Andy Soukup
Designers creating next-generation smart water, gas and electricity meters face a host of challenges. Besides the ever-present need to minimize cost in a highly competitive market, the performance, energy consumption and lifetime reliability requirements all force a continual search for innovative solutions.
When it comes to innovating, however, smart meter designers must solve these three specific challenges:
View our reference design | |
Battery and System Health Monitoring of Battery Powered Smart Flow Meters Reference Design |
Let’s consider the first challenge. Smart water and gas meters must typically operate from a nonrechargeable primary cell battery for a minimum of 15 years in a wide range of environmental conditions, making both energy consumption and the reliability of accurate measurement over the entire product lifetime the highest design priorities.
The most common battery chemistries in smart water and gas meters are lithium-based. The lithium-thionyl chloride (LiSOCL2) cell’s high energy density and low self-discharge rate make it a good fit for long-life applications.
Another increasingly popular option is the lithium manganese dioxide (LiMnO2) chemistry, because of its strong capability for high pulse currents. As smart meters integrate more high-powered radio-frequency communication modules such as narrowband-Internet of Things modems, the batteries need to supply periodic current pulses of 1A or higher during transmission intervals.
Smart water and gas meters need to have a long effective life in order to provide a sufficient return on investment for service operators and ultimately minimize utility costs for consumers. Deploying a smart water meter network is a major capital investment for service operators. In an interview with Bloomberg News in 2017, DC Water CEO George Hawkins mentioned that it costs $180 to install a smart meter on each home in the Washington, D.C., region. How can technology help ensure that operators and consumers get the best value for that cost?
One option is to use meter intelligence to perform predictive maintenance. If a smart meter can accurately predict the remaining effective life of its battery, then service operators can plan replacement cycles more cost-effectively. What if, due to favorable environmental conditions, a meter reaches its estimated end of life with 20% of its energy still available? Should the service operator still replace the meter? Conversely, if adverse environmental conditions, component failure or some other reliability issue shortens a meter’s battery life, the service operator would benefit from sufficient warning to plan for service earlier than scheduled.
TI’s Battery and System Health Monitoring of Battery Powered Smart Flow Meters Reference Design demonstrates a novel solution for monitoring the overall health of water and gas meters. It uses the BQ35100 fuel gauge and end-of-service monitor to track the amount of energy remaining in the primary battery and provide an accurate estimate of the battery’s remaining life based on actual usage in the field.
The reference design also implements system monitoring using the ADS7142 sensor monitor to autonomously monitor system current consumption and compare it against projected usage in real time. This enables the system to immediately determine if operating conditions have changed. These changes could be due to the environment, component degradation, firmware bugs or some other failure condition, which would need to be identified.
The challenge of maximizing battery life can be daunting as performance and connectivity expectations increase along with market pressures for lower cost and longer life. Improving system intelligence with new capabilities for predicting battery life and monitoring system performance in real time, as shown in this reference design, can help meet this challenge.
In upcoming blog posts, my colleagues will discuss the other two smart meter design challenges I cited at the beginning of this post: improving the accuracy of flow measurement and mitigating the increasing threat from tampering attacks.
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