[eng] Electrical substations are vital for the power grid,
and Substation Automation Systems (SASs) have been employed
to enhance substation functionality and safety. As the energy
landscape evolves, substations face new challenges such as accommodating
an increasing number of prosumers. Thus, SASs
require a reliable substation communication network (SCN)
capable of supporting real-time control and diverse applications.
While Ethernet-based SCN technologies have emerged, they often
fall short in meeting all requirements, including TCP/IP support,
cost-effective fault tolerance, and managing traffic with different
real-time demands. Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN) standards
have shown promise in addressing these limitations by providing
novel mechanisms. In this paper we compare TSN with the
Parallel Redundancy Protocol (PRP) demonstrating that TSN
offers better functionality and efficiency. In the direction of
designing a comprehensive TSN-based architecture for SASs’
Distributed Control Systems (DCSs) we start here by proposing
a roadmap for the fault tolerance aspects.