smartgridcomm 2013 final program

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4th Annual IEEE International Conference on SmartGrid Communications 21-24 OCTOBER 2013 • VANCOUVER, CANADA

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Page 1: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

4th Annual IEEE International Conferenceon SmartGrid Communications

21-24 OCTOBER 2013 • VANCOUVER, CANADA

Page 2: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2

Keynote Speakers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3

Technical Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5

Panel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12

Lightning Talks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12

Industry Demonstrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14

Social Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16

General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16

Committees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17

Patrons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18

IEEE SmartGridComm 2014 Call for Papers . . . . . . . . . .IBC

Tutorial 1

Pt. 1

Tutorial 1

Pt. 2

Lightning Talks

w/Lunch

09:00 - 10:00

Workshops 1 & 2

Keynote SessionKip Morison

Keynote SessionAlexandra von Meier

Monday, 21 October Tuesday, 22 October Wednesday, 23 October Thursday, 24 October

08:30 - 10:00 09:00 - 10:00 09:00-10:00

Coffee Break

Industry Demos

Coffee Break Coffee Break

10:30 - 12:00 10:30 - 12:10

Workshops 1 & 2 DEM1 WHO2 SERV2

Lunch on Your Own Lunch Lunch with Panel Discussion Lunch

12:10 - 13:40

NET1 STO1 NET3 ARCH2 STAN2 CYB2

13:30 - 15:00 13:40 - 15:20 13:40 - 15:20 13:40 - 15:20

DEM2 SEC1 STO2 DEM3

Welcome Reception

19:00 - 21:00

15:30 - 17:00

NET2 ARCH1 STAN1 CYB1 WHO1

15:50 - 17:30

Workshops 3 & 4

10:00 - 10:30

Banquet

10:30 - 12:1010:30 - 12:10

15:50 - 17:30 15:50 - 17:30

SERV1 DEM5 STO4 SEC4

SEC2 STO3 DEM4 NET4 SEC3

Coffee Break

Industry Demos

Workshops 3 & 4

12:00 - 13:30 12:10 - 13:40 12:10 - 13:40

Keynote SessionAnna Scaglione

10:00 - 10:30 10:00 - 10:30 10:00 - 10:30

Industry Demos

17:00 - 18:00

Industry Demo Happy Hour

18:00 - 20:00

15:00 - 15:30 15:00 - 15:30 15:00 - 15:30 15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break Coffee Break Coffee Break Coffee Break

PROGRAM AT A GLANCE

Page 3: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 2 –

WELCOME

Lutz Lampe Carl Hauser Kip Morison Sara Bavarian

Marija Ilic Petar Popovski Eve Schooler David Tse

Welcome to the 4th Annual IEEE International Conferenceon Smart Grid Communications (SmartGridComm).

IEEE SmartGridComm is sponsored by the IEEE Communications Society (ComSoc) and technically co-sponsored this year by the IEEEPower and Energy Society, IEEE Computer Society, and IEEE Control Systems Society. The conference brings together researchers fromacademia, industry, and national laboratories from around the world to present and discuss the latest research on all aspects of communications related to the Smart Grid.

The conference is organized as 9 symposia, each addressing a specific aspect of communications for the Smart Grid. A technical programcommittee of experts in the area of each symposium has selected 135 high-quality papers for presentation at the conference and publication in the proceedings. Overall, the conference received 334 paper submissions by authors from 36 countries in all IEEE regions:North America (45%), Latin America (2%), EMEA (24%), Asia/Pacific (29%).

The technical program will be presented October 22nd through 24th with 27 sessions in three parallel tracks. Each day will be introducedby a distinguished keynote speaker. On Monday, October 21, four workshops and one tutorial offer the opportunity to learn in greaterdepth about smart grid communication topics. Interaction and engagement are one of the main benefits of attending a conference likeIEEE SmartGridComm. Ample time has been provided for discussion and networking throughout the conference: following the keynotes,in the workshops and technical sessions, and during a panel session as well as during breaks, receptions, and meals. New to IEEESmartGridComm this year is a moderated “lightning talks” session where attendees will be able to make a (very) short presentation oncurrent research or other topic of interest. Other activities include tours of Powertech Labs and the University of British Columbia “LivingLab” smart micro-grid, and a student video contest.

We thank the many volunteers who have devoted countless hours to organizing the conference and creating a high-quality program:symposia co-chairs, TPC members, outside reviewers, and many others. Authors are the lifeblood of any conference, and while weregret that we could not accept all of the submitted papers, we thank all of the authors for their contribution to the conference and thecommunity. In addition, we extend our thanks to the organizers of the Wireless World Research Forum (WWRF) meeting occurring concurrently in Vancouver for their cooperation in creating the joint WWRF/ SmartGridComm workshop on Wireless Communicationsand the Smart Grid. Finally, the expert conference staff at IEEE ComSoc was indispensable throughout the conference organizing process.

With that, welcome to Vancouver!We invite you to enjoy the conference and all of the attractions of this beautiful city.

General Co-ChairsLutz Lampe, University of British Columbia, CanadaCarl Hauser, Washington State University, USAKip Morison, BC Hydro, Canada

Local Arrangements ChairSara Bavarian, Powertech Labs Inc., Canada

TPC Co-ChairsMarija Ilic, Carnegie Mellon University, USAPetar Popovski, Aalborg University, DenmarkEve Schooler, Intel Labs, USADavid Tse, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Page 4: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 3 –

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 09:00 – 10:00 • Room: Salon AKip MorisonChief Technology Officer, BC Hydro, Canada

Transforming Our Business with Technology

The technology landscape is evolving rapidly in the utility space. In particular, the deployment of ubiquitous telecomm networks,the availability of sensors and intelligent end-point devices, and the development of advanced analytics have opened a new worldof system intelligence, optimization, control and automation. In addition, there is a plethora of other new technologies such as

those associated with generation, storage, asset management, load control, and transportation. Some new technologies may offer significant value ifdeployed at scale, while others may be disruptive and pose risks if we are not prepared for their emergence into the mainstream.

This presentation will discuss how BC Hydro evaluates new technologies prior to deployment, how we are using technology to transform the way we dobusiness, and what we are doing to manage the risk of emerging “disruptive” technologies. Some of the current initiatives discussed will include thesmart metering program, advanced distribution automation, electric vehicle deployment, workforce mobility, and a number of on-going demonstrationprojects.

Biography: Kip Morison has over 30 years of experience in the electric utility business and is currently the Chief Technology Officer for BC Hydro in Vancouver, Canada. From 1979 to 1992 he worked for Ontario Hydro in Toronto as a transmission system planner specializing in advanced stability andcontrol of power systems. In 1993 he relocated to Vancouver and became the Director of Power System Technologies at Powertech Labs, the technologysubsidiary of BC Hydro, where he managed a business unit providing international consulting services in the field of power system design, operation,technology innovation, software development, and equipment testing. In 2008 he joined the British Columbia Transmission Corporation (BCTC) as Manager of Long Term Planning and Research & Development. At BCTC he led the technical team on the Provincial Inquiry into British Columbia’s 30Year Transmission Infrastructure and Capacity Needs. In 2010, Kip became the Chief Technology Officer for BC Hydro. He holds a MaSc degree inElectrical Engineering from the University of Toronto and is a registered professional engineer and an IEEE Fellow.

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 09:00 – 10:00 • Room: Salon AAnna ScaglioneUniversity of California, Davis, USA

Networks and Markets for Scheduling Energy Consumption

Over the past twenty years power systems and economic theory have merged to co-design market architectures that can competitively price and dispatch in real time generators’ power, so as to follow the random daily electricity demand. Designed forreliability and to work with poor telemetry, lack of real time situation awareness and to harness limited computational capabilities,

these markets favor fossil fuel generation over wind and solar power. What is still lacking are technologies and incentives that would make it possibleto use opportunistically abundant renewable energy, without compromising reliability. Responsive and controllable consumption could be used to compensate for the volatility introduced by intermittent resources on the generation side. This would require harnessing the flexibility of a large populationof responsive appliances and electrical vehicles, connected in an Internet of things that is the grid to respond to their real service needs. What kind ofnetworks communications and computations would be required?

This talk will discuss ongoing research on modeling electrical load demand that can both aid the direct management of these loads as well as facilitatethe integration of deferrable loads at the planning stage of the optimal power flow dispatch. We specifically focus on Electrical Vehicle charging and indicate how planning and real time decision can use data that come from these dispatchable loads to optimally schedule their charging. We also willindicate paths to extend this to other loads and challenges that lie ahead in the design of scalable and secure architectures for demand side managementin the power grid.

Biography: Prof. Anna Scaglione (M.Sc.'95, Ph.D. '99) is currently Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering at University of California at Davis.She was before an Associate Professor at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, where she joined in 2001 as tenure track faculty, after one year in the same roleat the University of New Mexico.

She is a Fellow of the IEEE since 2011. Dr. Scaglione is the first author of the paper that received the 2000 IEEE Signal Processing Transactions BestPaper Award; she has also received the NSF Career Award in 2002 and she is co-recipient of the Ellersick Best Paper Award (MILCOM 2005) and of the2013 IEEE Donald G. Fink Prize Paper Award. Her expertise is in the broad area of signal processing for communication systems and networks. Shecurrently studies enabling communication technologies for data processing in networks of sensors and, in particular, for the demand side managementand reliable energy delivery.

Page 5: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 4 –

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 09:00 – 10:00 • Room: Salon AAlexandra von MeierCo-Director, Electric Grid Research, California Institute for Energy and Environment, and Adjunct Associate Professor, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Who says what to whom and why? Challenges for Smart Communications in Distribution Systems

While sensing, communication and control technologies are advancing in leaps and bounds, their integrated application in electricpower systems, especially at the distribution level, remains anything but straightforward. This should come as no surprise, since

the process in which we are engaged today is nothing short of a re-invention of the grid and its mission. Multiple design goals – from high-quality,reliable and affordable power to decarbonization, customer involvement and infrastructure resilience – press against each other, and against survivalstrategies of a legacy system in which information was remarkably scarce. With examples from the integration of distributed renewable resources andadvanced high-resolution monitoring of distribution circuits, this talk will illustrate the challenges of evolving and sometimes competing objectives inmanaging the grid, to open a conversation about what this may mean for designing and implementing intelligent communications.

Biography: Dr. Alexandra “Sascha” von Meier is Co-Director for Electric Grid Research at the California Institute for Energy and Environment (http://uc-ciee.org), and Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at UC Berkeley. She currentlystudies technical and operational issues related to the integration of high levels of renewable resources in “smart grids,” particularly through advancedinstrumentation of power distribution circuits that increases their visibility to operators. Her past research has addressed engineering and cultural dimensions of energy technology, including electric power distribution, grid-connected photovoltaics, electric demand response, nuclear power plantoperation, nuclear materials management, and green building performance. Her textbook, Electric Power Systems: A Conceptual Introduction (Wiley-IEEE, 2006), has been used in university courses and industry to help explain the complexities of operating the electric grid. An award-winningeducator, she regularly presents tutorials on electric power delivery to academic and professional audiences. Sascha received her Ph.D. in energy andresources (1995) and her B.A. in physics (1986) from the University of California, Berkeley. Away from the office, she enjoys cycling, rock climbing andthe mountains whenever possible.

Page 6: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 5 –

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10 Room: Salon ADEM1: Demand Response and Transportation ElectrificationChair: Chris Develder (Ghent University - iMinds, Belgium)

Congestion Management for Urban EV Charging SystemsEmmanouil S. Rigas (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece)Sarvapali Ramchurn (University of Southampton, UK)Nick Bassiliades (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece)George Koutitas (International Hellenic University, Greece)

Design of a V2G Aggregator to Optimize PHEV Charging and FrequencyRegulation ControlRan Wang, Yifan Li, Ping Wang, Dusit Niyato (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

Electric Power Resource Provisioning for Large Scale Public EV Charging FacilitiesI. Safak Bayram (North Carolina State University, USA)George Michailidis (University of Michigan, USA)Michael Devetsikiotis (North Carolina State University, USA)

Randomized Response Electric Vehicles for Distributed FrequencyControl in Smart GridMohammad Reza Vedady Moghadam Nanehkaran, Rui Zhang (National University of Singapore, Singapore)Richard T. B. Ma (National University of Singapore, USA)

Analysis of the Behavior of Electric Vehicle Charging Stations with Renewable GenerationsWoongsup Lee, Lin Xiang (University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany)Robert Schober, Vincent W.S. Wong (University of British Columbia, Canada)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10 Room: Salon ENET1: Access Network PerformanceChair: Vincent W.S. Wong (University of British Columbia, Canada)

Novel Coexistence Scheme between Wireless Sensor Network andWireless LAN for HEMSFumihiro Inoue, Masahiro Morikura, Takayuki Nishio, Koji Yamamoto(Kyoto University, Japan)Fusao Nuno, Takatoshi Sugiyama (NTT, Japan)

Dynamic Selection of Wireless/Powerline Links using Markov DecisionProcessesDacfey Dzung, Yvonne-Anne Pignolet (ABB Corporate Research, Dättwil, Switzerland)

Pilot Based Channel Estimation and Transform Domain Analysis inBroadband PLC for Smart GridMuharrem A Tunç, Erik S. Perrins (University of Kansas, USA)

Feedback Control Scheme with Prediction for Power Line Communication ChannelsCesar Carrizo, Kentaro Kobayashi, Hiraku Okada, Masaaki Katayama(Nagoya University, Japan)

Performance Evaluation of PRIME in Smart GridMehdi Korki, Cishen Zhang, Hai L. Vu (Swinburne University of Technology, Australia)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10 Room: Salon FSTO1: Support for Storage, Renewable Resources andMicro-grids IChair: Javad Lavaei (Columbia University, USA)

Optimal Energy Storage Management in DC Power NetworksAkira Ito, Toru Shiraki (Denso CO., LTD, Japan)

Low-Rank Solution of Convex Relaxation for Optimal Power Flow ProblemSomayeh Sojoudi (California Institute of Technology, USA)Ramtin Madani, Javad Lavaei (Columbia University, USA)

Convex Relaxation and Decomposition in Large Resistive Power Networks with Energy StorageXin Lou, Chee Wei Tan (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

Optimal Storage-Aided Wind Generation Integration ConsideringRamping RequirementsLin Xiang, Derrick Wing Kwan Ng, Woongsup Lee (University Erlangen Nurnberg, Germany)Robert Schober (University of British Columbia, Canada)

Robust Optimal Power Flow with Wind Integration Using ConditionalValue-at-RiskYu Zhang, Georgios B. Giannakis (University of Minnesota, USA)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20 Room: Salon ADEM2: Pricing for Demand ResponseChair: Zhifang Wang (Virginia Commonwealth University, USA)

Convex Hull Pricing for Demand Response in Electricity MarketsNaoki Ito (Keio University, Japan)Akiko Takeda (University of Tokyo, Japan)Toru Namerikawa (Keio University, Japan)

Optimal Battery Configuration in a Residential Home with Time-of-Use PricingBaris Aksanli, Tajana Simunic Rosing (UCSD, USA)

Dynamic Price Optimization Models for Managing Time-of-Day Electricity UsageShivaram Subramanian, Soumyadip Ghosh, Jonathan Hosking, Ramesh Natarajan, Xiaoxuan Zhang (IBM, USA)

Low-Frequency Power-Grid Ancillary Services From CommercialBuilding HVAC SystemsYashen Lin, Prabir Barooah, Sean Meyn (University of Florida, USA)

Online Speeding Optimal Charging Algorithm for Electric Vehicleswithout Future InformationWanrong Tang, Suzhi Bi, Ying Jun (Angela) Zhang (Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

Page 7: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 6 –

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20 Room: Salon ESEC1: Data IntegrityChair: Saman Zonouz (University of Miami, USA)

Detection and Localization of Targeted Attacks on Fully DistributedPower System State EstimationOgnjen Vukovic, György Dán (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

On Phasor Measurement Unit Placement against State and TopologyAttacksJinsub Kim, Lang Tong (Cornell University, USA)

Malicious Data Detection in State Estimation Leveraging SystemLosses & Estimation of Perturbed ParametersWilliam Niemira, Rakesh B. Bobba, Peter Sauer, Bill Sanders (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

Detecting False Data Injection in Smart Grid In-Network AggregationLei Yang, Fengjun Li (University of Kansas, USA)

A Formal Model for Verifying Stealthy Attacks on State Estimation inPower GridsMohammad Ashiqur Rahman, Ehab Al-Shaer (University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA)Md Rahman (Virginia Polytechnique Institute and State University, USA)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20 Room: Salon FSTO2: Support for Storage, Renewable Resources andMicro-grids IIChair: Ram Rajagopal (Stanford University, USA)

Dynamic Contract to Regulate Energy Management in MicrogridsLingjie Duan (Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore)Rui Zhang (National University of Singapore, Singapore)

ECO-DAC Energy Control over Divide and ControlAlper Sinan Akyurek, Bill Torre, Tajana Simunic Rosing (UCSD, USA)

Stability, Power Sharing, & Distributed Secondary Control in Droop-Controlled MicrogridsJohn Simpson-Porco, Florian Dörfler (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)Qobad Shafiee, Josep M. Guerrero (Aalborg University, Denmark)Francesco Bullo (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)

Optimal Energy Management for Cooperative Microgrids with Renewable Energy ResourcesDuong Nguyen, Long Bao Le (INRS, University of Quebec, Canada)

Scalable Model Predictive Control of Demand for Ancillary ServicesMahnoosh Alizadeh, Anna Scaglione (University of California, Davis, USA)George Kesidis (Pennsylvania State University, USA)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon ANET2: Smart Grid Data ManagementChair: Long Bao Le (INRS, University of Quebec, Canada)

Coral: Reliable and Low-latency P2P Convergecast for Critical SensorData CollectionDaniel Germanus, Abdelmajid Khelil, Johannes Schwandke, Neeraj Suri(Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany)

Analyzing Storage Requirements of the Resilient Information-CentricSeDAX ArchitectureMichael J. Hoefling, Cynthia Mills, Michael Menth (University of Tuebingen, Germany)

Utilizing a Flexibility Interface for Distributed Energy Resourcesthrough a Cloud-Based ServiceLasse Orda, Jesper Bach, Anders Bro Pedersen (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)Bjarne Poulsen (Denmark)Lars Hansen (DONG Energy, Denmark)

On the Scalable Collection of Metering Data in Smart Grids throughMessage ConcatenationBabak Karimi, Vinod Namboodiri, Murtuza Jadliwala (Wichita State University, USA)

Characteristics of AMI using DLMS/COSEM and IEEE 802.15.4g Multi-hop Wireless CommunicationTetsuo Otani, Michifumi Miyashita (Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry, Japan)

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon EARCH1: Architectures and Models for the Smart Grid IChair: Maja Etinski (NEC Laboratories Europe, Germany)

Management of a Smart Grid with Controlled-Delivery of DiscretePower LevelsRoberto Rojas-Cessa, Yifei Xu, Haim Grebel (New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA)

Voltage-based Clustering to Identify Connectivity Relationships in Distribution NetworksVijay Arya, Rajendu Mitra (IBM Research - India, India)

Distributed Regulation Allocation with Aggregator Coordinated ElectricVehiclesSun Sun, Min Dong, Ben Liang (University of Toronto, Canada)

Distributed Mode Scheduling for Coordinated Power BalancingHiroaki Kawashima, Takekazu Kato, Takashi Matsuyama (Kyoto University, Japan)

Double-Layered Control Methodology Combining Price Objective andGrid ConstraintsSandro Iacovella, Frederik Geth, Frederik Ruelens, Niels Leemput, Pieter Vingerhoets (KU Leuven, Belgium)Bert Claessens (VITO, Belgium)Geert Deconinck (KU Leuven, Belgium)

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Page 8: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 7 –

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon FSTAN1: Simulation and Co-simulationChair: Anna Scaglione (University of California, Davis, USA)

MAC-Sim: A Multi-Agent and Communication Network Simulation Platform for Smart Grid Applications Based on Established TechnologiesFidelis Perkonigg, Djordje Brujic, Mike Ristic (Imperial College London, UK)

INSPIRE: Integrated Co-Simulation of Power and ICT Systems for Real-Time EvaluationHanno Georg, Sven Christian Müller, Nils Dorsch, Christian Rehtanz,Christian Wietfeld (TU Dortmund University, Germany)

A Tool for Assessing Interdependency of Mobile Communication andElectricity Distribution NetworksSeppo Horsmanheimo (VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland)Niwas Maskey (Aalto University, Finland)Heli Kokkoniemi-Tarkkanen, Pekka Savolainen, Lotta Tuomimäki (VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland)

A Control Loop Approach for Integrating the Future DecentralizedPower Markets and GridsYong Ding (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)Per Goncalves da Silva (SAP, Germany)Martin A. Neumann (Karlsruhe Institut of Technology, Germany)Lin Zhang (Tsinghua University, China)Michael Beigl (KIT & TecO, Germany)Matthias Budde (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)

The Development of a Smart Grid Co-Simulation Platform and CaseStudy on Vehicle-To-Grid Voltage Support ApplicationChong Shum, Wing-Hong Lau, Ka Lun Lam, Yuxuan He, Shu-hung Chung,Norman Tse, Kim Fung Tsang (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)Loi Lei Lai (City University, London, UK)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon ANET3: Grid Detection and EstimationChair: Woongsup Lee(Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen Nurnberg, Germany)

Wireless Communication Aided Differential Relay Protection in SmartGrids: A Concerted BlitzkriegZhenghao Zhang, Husheng Li (University of Tennessee, USA)Ju Bin Song (Kyung Hee University, Korea)Zhu Han (University of Houston, USA)Gaoyong Luo (Guangzhou University, China)Wenjing Hu (Shandong University, USA)

Power Grid Topology Inference Using Power Line CommunicationsLutz Lampe, Mohamed Osama Ahmed (University of British Columbia, Canada)

PMU Placement for Optimal Three-Phase State Estimation PerformanceYue Yang, Sumit Roy (University of Washington, USA)

Fuzzy C-Means Algorithm for Parameter Estimation of PartitionedMarkov Chain Impulsive Noise ModelFabien Sacuto, Fabrice Labeau (McGill University, Canada)Basile Landaabalo Agba (Institut de Recherche d'Hydro-Québec & École de Technologie Superieure, Canada)

A Maximum-Entropy Based Fast Estimation of Power Quality for SmartMicrogridSardar Ali, Kui Wu, Dimitri Marinakis (University of Victoria, Canada)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon EARCH2: Architectures and Models for the Smart Grid IIChair: Hiroaki Kawashima (Kyoto University, Japan)

Impact Study of Collaborative Implementation Models on Total Cost of Ownership of Integrated Fiber-Wireless Smart Grid CommunicationsInfrastructuresRamzi Charni (INRS-EMT, Canada)Martin Maier (Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, Canada)

Fair Power Allocation in Multi-User Systems with Controllable LoadsMaja Etinski, Anett Schülke (NEC Europe Ltd., Germany)

Online Scheduling for Vehicle-to-Grid Regulation ServiceJunhao Lin, Ka-Cheong Leung, Victor O. K. Li (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

A Comparative Study of High Renewables Penetration Electricity GridsJay Taneja, Virginia Smith, David Culler (University of California, Berkeley, USA)Catherine Rosenberg (University of Waterloo, Canada)

Impact Analysis of Locational Marginal Price Subject to Power SystemTopology ErrorsDae-Hyun Choi, Le Xie (Texas A&M University, USA)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon FSTAN2: Testbeds and Field TrialsChair: Yong Ding (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)

Unify AMI Information Models to Support Diversified Smart Grid Systems and ApplicationsZhao Li, Jiang Zheng (ABB US Corporate Research Center, USA)

An On-line PLC Frequency Impedance AnalyzerCornelis J. Kikkert (James Cook University, Australia)

Domino of the Smart Grid: An Empirical Study of System Behaviors inthe Interdependent Network ArchitectureXiang Lu (Institute of Information Engineering, CAS, China)Wenye Wang (NC State University, USA)Jianfeng Ma (Xidian University, China)Limin Sun (Institute of Information Engineering, CAS, China)

Randomizing AMI Configuration for Proactive Defense in Smart GridMuhammad Qasim Ali, Ehab Al-Shaer, Qi Duan (University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA)

Realistic Model for Narrowband PLC for Advanced Metering InfrastructureTanguy Ropitault (Telecom Bretagne, France)Alejandro Lampropulos (Institut Telecom / Telecom Bretagne, France)Alexander Pelov (Institut Mines -Telecom / Telecom Bretagne, France)Ramanuja Vedantham (Texas Instruments Inc., USA)Philippe Chiummiento (ITRON, France)Laurent Toutain (Telecom Bretagne, France)

Page 9: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 8 –

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon ADEM3: Demand Response Communications and NetworkingChair: Masahiro Morikura (Kyoto University, Japan)

Enabling Demand Response in a Computer ClusterChen Wang, Martin de Groot (CSIRO ICT Center, Australia)

LTE and Hybrid Sensor-LTE Network Performances in Smart Grid Demand Response ScenariosJuho Markkula, Jussi P. Haapola (University of Oulu, Finland)

Ambient Sensing-based Incentives for Behavior Modification in Demand ResponseChen-Khong Tham, Chongyu Zhou (National University of Singapore, Singapore)

Online Energy Management Strategies for Base Stations Powered by the Smart GridJohann Leithon, Teng Joon Lim (National University of Singapore, Singapore)Sumei Sun (Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore)

An Adaptive Scheduling of PHEV Charging: Analysis under ImperfectData CommunicationQiumin Dong, Dusit Niyato, Ping Wang (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)Zhu Han (University of Houston, USA)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon ESEC2: Privacy, Confidentiality and AuthenticationChair: Fengjun Li (University of Kansas, USA)

Privacy-Friendly Appliance Load Scheduling in Smart GridsCristina E.M. Rottondi, Giacomo Verticale (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)

Smart Meter Speed Dating, Short-term Relationships for Improved Privacy in Smart MeteringSören Finster (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)

Confidentiality-preserving Obfuscation for Cloud-based Power SystemContingency AnalysisOgnjen Vuković, György Dán (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)Rakesh B. Bobba (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

Spoofing Prevention Using Received Signal Strength for ZigBee-BasedHome Area NetworksParia Jokar, Nasim Arianpoo, Victor CM Leung (University of British Columbia, Canada)

TSAF: Tamper-resistant and Scalable Mutual Authentication Framework for Plug-in EV ChargingYoung Jin Kim, Vladimir Kolesnikov, Marina Thottan (Bell Labs, USA)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon FSTO3: Testbeds II & Support for Storage, Renewable Resources and Micro-grids IIIChair: Cornelis J. Kikkert (James Cook University, Australia)

A High Performance Line Filter for Narrowband Power Line Communication Testbed ApplicationsSteffen Mueller, Robert Weigel, Fabian Lurz, Alexander Koelpin (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany)

Cloud Motion Estimation for Short Term Solar Irradiation PredictionHao Huang (Stony Brook University & Brookhaven National Lab, USA)Jin Xu, Zhenzhou Peng (Stony Brook University, USA)Shinjae Yoo, Dantong Yu, Dong Huang (Brookhaven National Lab, USA)Hong Qin (Stony Brook University, USA)

Modeling the Effect of Geographically Diverse PV Generation on California's Distribution SystemMichael Cohen, Duncan Callaway (University of California, Berkeley, USA)

Solar Irradiance Forecast System Based on Geostationary SatelliteZhenzhou Peng (Stony Brook University, USA)Shinjae Yoo, Dantong Yu, Dong Huang (Brookhaven National Lab, USA)

Value of Aggregation in a Smart GridRaffi Sevlian (Stanford University, USA)Ram Rajagopal (University of California, Berkeley, USA)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17: 30Room: Salon ACYB1: Cyber-Physical Wide-Area Monitoring, Protection& Control IChair: Lars Nordström (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

SeCPSim: A Training Simulator for Cyber-Power Infrastructure SecurityCeeman Vellaithurai, Anurag Srivastava (Washington State University, USA)Saman Zonouz (University of Miami, USA)

Structural Dependability Analysis in Smart Grid under SimultaneousFailuresJonas Wäfler, Poul E. Heegaard (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)

Detection, Recognition, and Localization of Multiple Attacks throughEvent UnmixingWei Wang, Li He, Penn Markham, Hairong Qi, Yilu Liu (University of Tennessee, USA)

On Measurement Unit Placement for Smart Electrical Grid Fault LocalizationMd Mashud Hyder, Kaushik Mahata (University of New Castle, Australia)Dynamic Modeling and Resilience for Power DistributionYun Wei, Chuanyi Ji (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)Floyd Galvan, Stephen Couvillon, George Orellana (Entergy Services, Inc., USA)

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TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17: 30Room: Salon EWHO1: Whole Picture: Smart Grid ControlChair: Yannick Phulpin (EDF R&D, France)

Blind Control Synthesis for Large Dynamical Systems with Applicationin Smart Grids: A Non-equilibrium Statistical Mechanics ApproachHusheng Li (University of Tennessee, USA)Ju Bin Song (Kyung Hee University, Korea)Zhu Han (University of Houston, USA)

Convexification of Optimal Power Flow Problem by Means of PhaseShiftersSomayeh Sojoudi (California Institute of Technology, USA)Javad Lavaei (Columbia University, USA)

A Predictive Protection Scheme based on Adaptive SynchrophasorCommunicationsMd Mashud Hyder, Reduan H. Khan, Kaushik Mahata, Jamil Y. Khan (The University of Newcastle, Australia)

Differential Game-Theoretic Framework for a Demand-side EnergyManagement SystemRyohei Arai, Koji Yamamoto, Masahiro Morikura (Kyoto University, Japan)

A Distribute Parallel Approach for Big Data Scale Optimal Power Flowwith Security ConstraintsLanchao Liu, Amin Khodaei (University of Houston, USA)Wotao Yin (Rice University, USA)Zhu Han (University of Houston, USA)

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17: 30Room: Salon FSERV1: Smart Grid Network Management and ServicesChair: Chee Wei Tan (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

Electric Vehicle Charging Station PlacementAlbert Y.S. Lam, Yiu-Wing Leung, Xiaowen Chu (Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong)

Distributed Real-Time Power Flow Control with Renewable IntegrationKiyoshi Nakayama (University of California, Irvine, USA)Changhong Zhao (California Institute of Technology, USA)Lubomir Bic, Michael B. Dillencourt, Jack Brouwer (University of California, Irvine, USA)

Modeling Economic Interactions between Microgrids and Electric Utilities: A Regulator's PerspectiveChiara Lo Prete (Harvard University, USA)Benjamin Hobbs (Johns Hopkins University, USA)

Tackling the Photovoltaic Integration Challenge in the Distribution Network with Deferrable LoadEnxin Yao, Pedram Samadi, Vincent W.S. Wong, Robert Schober (University of British Columbia, Canada)

Microgrid Provision of Blackstart in Disaster Recovery for Power System RestorationAnya Castillo (Johns Hopkins University, USA)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon ACYB2: Cyber-Physical Wide-Area Monitoring, Protection& Control IIChair: Lars Nordström (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

Blind Topology Identification for Power SystemsXiao Li (University of California, Davis, USA)H. Vincent Poor (Princeton University, USA)Anna Scaglione (University of California, Davis, USA)

Historical Data-Driven State Estimation for Electric Power SystemsYang Weng, Rohit Negi, Marija Ilic (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)

Graphical Model for State Estimation in Electric Power SystemsYang Weng, Rohit Negi, Marija Ilic (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)

Real-Time Prediction of Power System Frequency in FNET: A StateSpace ApproachJin Dong, Xiao Ma, Seddik M. Djouadi, Husheng Li (University of Tennessee, USA)Phani Teja Kuruganti (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA)

A Distributed Control Strategy for Optimal Reactive Power Flow withPower and Voltage ConstraintsSaverio Bolognani (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)Ruggero Carli, Guido Cavraro, Sandro Zampieri (Universita di Padova, Italy)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon EWHO2: Whole Picture: Smart Grid Generation and DemandChair: Pei Zhang (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)

Towards More Transmission Asset Utilization through Real-time PathRatingRuisheng Diao, Zhenyu Huang, Chunlian Jin, Bharat Vyakaranam,Shuangshuang Jin, Yuri Makarov (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA)

Virtual Power Sensing Based on a Multiple-Hypothesis Sequential TestZhaoyi Kang, Yuxun Zhou (University of California, Berkeley, USA)Lin Zhang (Tsinghua University, China)Costas Spanos (University of California, Berkeley, USA)

Risk Limiting Dispatch with Ramping ConstraintsJunjie Qin (Stanford University, USA)Baosen Zhang (University of California, Berkeley, USA)Ram Rajagopal (Stanford University, USA)

Energy Efficient Thermal Comfort Control for Cyber-Physical HomeSystemZhuo Cheng, Wai Wai Shein, Yasuo Tan, Azman Osman Lim (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan)

TSB: Trusted Sensing Base for the Power GridAli Mazloomzadeh, Osama Mohammed (Florida International University, USA)Saman Zonouz (University of Miami, USA)

´

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TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 10:30 – 12:10Room: Salon FSERV2: Smart Grid Software and ApplicationsChair: Albert Y.S. Lam (Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong)

Safety Design for Smart Electric Vehicle Charging with Current andMultiplexing ControlChing-Yen Chung, Edward Youn, Joshua S. Chynoweth, Charlie Qiu, Chi-Cheng Chu, Rajit Gadh (University of California, Los Angeles, USA)

Intelligent Meter Placement for Power Quality Estimation in Smart GridSardar Ali (University of Victoria, Canada)Kyle Weston (Kinsol Research, Canada)Dimitri Marinakis, Kui Wu (University of Victoria, Canada)

Home Energy Management with Generic Thermal Dynamics and UserTemperature PreferenceHieu Trung Nguyen (INRS-EMT, Canada)Duong Nguyen (INRS, Canada)Long Bao Le (INRS, University of Quebec, Canada)

Software-Defined Energy Communication Networks: From SubstationAutomation to Future Smart GridsAdam Cahn (University of Colorado, USA)Juan Hoyos (University of Colorado & Empresas Publicas de Medellin, USA)Matthew Hulse, Eric Keller (University of Colorado, USA)

Optimal Demand Response in DC Distribution NetworksHamed Mohsenian-Rad (University of California, Riverside, USA)Ali Davoudi (University of Texas, Arlington, USA)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon ADEM4: Simulations and Testbeds for Demand ResponseChair: Chin-Woo Tan (Stanford University & Bigwood Systems, Inc., USA)

A Comparison of Two GIV Mechanisms for Providing Ancillary Servicesat the University of DelawareStijn Vandael (University of Leuven & University of Delaware, Belgium)Sachin Kamboj (University of Delaware, USA)Tom Holvoet, Geert Deconinck (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium)Willett Kempton (University of Delaware, USA)

DRSim: A Cyber Physical Simulator for Demand Response SystemsTri Kurniawan Wijaya (EPFL, Switzerland)Dipyaman Banerjee, Tanuja Ganu, Dipanjan Chakraborty, Sourav Battacharya (IBM Research - India, India)Thanasis Papaioannou (EPFL, Switzerland)Deva P. Seetharam (IBM Research - India, India)Karl Aberer (EPFL, Switzerland)

Critiquing Time-Of-Use Pricing in OntarioAdedamola Adepetu, Elnaz Rezaei, Daniel Lizotte, Srinivasan Keshav(University of Waterloo, Canada)

The Potential of Smart Home Sensors in Forecasting Household Electricity DemandHolger Ziekow (AGT Group (R&D) GmbH, Germany)Christoph Goebel (Technical University Munich, Germany)Jens Strüker (Fresenius University of Applied Sciences, Germany)Hans-Arno Jacobsen (Technical University Munich, Germany)

Automated Scheduling of Deferrable PEV/PHEV Load by Power-ProfileUnevennessHongyuan Lu, Guodong Pang, George Kesidis (Pennsylvania State University, USA)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon ENET4: Network Monitoring, QoS and ResilienceChair: Samir R. Das (Stony Brook University, USA)

Smart Eagle: A Bird's-eye View on Heterogeneous Networks for Commercial and Industrial SitesBram Scheidegger (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)Yvonne-Anne Pignolet, Ettore Ferranti (ABB Corporate Research, Switzerland)

Assessing the Effect of Geographically Correlated Failures on Interconnected Power-Communication NetworksSebastian Neumayer, Eytan Modiano (MIT, USA)

Stabilizing Hybrid Data Traffics in Cyber Physical Systems with CaseStudy on Smart GridHusheng Li, Zhu Han (University of Houston, USA)Ju Bin Song (Kyung Hee University, Korea)

Efficient PMU Networking with Software Defined NetworksAndrew Goodney, Saurabh Kumar, Akshay Ravi, Young Cho (University of Southern California, USA)

A Simulation Study of Routing Protocols for Smart Meter NetworksVibha Kathuria, Gokul Mohanasundaram, Samir R. Das (Stony Brook University, USA)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 13:40 – 15:20Room: Salon FSEC3: AMI SecurityChair: Mike Ahmadi (Codenomicon, USA)

Reconciling Security Protection and Monitoring Requirements in Advanced Metering InfrastructuresRobin Berthier (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)Jorjeta Jetcheva, Daisuke Mashima (Fujitsu Laboratories of America, USA)Jun Huh, David Grochocki, Jr, Rakesh B. Bobba (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)Alvaro A. Cárdenas (University of Texas, Dallas, USA)Bill Sanders (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

A Systems Approach to Analysing Cyber-Physical Threats in the Smart GridAnas AlMajali (University of Southern California, USA)Eric Rice (Jet Propulsion Laboratory & Cal Tech, USA)Arun Viswanathan (University of Southern California, USA)Kymie Tan (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA)Clifford Neuman (University of Southern California, USA)

Delay Makes a Difference: Smart Grid Resilience under Remote Meter Disconnect AttackWilliam Temple, Binbin Chen, Nils Ole Tippenhauer (Advanced Digital Sciences Center, Singapore)

Probabilistic Model Checking for AMI Intrusion DetectionMuhammad Qasim Ali, Ehab Al-Shaer (University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA)

Prevention of Malware Propagation in AMIYoung Hee Park, David Nicol, Huaiyu Zhu (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)Cheol Won Lee (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute, Korea)

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TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon ADEM5: Demand Response for Thermostatically Controlledand Industrial LoadChair: Saman Zonouz (University of Miami, USA)

A Model of Demand Response Energy Management System in Industrial FacilitiesYuemin Ding, Seung Ho Hong (Hanyang University, Korea)

Combined Load Frequency Control and Active Distribution NetworkManagement with Thermostatically Controlled LoadsEvangelos Vrettos, Göran Andersson (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)

A Moving Horizon State Estimator in the Control of ThermostaticallyControlled Loads for Demand ResponseEmre Kara, Zico Kolter, Mario Berges, Bruce Krogh, Gabriela Hug(Carnegie Mellon University, USA)Tugce Yuksel (Carnegie Mellon University, Turkey)

Large Population Optimal Demand Response for ThermostaticallyControlled Inertial LoadsGaurav Sharma, Le Xie, Panganamala Kumar (Texas A&M University, USA)

The Impact of Flexible Loads in Increasingly Renewable GridsJay Taneja, Ken Lutz, David Culler (University of California, Berkeley, USA)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon ESTO4: Customer Segmentation & Support for Storage, Renewable Resources and Micro-grids IVChair: Eve Schooler (Intel, USA)

Utility Customer Segmentation Based on Smart Meter Data: Empirical StudyJungsuk Kwac (Stanford University, USA)Chin-Woo Tan (Stanford University & Bigwood Systems, Inc., USA)Nicole Sintov (University of Southern California, USA)June Flora, Ram Rajagopal (Stanford University, USA)

Economic Analysis of Lifetime-Constrained Battery Storage under Dynamic PricingXiaoqi Tan (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong)Yuan Wu (Zhejiang University of Technology, China)Danny H. K. Tsang (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong)

Differential Protection of Microgrids over a WiMAX NetworkReduan H. Khan (University of Newcastle, Australia)Taha Selim Ustun (Carnegie-Mellon University, Australia)Jamil Y. Khan (University of Newcastle, Australia)

Modeling and Simulation of Wireless Communication Based RobustController for Multi-Converter SystemsMehdi Karbalaye Zadeh, Reza Parseh, Marta Molinas, Kimmo Kansanen(Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)

Energy Delivery NetworksJagabondhu Hazra, Sambuddha Roy, Zainul M. Charbiwala, Deva P. Seetharam, Yogish Sabharwal (IBM Research - India, India)Saiful A. Husain, Satyajith Mathew (Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Brunei Darussalam)

Thursday, 24 October 2013 • 15:50 – 17:30Room: Salon FSEC4: Protocols and Key ManagementChair: Rakesh B. Bobba (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

SELINDA: A Secure, Scalable and Light-Weight Data Collection Protocol for Smart GridsGyörgy Dán (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)King-Shan Lui (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)Rehana Tabassum, Quanyan Zhu, Klara Nahrstedt (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

Formal Design of Communication Checkers for ICCP using UPPAALSalman Malik, Robin Berthier, Rakesh B. Bobba, Roy Campbell, BillSanders (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

Flexible Data Authentication Evaluated for the Smart GridKelsey Cairns, Carl Hauser, Thoshitha T Gamage (Washington State University, USA)

Encryption Key Management for Secure Communication in Smart Advanced Metering InfrastructuresSeung-Hyun Seo, Xiaoyu Ding, Elisa Bertino (Purdue University, USA)

An Advanced Key Management Scheme for Secure Smart Grid CommunicationsXuelian Long, David Tipper (University of Pittsburgh, USA)Yi Qian (University of Nebraska–Lincoln, USA)

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PANEL & LIGHTNING TALKS

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 12:10 – 13:40 Room: Harbourside Ballroom

Panel: BC Hydro’s Experience and Challenges with Smart GridChair: Sol Lancashire (BC Hydro & University of British Columbia, Canada)

Utilities world-wide are looking to implement smartgrid technologies to help meet business objectives due to drivers such as aging infrastructures, workforce and capital resource constraints, rate pressures, elevated customer expectations, policy requirements, and the need to manage disruptive technologies. Although smartgrid technologies promise a host of benefits, including improvements in efficiency, reliability, and safety, they are oftentransformational and represent significant challenges to the traditional utilities. This panel will discuss, from BC Hydro’s perspective, real-life experiencesand challenges associated with planning, implementing, and operating systems that incorporate these new technologies.

BC Hydro is a Crown Corporation providing electricity to 95% of British Columbia residents. BC Hydro is committed to energy conservation, reduction of greenhouse gases, and modernization of the electrical grid while keeping the lights on and the rates low for customers.

Lunch will be provided.

PANEL

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 12:10 – 13:40 Room: Salon F

Lightning Talks Session Chair: Rakesh Bobba (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)

LIGHTNING TALKS

Lightning Talks are short five minute talks on technical topics. About 12talks will be presented in this 90-minute session. The point of a lightningtalk is not to give a detailed talk but rather to convey the main point briefly.Talks on any topic within the scope for IEEE SmartGridComm Symposia arewelcome. Come to talk about a nifty algorithm trick, thoughts triggered bypresentations at the conference, or if you are a student, share the highlightof your thesis project. While there is no hard and fast rule about the presentation format, it is recommended that you have no more than 5 slides.The goal is to convey your main idea succinctly and quickly. Five-minutetime limit is strictly enforced and you will be asked to stop at the end of 5minutes.

Speakers that desire to present lightning talks should sign up at the conference registration before Wednesday, 23 October 2013 at 10:00.A sign-up sheet and logistic instructions for the session will be posted at conference registration. Speakers will need to provide name, affiliation,contact email and most importantly the title of the talk.

Lunch will be provided.

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INDUSTRY DEMONSTRATIONS • TUTORIAL

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 10:00 – 18:00Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 10:00 – 18:00

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 10:00 – 13:40Room: Foyer Level A

INDUSTRY DEMONSTRATIONS

Developing an Energy Management System (EMS) for a Network of Alpha Distributed Energy Resources (DERs)Presenters: Rasvan Mihai, Colin Coombes,Chad Lecompte, Andonis Shariatzadeh, Alpha Technologies Ltd.

UBC Living Lab team, from Alpha TechnologiesLtd, will present a case study on an innovativedesign for integrating distributed power modules. Alpha has teamed up with Corvus Energy to develop an Energy Management System (EMS) for a Network of Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) and Li-Ion batteries todemonstrate that stored energy can be used toreduce energy flow from BC Hydro during peakdemand periods. This project is part of the continuing UBC Living Lab initiative for demonstrating industry-university collaboration.

A Smart Meter Design Using the MFMS Current SensorPresenter: Arnold Stillman, Founder, POEM Technology, LLC

Poem Technology has developed the MFMS current sensor. This mechanically flexible, magnetically shielded current sensor comprisesthe input transducer for a new class of electricpower meter. The transducer takes the form of aflexible, composite material that encircles a conductor and fastens easily and quickly. Installation of a meter using the MFMS sensorcan be permanent or temporary and proximity toother conductors has no effect on current measurements, even for kiloAmp currents a fewcm away.

BC Hydro DisplayBC Hydro has been providing clean, reliablepower to British Columbians for more than 50years while maintaining among the lowest ratesin North America. BC Hydro is a provincial Crowncorporation that serves 1.9 million customersand invests in the electrical system and in energyconservation to deliver a safe and reliable supplyof electricity for today’s customers and for generations to come.

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 08:30 – 12:00 Room: Salon F

TUTORIAL

T1: IEC 61850-Principles, Applications and BenefitsAlexander Apostolov, Principal Engineer, OMICRON Electronics, USA

The tutorial will cover briefly the history and fundamental principles of IEC 61850, its applications and benefits. The concepts of abstract models and servicesand their mapping to specific protocols will be presented. The principles of GOOSE and sampled values, their communication mechanisms, applications andbenefits, including their use for synchrophasor communications, will be described. The IEC 61850 configuration language ideas, different files and their application in the engineering of protection and control systems will be discussed. Requirements, methods and tools for the testing of IEC 61850 based systems will be covered at the end.

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IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 14 –

WORKSHOPS

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 08:30 – 12:00 Room: Salon E

W1: Closed-Loop Wide Area Applications, Communications, and Security

Electric power grids worldwide are getting increasingly stressed each year for a number of factors, including renewable integration and inadequate growthin transmission capacity. Further, the lack of adequate visibility has been a major contributing factor in all recent major blackouts. These factors canpartially be mitigated by closed-loop applications, including distributed control and system integrity protection schemes (SIPS). These applications by nature have extreme communications requirements -- latency of 1-2 power cycles, extremely high availability, and sometimes a rate of hundreds ofHz -- across hundreds of miles or more.

This industry-focused workshop will help attendees better understand this brave new world that requires different thinking, protocols, etc. The firstsession will be a panel session on these kinds of applications. The second session will provide an overview of communications issues needed to supportthis, including an overview of the emerging (but not fully implemented) NASPInet concept as well as a case study with GridStat. The final session will beon the security issues and mechanisms that are required -- naive (but common) applications of existing security mechanisms such as RSA effectivelyrule out low enough delivery latencies. As a whole, the attendees will get a concrete glimpse into how and why business as usual will not apply to thesenew and necessary applications.

08:30 – 09:20Applications of Closed-Loop Wide Area Protection and Control Greg Zweigle, Principal Research Engineer, Schweitzer Engineering Labs Inc.

09:20 – 10:00Communications for Closed-Loop Cyber Physical WAMPAC David Bakken, Professor, Washington State University

10:00 – 10:30Coffee Break

10:30 – 11:00Security Issues and Tradeoffs for Closed-Loop WAN Applications Thoshitha Gamage, Research Assistant Professor, Washington State University

11:00 – 11:40The Security Fabric for Critical Infrastructures John Reynolds, Chief Architect, Security Fabric Alliance

11:40 – 12:00Panel and Q&A

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 08:30 – 12:00 Room: Salon A

W2: Smart Grid at Scale: The UBC Living Lab

At UBC we view our entire campus as a living laboratory, a "city scale" sand box in which to explore, creatively and collaboratively, solutions to today’schallenges and market opportunities. The session will describe the UBC Living Lab initiative and provide details on specific projects supporting the development of integrated smart-grid technology on the campus.

08:30 – 09:00 UBC's Living Lab Initiative: Driving Innovation Iain Evans, Associate Director, Strategic Partnerships UBC

09:00 – 09:30Carbon-Neutral Community Scale Co-Generation Cliff Mui, Director, Product Development, Nexterra Systems Corporation

09:30 – 10:00The Role of Energy Storage in the Energy Grid Geoff Davenport, President, International Business, Corvus Energy

10:00 – 10:30Coffee Break

10:30 – 11:00Energy Management Victor Goncalves, Director of Engineering, Alpha Technologies

11:00 – 11:30Converged Networks- Distributing Power and Data Guneet Bedi and Robert Flesher, Cisco Systems

11:30 – 12:00 Integrating Electric Vehicles with the Power Grid David Leboe, Project Manager, Powertech Labs

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WORKSHOPS

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 13:30 – 17:00 Room: Salon A

W3: Joint WWRF/SmartGridComm Workshop on Wireless Communications and the Smart Grid

This workshop will discuss both the roles that wireless communications can play in the smart grid of the future, and the use of the smart grid to powerfuture wireless systems including cellular systems and machine-to-machine communications. Speakers will be drawn from both industry and academia,and come from Europe, North America and Asia. Topics covered include the optimal management of energy in a system of cellular base stations, networkingissues arising from using wireless sensors and meters in a smart grid, R&D activities within major industry players in this domain, standardization andmore.

13:30 – 14:00Smart Energy Field Trials: Insights from a Private Public Partnership and the FINESCE ProjectFiona Williams, Ericsson

14:00 – 14:30IEEE Strategic Smart Grid Standards Infrastructure Development - Integrating Power, Communications, IT, & Applications Requirements Chuck Adams, Distinguished Standards Strategist, Futurewei Technologies

14:30 – 15:00Getting fit for the Smart Grid: Wireless Standardization Efforts Xavier Costa Perez, Chief Researcher, NEC Europe

15:00 – 15:30Coffee Break

15:30 – 16:00Sensors, Signals and Sense-making in Human-energy RelationshipsMartha Russell, Executive Director, mediaX, Stanford University

16:00 – 16:30Energy Management at Cellular Base Stations in a Smart Grid Teng Joon Lim, National University of Singapore

16:30 – 17:00Shift of Smart Grid IndustriesMischa Dohler, King's College London

The Wireless World Research Forum (WWRF) is meeting in Vancouver concurrently with IEEE SmartGridComm and has partnered in sponsoringthis workshop at the IEEE SmartGridComm venue for attendees of bothevents. The Workshop is organized by the Wireless World Research Forum(WWRF), as well as Teng Joon Lim and Andreas Georgakopoulos.

Monday, 21 October 2013 • 13:30 – 17:00 Room: Salon F

W4: Smart Grid Cyber Security

Although power utilities across North America operate within their own jurisdictional frameworks, their networks are moving toward a higher level of interconnection as a consequence of the roll out of Smart Grid technologies. As such, attacks on their critical infrastructure may not be contained withinjurisdictional borders. Security and resiliency of electrical power infrastructure needs to be ensured through a federally supported coordination, collaboration and standardization program.

13:30 – 13:40Welcome and Opening RemarksHassan Farhangi, Director, BCIT Group for Advanced Information Technology

13:40 – 14:00Smart Grid Communications Security: What utilities are actually doing?Bob Lockhart, Research Director, Navigant Research

14:00 – 14:20CyberSecurity Technology Strategy Development for UtilitiesNeil Rerup, Enterprise Security Architect, BC Hydro

14:20 – 14:40Securing the Grid: A Discussion on DependencePatrick C. Miller, Managing Partner, The Anfield Group

14:40 – 15:00Understanding the Smart Grid Attack Surface: Risks, Hypothetical Attacks, and Protective CountermeasuresJustin W. Clarke, Principal Consultant, Cyclance

15:00 – 15:30Coffee Break

15:30 – 17:00Panel DiscussionModerator: Hassan FarhangiDirector, BCIT Group for Advanced Information Technology

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IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 16 –

SOCIAL PROGRAM • GENERAL INFORMATION

BadgesIEEE SmartGridComm 2013 badges must be worn at all times and are necessary for entrance into all IEEE SmartGridComm 2013 sessions.

RegistrationRegistration is located on the Foyer Level A of the Renaissance VancouverHarbourside Hotel. All attendees must be registered to participate in conference activities.

Registration/Meeting Information Desk Hours Monday, 21 October 07:30 – 17:00Tuesday, 22 October 08:00 – 18:00Wednesday, 23 October 08:00 – 17:30Thursday, 24 October 08:00 – 17:30

Conference MealsIncluded in the price of the full registration are the Welcome Reception,Three Luncheons, Happy Hour Demo and Banquet.

Internet Access Wireless access will be available for all attendees.

Cell Phones/PDAs/Laptops/BeepersPlease respect your fellow conference attendees and speakers. During sessions please lower the volume on your electronic devices and put themon vibrate or silent mode.

Evaluation FormAn email with a link to the evaluation form will be sent to you after theevent. Please be sure to take the time to fill out the form. We value yourfeedback.

Wednesday, 23 October 2013 • 19:00 – 21:00Habourside Ballroom

The banquet will feature a short talk by IEEE Communications SocietyPresident, Vijay Bhargava, who will elaborate on "Tales from a Consummate IEEE Volunteer" as well as the presentation of the BestPaper, Best Student Paper and Best Video Awards. You will also havean opportunity to take a professional photo with a Canadian Mountieand/or a Vancouver scenic background as a keepsake.

Conference Banquet

Tuesday, 22 October 2013 • 18:00 – 20:00Vistas, 19th Floor

Join your colleagues and friends for food and drinkat Vistas Restaurant. This revolving restaurant

allows you fabulous 360 views of the city.

Welcome ReceptionMonday, 21 October 2013 • 17:00 – 18:00

Foyer Level A

Come mingle with fellow attendees while enjoying hor d'oeuvres and beverages.

Happy Hour Demo

SOCIAL PROGRAM

GENERAL INFORMATION

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IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 17 –

COMMITTEE

General Co-ChairsLutz Lampe, University of British Columbia, CanadaCarl Hauser, Washington State University, USAKip Morison, BC Hydro, Canada

Conference Technical Program Committee Co-ChairsMarija Ilic, Carnegie Mellon University, USAPetar Popovski, Aalborg University, DenmarkEve Schooler, Intel Labs, USADavid Tse, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Local Arrangements ChairSara Bavarian, Powertech Labs Inc., Canada

Publication ChairZhenyu (Henry) Huang, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA

Web ChairYujue Wang, Washington State University, USA

Social Media ChairThoshitha Gamage, Washington State University, USA

Student Travel Grant Co-ChairsRakesh Bobba, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USAMoslem Noori, University of British Columbia, Canada

Student Video Competition Co-ChairsMark Dubois-Philips, Powertech Labs Inc., CanadaVictor Goncalves, Alpha Technologies, CanadaTom Johnson, Itron Inc., USA

Industry Liaison, Patronage and Workshop Co-ChairsChris Develder, Ghent University, BelgiumDave Michelson, University of British Columbia, CanadaBrent Sauder, University of British Columbia, Canada

International LiaisonsHendrik Ferreira, University of Johannesburg, South AfricaChih-Wen Liu, National Taiwan University, TaiwanMoises Ribeiro, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, BrazilAnna Scaglione, University of California, Davis, USA

Conference ManagerGayle Weisman, IEEE ComSoc, USA

Finance ChairBruce Worthman, IEEE ComSoc, USA

Promotion and Media RelationsHeather Ann Sweeney, IEEE ComSoc, USA

Graphic Design and BrandingKerrianne Sullivan, IEEE ComSoc, USAMax Loskutnikov, IEEE ComSoc, USA

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Architectures and Models for the Smart GridYoshizumi Serizawa, Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry(CRIEPI), JapanVladimir Stankovic, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UKHongbin Sun, Tsinghua University, China

Cyber-Physical Wide-Area Monitoring, Protection & Control(Cyber-Physical WAMPAC)Carlos S "Santiago" Grijalva, Georgia Tech, USASoummya Kar, Carnegie Mellon University, USALars Nordström, KTH, Sweden

The Whole Picture - Sense, Communicate, Compute, ControlPei Zhang, Carnegie Mellon University, USALe Xie, TAMU, USAYannick Phulpin, EDF, France

Smart Grid Cyber Security and PrivacyKwang-Cheng Chen, National Taiwan University, TaiwanMike Ahmadi, Codenomicon, USAGeorge Arnold, NIST, USA

Support for Storage, Renewable Resources and Micro-gridsSara Biyabani, Intel, USAAlejandro Dominguez-Garcia, UIUC, USARam Rajagopal, Stanford University, USAYong Tae (Philip) Yoon, Seoul National University, Korea

Demand Side Management, Demand Response, Dynamic PricingEilyan Bitar, Cornell University, USADusit Niyato, Nanyang Technological University, SingaporeDuncan Callaway, UC Berkeley, USAHamed Mohsenian-Rad, UC Riverside, USA

Communications and Networks for Smart Grids and Smart Metering Hans-Peter Schwefel, FTW, AustriaSuresh Singh, Portland State University, USAVincent W. S. Wong, University of British Columbia, Canada

Smart Grid Services and Management Models Steve Puller, TAMU, USARatnet Sharma, NEC, USAChee Wei Tan, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Smart Grid Standards, Co-simulation, Test-beds and Field Trials Lin Zhang, Tsinghua University, ChinaMike Coop, ThinkSmartGrid, USAGiocanna Dondossola, RSE, Italy

SYMPOSIA TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE C0-CHAIRS

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SILVER PATRONSBRONZE PATRONS

PATRONS

IEEE SmartGridComm • 4th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications– 18 –

Alpha Technologies is an established leader in the design and manufacture of AC, DC and Renewable powering solutions for theTelecom, Cable-Broadband, Traffic, Industrial and Smart Grid sectors. With over 35 years of powering solutions expertise, andmillions of powering solutions installed and operating globally, Alpha is the powering expert.

The Energy Systems Innovation Center at Washington State University is a leading center of excellence, both nationally and internationally, for research, education, technological innovation, and technology transfer in energy systems, including smartgrids. With an exceptional team of 8 researchers in power, energy, and computer science, and 18 faculty researchers in alliedfields (including economics and public policy), the ESI Center provides a strong synergistic environment for conducting majormulti-disciplinary studies on electric energy and its social and economic impacts, facilitating the development of public policyin the state and nation.

The ESI Center collaborates with governments and industries at local, state, regional, national and international levels on researchand development, education, workforce training, and economic development. The Center has also established strong linkageswith leading educational institutions around the world to promote collaborative research and educational programs as well asfaculty and student exchanges. The Center builds on the existing excellence of WSU’s power engineering and related programsto provide the broad scope and expertise needed to meet the global society’s grand challenges in energy and the environment.

BC Hydro has been providing clean, reliable power to British Columbians for more than 50 years while maintaining among thelowest rates in North America. BC Hydro is a provincial Crown corporation that serves 1.9 million customers and invests in theelectrical system and in energy conservation to deliver a safe and reliable supply of electricity for today’s customers and forgenerations to come.

GOLD PATRONS

Page 20: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

BC HYDRO IS PROUD TO BE A GOLD SPONSOR OF IEEE SMARTGRIDCOMM.To learn more visit bchydro.com.

A13

-447

Alpha Technologies is an established leader in the

design and manufacture of AC, DC and Renewable

powering solutions for the Telecom, Cable-Broadband,

Traffic, Industrial and Smart Grid sectors. With over 35

years of powering solutions expertise, and millions

of powering solutions installed and operating globally,

Alpha is the powering expert.

www.alpha.ca • 1.800.667.8743 • [email protected]

Visit us at:

Page 21: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications

The evolution of today’s electricity grids into smart grids is a key element for the sustainable economic, environmental and societal growth worldwide. The migration to smarter grids comes at a time in which information and communication technologies have revolutionized personal communications. It is thus no coincidence that communication technologies are ready to and will play an essential role in the implementation of smart grids. However, it is not obvious which communication technologies will be integrated into electricity grids and in what way. Communication systems need to be seen as part of a larger system of systems, including in particular energy, control, and information processing systems to support two-way energy flows, the automatic management of power outages, the integration of renewable energy sources and allowing the consumers to play an active role in energy production and consumption. The overlap of disciplines is part of the specific challenge and appeal of smart grid communications research and development.The 5th IEEE International Conference on Smart Grid Communications (SmartGridComm 2014) will provide a forum to discuss all aspects that are relevant to smart grid communication and information technologies. It will bring together researchers and practitioners from academia, industry, and government institutions, with backgrounds in communication, energy, control, signal processing, and information systems to exchange ideas, explore enabling technologies, discuss innovative designs, and share field trial experiences and lessons learned.

1. Communications and Networks to Enable the Smart Grid

2. Cyber Security and Privacy

4. Demand Response and Dynamic Pricing

5. Data Management and Grid Analytics

3. Architectures, Control and Operation for Smart Grids, Microgrids and Distributed Resources

See the website for requirements of accepted papers.

CALL FOR PAPERS

For more information, visit www.ieee-smartgridcomm.org.

Paper Submission Deadline: 12 April 2014 Camera Ready Paper Due: 26 July 2014 Notification of Acceptance: 5 July 2014 Author Registration Deadline: 26 July 2014

General Co-ChairsAndrea M. Tonello, Università di Udine, ItalyMichele De Nigris, Ricerca Sistema Energetico, Italy

TPC Co-ChairsVincent Wong, University of British Columbia, CanadaJohn McDonald, General Electric, USALars Nordström, Royal Institute of Technology, SwedenPaolo Tenti, Università di Padova, Italy

IMPORTANT DATES

PROSPECTIVE AUTHORS ARE INVITED

to submit original contributions (standard two-column IEEE format,

up to six pages) using EDAS http://www.edas.info/

under the track “SmartGridComm2014” on all aspects of smart grid communications covered by the five technical symposia:

Fall 2014•Venice, Italy

Page 22: SmartGridComm 2013 Final Program

®

www.ieee.org www.comsoc.org