services
has hit the beach, and lots of new players are making smart buildings
compelling and accessible for the other 90 percent of the market —
Steve Raschke, CEO, Candi
I have provided a summary in my review: “Recent History on How We Got to the Edge.”
While reading our August lead article, "The Era of Hybrid Edge Controllers,”
I gained a better understanding of the power of the edge. This is a
very evolutionary article with a lot of head shakes that question how
we now do stuff, and is embedded with insight to the changes coming ...
great stuff.
It got me thinking about a conversation Alper and I had several years ago that inspired me to write this endless article: “The Past and Future of Control Languages” — A call to the industry to speed their evolution to open protocol for control languages.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]Many
industry experts contributed to this never ending article. Both Alper
Üzmezler and Toby Considine talked of the movement to the edge in 2008
and 2009.
From this column by Toby Considine, “Clouds and Rain,” comes this wisdom:
For Brandl, nearly everything is a
cloud; only the core control processes are on the ground. I think this
is right; for buildings, only the core processes, those elements on the
traditional low voltage protocols such as BACnet and LON, are on the
ground.
Therefore the core control language
must be on the ground and closely coupled with DDC control. The
optimization of this language will come from web services in the cloud.
Optimization will no longer be
contained in the DDC control language. Optimization and the necessary
interaction will come from complete web services solutions and smart
grid interaction from the cloud.
The complex dynamic optimizing control coding of the past will be part of actual major equipment control and part web services.
Optimization and the necessary
interaction cannot exist with our existing proprietary control
languages but only exist in a mash up of dynamic web services that will
provide the results we are looking for.
In this 2009 article, “Future of Building Automation,” from Alper Üzmezler comes these thoughts:
Pure object oriented programming for
building controls: Since every object is a real life device,
programming methodologies will completely change. Every equipment
manufacturer will store and build essential algorithms into their
devices which will give them an edge over their competitors. For
example, a VFD manufacturer will essentially create algorithms that
will optimize their PID loops inside their equipment. Damper actuators
will have more optimized PID loops based on their communication skills
to the cloud.
I think this new "Era of Hybrid Edge Controllers” article is an evolution of the history Alper Üzmezler predicted. Wow, in 2009 he told us this was going to happen.
Then all he had to do was make it happen ... smile.
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