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The EnOcean Alliance advances the wireless standard for green buildings
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The new version of the energy harvesting wireless specification now
includes over 100 product profiles for building and industrial
automation and smart home systems
San Ramon, CA – March 07, 2013 – The EnOcean Alliance is advancing the
interoperability between EnOcean-based products from different OEMs by
developing the EEP 2.5 version of the “EnOcean Equipment Profiles”
(EEP). More than 100 product profiles are now available, for developing
different energy harvesting wireless solutions for building and
industrial automation and smart home systems. New profile families now
summarize several applications and facilitate the creation and release
of a new profile by Alliance members. The public new version 2.5 of the
EEP specification has 24 new profiles and can be downloaded at
www.enocean-alliance.org.
With more than 300 members in 34 countries worldwide as well as over
1000 interoperable products and solutions, the EnOcean Alliance is one
of the most successful technical alliances. The common technological
base is the energy harvesting wireless technology from EnOcean, which
uses energy from the surroundings. Using energy harvesters, motion,
light or temperature differences are used as an energy source for
maintenance-free wireless modules.
Interoperability is a trump card
One of the EnOcean Alliance’s key strengths is the interoperability of
EnOcean-based solutions. It allows for products from different
manufacturers to be able to communicate and work amongst themselves.
The foundation for this is standardized application protocols (EnOcean
Equipment Profiles or EEPs), developed by the Alliance’s Technical
Working Group (TWG) and based on the international wireless radio
standard ISO/IEC 14543-3-10.
The newest version 2.5 of the EEP specification has grouped
applications with similar attributes together into profile families for
the first time. This concept is a guideline for new product and profile
development. New applications, meaning new “family members”, are
therefore easier to create, classify into specifications and release
into the TWG. A new area of variable length data profiles (VLD,
profiles with variable data content), has been created, especially for
new product development and application. That way, OEMs can realize
products with a flexible and extensive application spectrum, carried
out with the small energy budget provided by energy harvesting. An
example would be an energy-autonomous, thermostatic radiator valve,
which only uses heat as an energy source, and communicates with another
solar-powered control device.
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In addition, standardized learn-in methods for unidirectional and
bidirectional wireless applications and profiles for encrypted data
communication supplement the new specification. The latter is very
important for critical applications like access and control systems or
for the secure networking of consumption data over cloud services.
About EnOcean Alliance
Leading companies worldwide from the building sector collected to form
the EnOcean Alliance and establish innovative automation solutions for
sustainable building projects – and so to make buildings more
energy-efficient, more flexible and lower in cost. The core technology
of the Alliance is energy harvesting wireless technology for flexibly
positioned and service-free sensor solutions. The EnOcean Alliance aims
to internationalize the energy harvesting wireless technology, and is
dedicated to creating interoperability between the products of OEM
partners. Basis for this is the international standard ISO/IEC
14543-3-10, which is optimized for wireless solutions with ultra-low
power consumption and energy harvesting. More than 300 companies
currently belong to the EnOcean Alliance. The headquarters of the
non-profit organization is located in San Ramon, California.
www.enocean-alliance.org
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