The present invention is related to computer software and more specifically to computer software for residential power analysis.
Power analysis systems in residences have not been successful in the marketplace because the systems require sensors on resource consuming devices, like refrigerators, pool pumps and the like. The costs of the sensors and their installation can be so high that homeowners are unwilling to take the risk of purchasing a system that may not save them more than the cost of the system.
As smart power meters are installed between the power grid and homes, this represents an opportunity to install a solution in the power meter that can be used to implement power analysis functions. For example, a meter could be developed that would recognize a power signature of each device in the home. However, this would require a meter that reported the power thousands of times per second, to provide the resolution of the power use that could be used in such a system. Currently available meters do not report this frequently. Although they could be made to increase their reporting rate, this too would increase the cost of the system. Utilities are frequently the party that bears the cost of a retrofit of a meter. Many utilities would not want to pay the extra costs for such a meter. Furthermore, the network capacity for many meters may be limited, and that much data could be problematic.
What is needed is a system and method that can analyze power usage without requiring power sensors on every device, can use the capabilities of existing smart meters, and will not overload the network bandwidth of the smart meters.
A system and method uses the capabilities of the smart power meter, any other smart meters, and any devices capable of power monitoring, to receive power monitoring reports at a central server. Weather reports from Internet web sites that supply such reports may also be used. The system and method displays the power usage to the user in near real time, graphically showing the level of power being used at the user's residence or business over time. The system and method incorporates reports of power usage from any devices that monitor their own power usage. For other devices, the user can turn devices on and off, or monitor times devices have turned themselves on or off, and then visually identify the power usage of such devices using the graph displayed, and indicate the name of the device, and the system and method associates the name with the power usage and attempts to identify the power usage over typical multiple times of operation of the device. If the power usage can not be automatically identified, the system and method prompts the user for information to allow its manual identification. Thus, although devices with power sensing capabilities can be used, the power usage of devices without such capability can be analyzed as well. A data structure containing power usage of an anonymous device is thus transformed with the name of the device.
The system and method may then compare the resource usage of a device with that of other similar devices or similar devices in the same geographic area to identify problems or make recommendations regarding the saving of power. Information may be provided to retailers or manufacturers who can market devices that have a lower resource consumption profile than the device the user has, and can make precise cost/benefit comparisons.
The present invention may be implemented as computer software on a conventional computer system. Referring now to
In one embodiment, each computer system 150 is a conventional SUN MICROSYSTEMS ULTRA 10 workstation running the SOLARIS operating system commercially available from SUN MICROSYSTEMS, Inc. of Mountain View, Calif., a PENTIUM-compatible personal computer system such as are available from DELL COMPUTER CORPORATION of Round Rock, Tex. running a version of the WINDOWS operating system (such as 95, 98, Me, XP, NT or 2000) commercially available from MICROSOFT Corporation of Redmond Wash. or a Macintosh computer system running the MACOS or OPENSTEP operating system commercially available from APPLE INCORPORATED of Cupertino, Calif. and the FIREFOX browser commercially available from MOZILLA FOUNDATION of Mountain View, Calif. or INTERNET EXPLORER browser commercially available from MICROSOFT above, although other systems such as cell phones, IPHONES commercially available from APPLE, INC. and touch screen photo viewers may be used.
Referring now to
Registration information is received, for example, from the user, and cost data is received, for example, from a utility 210. In one embodiment the registration information may include a name and address/city/state/zip, utility account number or meter identifier or an identifier of a device that collects resource use information and provides it to a server as described in more detail herein. Registration information may include receipt or assignment of a user identifier and receipt of a password.
The user logs into a server via a computer coupled to a network, such as the Internet 212. In one embodiment, in response, the server notifies the user's power meter using the registration information, and the user's power meter changes from providing data at a second rate, to providing data at a first rate, whereby the first rate is faster than the second rate. For example, the power meter may provide an indication of the rate of power being supplied every 15 minutes at the second rate, and every 5 seconds at the first rate. In one embodiment, such notification and change in rates does not occur until the user indicates that the user wishes to view resource use or provide device assignments as described in more detail herein. Other types of meters may be used instead of, or in addition to, the power meter.
Resource use is received by the server 214. In one embodiment, resources may include power, water, natural gas phone, cable, or other utilities. In one embodiment, the server may receive resource use at other times, but the reports are provided at a slower rate than it is received when the user has logged in as described above. In one embodiment, step 214 includes displaying the resource use to the user, and receiving assignments of devices to portions of the resources being used as described in more detail herein.
Weather information may be received for an area at least near the user's location, for example, from a web site that provides weather by providing the user's zip code, or weather information may be retrieved from a database 216. In one embodiment weather information includes conditions such as sunny, cloudy, rain, etc., wind speeds, and/or outside temperature. Additionally, thermostat information may be received from a thermostat capable of transmitting such information. Thermostat information may include the temperature at the thermostat or at one or more sensors monitored by the thermostat, the trigger temperature or temperatures at which heating or cooling devices, such as a heat pump or furnace, will turn on. The on or off status or resource consumption amount of the device controlled by the thermostat may also be received.
Usage data for other resources, such as water or gas may be received and used as described in more detail with respect to
Resource use is analyzed 220 based on the identifier of each device, by comparing the resource use to normal resource use for the environment reported and/or based on usage reports received in a similar fashion for other users or by identifying potential savings that can be achieved by changing the operation or environment of similar devices. For example, the power use of a refrigerator may be compared with actual resource use for the same type of device or similar devices of other nearby users (optionally, around the same date and time) to identify that the power usage of a refrigerator is eight times the average for the area, which may indicate that a replacement could save resources such as power. The power usage of the refrigerator may be compared with estimated power usage of refrigerators currently available for sale to determine if resource savings may be identified. The power use of a second refrigerator can be identified as one that could be eliminated. In one embodiment, when a user identifies each device as described above, the user may select from preselected names, such as “second refrigerator” or “garage refrigerator” to facilitate such analysis.
Suggestions are provided 222 to the user or to a third party such as a retailer to reduce resource use based on the analysis of the different devices, where resource use savings can be identified. The third party such as a retailer may then contact the user, for example, by mail or by e-mail or at the next time the user logs into the server to provide information about products or services that may be provided to reduce resource use, for example a more energy efficient refrigerator, or a service that cleans the coils on a refrigerator. Suggestions may include alternatives for a device, such as a pool cover to reduce the use of a pool pump. Suggestions may include suggestions regarding the operating environment of a device, such as suggesting checking for blockage of attic vents when an air conditioning unit is running several hours after the outside temperature has dropped lower than the desired indoor temperature.
The user may log out or the server may time out for lack of activity, and an indication that the user is no longer using the system may be provided to the meter 224 to allow it to reduce its reporting rate as described herein.
The user may implement the suggestions or the third party may work with the user to implement the suggestions 226 and the user may repeat operation of the method starting with step 212.
Referring now to
Steps 410-418 illustrate the change in transmission of pulse count information from a resource meter that provides pulses to indicate a quantity of the resource has been consumed. The date and time of pulses received is recorded. At the end of each reporting period, the number of pulses, or the number of pulses and duration between them is sent based on whether the number of pulses exceeds a threshold rate. This allows less data to be reported if the pulse rate is low.
Referring now to
One or more resource use areas are identified 512 from the graph. A resource use area corresponds to the resource being used by a single device or multiple devices, as will now be described.
Referring momentarily to
The resource use shown in
Referring now to
In one embodiment, steps 510-514 operate as a continuously running process, which automatically updates in real time or nearly real time (without further user input) based on the data from the meter, and the cost at the time of day for that day.
A determination is made 516 as to whether the user is hovering a mouse cursor 720 over a resource use area of the graph or is otherwise indicating a resource use area, for example, by surrounding it by clicking and holding the mouse button down while the mouse cursor is at one corner of an area the user is defining, and then dragging the mouse to the opposite corner of a box defined by such action that will include the intended resource use area.
The user hovers a mouse cursor if the mouse cursor does not move or does not substantially move for a threshold period of time.
If the user hovers over a resource use area 518, the increase in the rate of use of the resource, and the duration of that use is identified and the cost of that use, the product of the increase, the duration, and the cost at that time for that day, are identified and the increase and cost is displayed 520. On
An identifier of the device corresponding to the resource use area over which the user hovered the mouse cursor is requested from the user and received 522, and the identifier is associated 524 with information about the resource use area, which may include the date and time of day, an indication of the increase in the rate of resource use that corresponds to that device, an indication of the duration of such use, an indication of the cost and an identifier of the user or collector or meter. In one embodiment, associating an identifier of the device with such information may include adding the identifier to a data structure in a computer readable medium such as memory or disk storage that already has such information, or vice versa. Such association may be made by removing or reordering identifiers of other possible devices that may be in the data structure to leave the identifier of the device in place, or by marking such identifier in a list of identifiers already associated with the information. In such a way, the data structure, existing in a tangible, physical media, is transformed. The data structure is, of course, readable by a computer system, and used for the applied purpose of resource use analysis as described herein. In one embodiment, the data structure need not be a single data structure, but may be a set of related data structures, such as different tables in a relational database.
In
In one embodiment, the transformation of the data structure occurs on a server computer system, or a client computer system, each coupled via a network.
In one embodiment, as increases or decreases above a threshold percentage (e.g. 5%) in the rate of resources used appears on the display, as part of step 510, a change notice is provided that identifies the magnitude of the most recent change.
Frequency of use of the device may be identified 526. In one embodiment, step 526 includes attempting to identify other resource use areas that have similar increases, and durations that are at least consistent with the duration of the resource use area identified, and associating them with the device name after confirming with the user. In one embodiment, outside temperatures and/or the name of the device may be used to make such a determination. For example, an other resource use area that has the same increase, but a longer duration may be identified as the air conditioning unit the user just identified if the outside temperature at the time and date corresponding to the resource use area identified is hotter than the outside temperature at the other resource use area. In one embodiment, to confirm that the other resource use areas correspond to the same device, the other resource use areas identified are highlighted and the user is asked to confirm that they are correct. The user may click on any highlighted resource use area to remove it from consideration. The user may then confirm that the highlighted resource use areas correspond to the same device, and the frequency of use is identified for the device. In one embodiment, other information may be identified that allows an estimate of the cost or resource use over a longer period of time instead of frequency of use, such as typical use in an hour, typical use in an hour as a function of outside or inside temperature, etc. In one embodiment, the user may click on all of the identified resource use areas of the graph, thereby removing all of them, and manually enter frequency of use, duration, functions, times of use, or other information that can be used to calculate the amount of resource use or cost of resource use of a device. In one embodiment, if no other resource use areas are automatically identified as described above, the user is prompted to enter such information, and such information is received and stored as part of the data structure as described above, all as part of step 526. The method continues at step 510.
As the method iterates to step 512, known device assignments may be removed from either the graph or from a modified set of data based on the graph that is used to identify resource use areas, to allow resource use areas corresponding to unknown devices to be identified more easily. Device assignments may be known because they have been identified by the user as described herein or reported by a device that reports its resource use.
If the user does not hover over a resource use area and none of the other conditions exist (entry in the device change label or indication that the user is done as described herein) 518, the method continues at step 510.
If the user indicates they are done with making the device assignments to resource use areas 518, the user may be logged out 530 as described above.
System
Referring now to
Resource consuming device C 614 may employ a different resource, such as water or gas, and is thus connected to resource meter 622 which may be a smart meter, also ZIGBEE capable, wireless capable or wireless mesh network capable.
Meters 620, 622 report rates of resource use as described herein to collector 630, which forwards such rates to server 650 via a network such as the Internet. Meters may report rates of resource use to server 650 directly or one 622 may report via the other 620, bypassing collector 630, though in such case, some meters may serve as the collectors for other meters. Meters may also implement the method of
Collector 630 includes a ZIGBEE (or other wireless network or wireless mesh network) capable, Internet capable device that receives reports from meters 620, 622 and forwards them to server 650 with a unique identifier of collector 630 or meters 620, 622 that has been associated with the user on the server, for example via the registration information described above or via a system administrator. Collector 630 may implement the methods of
In one embodiment, resource consuming device B 612 may be a smart device, meaning it reports its resource use, for example via a ZIGBEE wireless network connection, other wireless network connection or other wireless mesh network connection. In one embodiment, the report is made to collector 630, though in another embodiment, such report may be made to electric meter 620 which forwards it to collector 630 or server 650.
In one embodiment, server 650 is a conventional server coupled to the Internet that performs the method of
In one embodiment, client computer 640 serves the function of server 650 as well. In another embodiment, client computer 640 is ZIGBEE capable, wireless capable or wireless mesh network capable and also serves the function of collector 630. Electric meter 620 may serve the function of collector 630. In one embodiment, each user may have their own client computer system 640, devices 610-614, electric or other resource meter 620-622, thermostat and heat pump/furnace 624-626 and collector 630, though collector 630 may be shared by multiple users. There may be any number of users with similar or identical components 610-640 whose resource use information is collected by server 650. Server 650 may include one or more conventional web servers and may include a conventional database.
Resource information manager 812 receives resource usage information, for example from collector 630 of
Registration manager 820 provides a user interface to prompt for registration information, including the user's address of the user's residence or business, the device identifier of collector 630 that collects resource usage information for the user's residence or business (or identifiers of meters 620-622), the cost or costs of the resource and days and times such cost is applicable if the cost of the resource varies by time and/or day, from the user and/or system administrator as described above and stores such registration information into registration storage 822 associated with the user or users for which it applies. In one embodiment, registration manager 820 associates the unique device identifier of collector 630 or meters 620-622 with the user's address in registration storage 822, which may include a conventional address database. Log in manager 830 provides a user interface to allow the user to log in and uses the registration information in registration storage 822 to authenticate the user.
Once the user is logged in, log in manager 830 provides the user identifier of the user to resource assignment manager 832, which then signals the collector 630 for that user that the data rate should be increased as described above and collector 630 complies. Resource assignment manager 832 provides information to the user's client computer system 640 that may be used to display in real time or near real time resource usage information corresponding to that user from resource usage storage 814 as described above, and makes assignments of device labels to resource use area information by transforming data structures in resource assignment storage 834 that also includes the identifier of the collector 630, a user identifier, device identifier of collector 630 as described above and in more detail below. The information in resource assignment storage 834 may include the user identifier or device identifier, the label that identifies the device that used the resource, and the resource use information that identifies the amount of the use of the resource by that device during a period, such as annually.
When the user signals resource assignment manager 832 that the user wishes to perform an analysis, resource assignment manager 832 provides the user identifier or identifier of the collector 630 associated with that user in registration storage 822 to resource analyzer 840, which uses the information in any or all of resource assignment storage 834, resource usage storage 814 and registration storage 822 corresponding to the identifier it receives to perform the analysis described above and provides indications of potential areas for improvement to suggestion manager 850, which makes suggestions to the user or provides information that may be used by a third party such as a retailer to make suggestions as described above. The information used for the analysis may include the assignment information, weather or other information, and the assignment information made to devices with the same device identifier or made to other devices by users having nearby addresses as indicated by the address database, around the same date and time as described above. Resource assignment manager 832 may also signal the collector 630 or meter 620-622 associated with the user as described above to reduce the data rate as described above.
For example, resource analyzer 840 may use the user identifier to retrieve the identifier of the collector 630 in registration storage 822, and then use the identifier of the collector or the user to retrieve the device assignments in resource assignment storage 834, along with information associated with the device assignments. Resource analyzer 840 may then compare the device assignments with an average of device assignments made by other users within a 5 mile radius within 15 days of the user's assignment (or on days or at times in with similar outside and/or inside temperatures) for the same device identifier, such as “pool pump”. To identify the device assignments within such radius, resource analyzer 840 may identify in registration storage 822 all users who identified their addresses as being within 5 miles of the address of the user whose resource use is being analyzed, based on the map database stored in registration storage 822 or using a web based map database accessed via communication interface 810. Device assignments may be normalized to similar length periods for the purpose of this analysis, so that if one user's assignments only are made for a 15 minute period, the resource use of each device may be multiplied by four to provide an hourly resource use. Resource uses of days or weeks may also be employed. If the user whose resource use is outside a boundary condition (e.g. two standard deviations above the average for all such users within a five mile radius who made device assignments at times with the same approximate temperature), the device identifier, resource use of that user, and average and standard deviation of the resource use of other users for the same named device may be supplied by resource analyzer 840 as an indication of a potential areas for improvement. The process may be repeated for each identified device. Other means of identifying norms, such as a usage database for each device identifier, may also be employed.
It is noted that other information other than the amount of resources may be employed to perform the analysis and such information may be supplied by resource analyzer 840 as well. For example, the fact that the pool pump “on” cycles are twice as long as average “on” cycle times in the area may be analyzed as abnormal by resource analyzer and supplied to suggestion manager 850, and suggestion manager 850 may use this information to suggest that the pool pump filter be investigated for blockage.
Each time such an assignment of a label is made to the data structure, resource use area manager 924 or change notice manager 926 provides an identifier of the user and the data structure corresponding to the assignment to total use manager 928, which identifies potential other resource use areas that may correspond to the newly labeled one as described above and provides identifiers to client computer system 640, which provides the user interface to the user as described above or otherwise asks the user for information on frequency of use or other information that can be used, for example, to identify the total amount and/or cost of resources used by that device over a longer period of time, such as a month or a year, and stores such information into the corresponding data structure.
It is noted that as resource use areas move along the display, area assignment manager 922 updates the area assignments to client computer system 640 and in the data structures.
Display manager 1020 receives the information as described above and renders the appropriate information as graphics and provides the rendered graphics to the display (not shown). Other information such as coordinates and area identifiers are stored into display storage 1022 by display manager 1020. User action manager 1030 receives user commands and actions such as hovers, and signals display manager 1020 with sufficient information to allow display manager 1020 to display the response to such user action as described above, which display manager 1020 does. Information to be displayed in response to a hover or change notices and the like is identified by area assignment manager 922 and provided to display manager 1020, which stores it into display storage 1022 and uses it to display the appropriate response to a user action. User action manager 1030 provides an indication of the user action as well as any data associated therewith to user action report manager 1032, which provides it to the server 650 of
This application is a continuation of co-pending U.S. patent application titled, “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR IDENTIFYING POWER USAGE ISSUES,” filed on Nov. 6, 2009 and having Ser. No. 12/590,451, which claims benefit of United States provisional patent application titled, “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR IDENTIFYING POWER USAGE ISSUES” and having Ser. No. 61/198,680, filed Nov. 6, 2008. The subject matter of these related applications is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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SmartSynch, SmartMeter System Overview, pp. 1-12, <http://www.smartsynch.com/products/smartmeter_overview.html>, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
SmartSynch, “SmartMeter Power Quality Matrix”, 1 page, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
SmartSynch, “A3 Alpha SmartMeter”, 4 pages, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
SmartSynch, “SmartSynch Quick Facts”, 1 page, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
SmartSynch, “TMS System Interfaces”, 2 pages, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
SmartSynch, Centron Smartmeter, 4 pages, at least as early as Apr. 4, 2007. |
Primen Final Report on California Information Display Pilot Technology Assessment, Dec. 21, 2004. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170116689 A1 | Apr 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61198680 | Nov 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12590451 | Nov 2009 | US |
Child | 15402088 | US |