Power System Add-On Can Protect Against City-Sized Cyberattacks

Researcher Receives Grant to Develop Innovative PMU Network

Date

Author

By Marcia Faye
Power System Add-On Can Protect Against City-Sized Cyberattacks

Cyberattacks on the energy sector and other critical infrastructure systems are and can significantly impact a city or even a country. Earlier this year, for example, the United States Department of Homeland Security and the FBI issued a that the Russian government had cyber targeted multiple entities within the U.S. government, energy, nuclear, commercial, water, aviation, and manufacturing sectors. Illinois Tech Assistant Professor of Computer Science Dong ā€œKevinā€ Jin is developing an innovative (PMU) that will make power systems more resilient and minimize the time the system needs to repair itself.

The researchers propose using a centralized network control, such as the emerging software-defined networking technology, to design resilient network self-healing algorithms against cyberattacks. Upon detection of a cyberattack, the PMU network can reconfigure itself to isolate compromised devices, reconnect uncompromised devices, and re-route measurement data with the goal of preserving the power-system observability. The result is a system that keeps capturing important data even during a cyberattack and uses it to build intelligence to defend against the attack.

ā€œThe government today spends billions of dollars to protect the communication networks of national critical infrastructures, yet struggles with the difficulty of finding enough highly skilled cybersecurity workers,ā€ says Jin, noting that the lack of qualified employees makes his PMU network even more critical. ā€œThe ability to detect and mitigate security violations more efficiently would have a significant economic impact by making the industrial control systems more secure, reliable, and cost effective.ā€ 

Jin is funded by a U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research Young Investigator Research Program Award grant. His team, which includes Assistant Professor of Computer Science Yuan Hong, two Ph.D. students, and a computational engineer from , is at the prototype stage and has completed a performance evaluation. The members plan to extend the attack scenarios and study efficient self-healing mechanisms on a hybrid network.