Application of Serial to Ethernet Convertor in the New Energy Industry: How to Achieve Energy Management?
In today's booming new energy industry, the scale of photovoltaic power stations, wind farms, and energy storage systems is growing exponentially. However, when operation and maintenance personnel are faced with hundreds or thousands of inverters, electricity meters, and sensors, a practical problem emerges: How can these "silent devices" scattered across gobi deserts, plateaus, and islands be made to "speak"? The answer lies in the seemingly unremarkable Serial to Ethernet Convertor—a device the size of a palm that is redefining the "nerve endings" of new energy systems.
A photovoltaic power station in northwest China once encountered such a dilemma: In a 200 MW power station, 3,000 inverters were connected via an RS-485 bus, but the traditional monitoring system could only display general data such as "total power generation." When the power generation efficiency in a certain area suddenly dropped by 20%, the operation and maintenance team had to carry laptops to investigate each unit across a 40-square-kilometer area, taking 72 hours to locate a group of photovoltaic panels covered in sand and dust.
This scenario exposes three major contradictions in new energy management:
A case from a wind farm is even more representative: Its SCADA system connects 200 wind turbine generators via optical fiber, but when the gearbox temperature of a certain unit becomes abnormal, the system can only trigger a "temperature too high" alarm without providing in-depth diagnostic information such as "which specific bearing lacks lubrication." This "knowing the what but not the why" monitoring mode is restricting the intelligent upgrading of new energy systems.
Modern Serial to Ethernet Convertors have broken through the limitations of traditional devices that only support Modbus RTU/TCP. Taking Acrel's APort100 as an example, its built-in protocol parsing engine can simultaneously handle:
The practice at an energy storage power station is highly enlightening: By deploying a Serial to Ethernet Convertor that supports Lua scripting, the operation and maintenance team completed protocol adaptation for 12 different brands of BMS (Battery Management Systems) in just three days, reducing the data collection cycle from 15 minutes to 3 seconds.
The reliability requirements for devices in new energy scenarios are extremely stringent:
A case from an offshore wind farm is typical: The selected Serial to Ethernet Convertor features an IP68-rated enclosure, a fanless cooling design, and conformal coating on the circuit board. During Typhoon Dusurui in 2023, the device was able to transmit data normally after being immersed in seawater for 48 hours, providing critical support for rapid post-disaster recovery.
New-generation Serial to Ethernet Convertors already possess lightweight AI processing capabilities. Taking Inocontrol's ESU-1F-5130 as an example, its RK3588 processor can run:
The practice in a microgrid project shows that by deploying edge AI models on Serial to Ethernet Convertors, the system predicted the capacity degradation trend of energy storage batteries 72 hours in advance, avoiding a battery pack replacement incident worth 2 million yuan.
In a 500 MW photovoltaic power station in Qinghai, Serial to Ethernet Convertors have constructed a three-tier communication architecture:
This architecture has achieved three major breakthroughs:
A wind farm in Inner Mongolia has deployed Serial to Ethernet Convertors that support dual-mode communication:
After one year of operation, the system has achieved:
A commercial and industrial energy storage project in Jiangsu creatively uses Serial to Ethernet Convertors as the "energy scheduling hub":
During the peak electricity consumption period in the summer of 2024, the system saved the enterprise 1.27 million yuan in electricity costs through peak-valley arbitrage while receiving 430,000 yuan in subsidies for participating in grid frequency regulation.
Future Serial to Ethernet Convertors will integrate TinyML frameworks to run locally:
Test data from a research and development team shows that a Serial to Ethernet Convertor equipped with an AI module can improve the overall efficiency of new energy systems by 3.7%.
Through the OPC UA over TLS protocol, Serial to Ethernet Convertors are becoming bridges connecting physical devices and digital twins. In a virtual power plant project, the system achieves:
New-generation Serial to Ethernet Convertors adopt low-power designs:
The practice at a desert photovoltaic power station shows that after adopting energy-efficient Serial to Ethernet Convertors, the energy consumption of the monitoring system itself decreased by 68%, equivalent to reducing CO₂ emissions by 12 tons per year.
In the new energy industry, the value of a Serial to Ethernet Convertor lies not in its technological complexity but in its ability to solve the most fundamental problems: making devices speak a "common language," enabling data to "flow," and providing a basis for decision-making. When the operation and maintenance supervisor of a photovoltaic power station told me, "Now I can smell the scent of the photovoltaic panels on the gobi desert from my office," I deeply realized that the best technology often makes complex problems simple and remote devices feel close.
This "silent but transformative" change is reshaping the competitive landscape of the new energy industry. Enterprises that take the lead in building efficient communication networks not only gain an advantage in operation and maintenance costs but also win ahead in terms of data asset accumulation and business model innovation. As the CTO of an energy group said, "A Serial to Ethernet Convertor is not just a communication device; it is the 'nerve synapse' of the new energy system, determining the reaction speed and intelligence level of the entire organism."
In this era of the Internet of Everything, perhaps we will eventually forget the existence of Serial to Ethernet Convertors—just as we do not consciously perceive the beating of our hearts, but it is this "imperceptible" stable operation that supports the new energy system's evolution toward higher efficiency, lower costs, and greater sustainability.