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By ELLEN GOLDBAUM Contributing Editor
As electric power returned this week to the last of the homes and
businesses affected by the devastating October snowstorm, UB researchers
were discussing how tiny, nanoscale sensors could make power systems far
more resilient.
 |  UB engineers are looking into how
nanoelectronics could dramatically shorten, or in some cases eliminate,
crippling power outages like the ones experienced in the aftermath of
the surprise October snowstorm.
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Engineers with UB's Energy Systems Institute, one of the nation's few
academic research centers that studies the fundamentals of electric
power, have for the past year been considering how nanoelectronics could
dramatically shorten, or in some cases eliminate, crippling power
outages. "Until now, we've had to do everything with wires and
that makes it very expensive," said W. James Sarjeant, James Clerk
Maxwell Chair Professor of Electrical Engineering and director of the
institute. "What we're proposing is to use wireless communication
by embedding tiny sensors at every point in the system," he said. "The
nanosensors would then send in real-time a signal to a centralized
computer using wireless communication. It would monitor the power coming
to every home or business in the system at every instant in time."
Such an embedded, low-cost, self-powered system would provide
integrated prognostic and diagnostic capabilities, detecting problems
and in some cases prescribing solutions, thus greatly expediting the
time it would take to prevent cascading effects. According to
Sarjeant, one of the factors contributing to the enormous investment of
time needed to get all of the 390,000 customers back online last week
was that the utilities needed to send crews street by street just to
identify the problems in the field. "The utilities had no way of
knowing what happened at specific locations," he said, "whether it was a
wire down or a transformer that had blown up. "Wireless sensors,
on the other hand, could give you a very low-cost way to monitor the
health, quality and safety of every element in the system without having
to dispatch a crew to investigate," he said. Since the
information transmitted from sensors could instantly indicate to a
central computer the nature of a problem, the utility would know
immediately whether it needed to send a truck out or simply inform the
property owner that a main circuit breaker had tripped. The
wireless sensors also could be used in sump pumps, Sarjeant said,
creating a kind of "smart house" that could detect and report
malfunctions in its systems before a catastrophic failure occurs.
For electric power applications, such a capability would be nothing
short of a revolution, Sarjeant said. "This could change the way
electricity is managed from a safety point of view," he said. A
key advantage of the wireless sensor system is that because nanoscale
sensors are by definition very small and use low power, they could be
designed into power components or retrofitted at a minimal cost,
according to the UB scientists. Sarjeant noted that such a system
would be a far more efficient, cost-effective way to modernize the power
grid than replacing components after they fail. He and his
colleagues in the Department of Electrical Engineering and others in the
UB departments of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering and
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering have developed a multidisciplinary
team with expertise in nanoelectronics, sensors, power systems and
networking to tackle the issue. Unfortunately, Sarjeant noted,
funding for electrical power research has dwindled substantially over
the past few decades. While that may not make sense to Buffalo
home and business owners whose lives still may not be back to normal
after last week's storm, the reality is that there is currently very
little federal- or industry-funded research on enhancing power systems,
Sarjeant said. The UB engineers currently are seeking funding for
their research. The UB multidisciplinary team in the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences is pursuing the power-systems research
as part of UB's 2020 strategic strength initiative in integrated
nanostructured systems. The goal is to improve the response of power
systems during catastrophic or extreme events. In addition to
Sarjeant, the team includes Jennifer Zirnheld, adjunct lecturer in
electrical engineering and deputy director of UB's Energy Systems
Institute; Jonathan Bird, Alexander Cartwright and Albert Titus,
professors of electrical engineering; Vladimir Mitin, professor and
chair of the Department of Electrical Engineering; and Cemal Basaran,
professor of civil, structural and environmental engineering.
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