Hybrid-Oriented Intelligent Operational and Architectural Foundations of IoT-Enabled Smart Grids: A System-Level Review and Challenge-Oriented Comparative Synthesis
Grygorii Diachenko, Ivan Laktionov, Daniil FainshteinThe rapid digitalization of energy systems and the increasing integration of distributed energy resources, renewable energy technologies, and prosumer-oriented infrastructures have accelerated the development of IoT-enabled Smart Grids as a foundation for intelligent and adaptive energy management. Modern Smart Grids increasingly depend on the coordinated interaction of IoT architectures, artificial intelligence, distributed analytics, and decentralized control mechanisms to ensure reliability, scalability, and real-time operational flexibility. Despite extensive research activity, existing studies remain predominantly technology-centric, focusing on isolated architectural layers or individual intelligent methods without providing a unified system-level perspective on their coordinated operation and interoperability. This article presents a system-level integrative review and challenge-oriented comparative synthesis of intelligent operational and architectural foundations of IoT-enabled Smart Grids. The study analyzes data-driven, model-driven, knowledge-driven, agent-based, and hybrid-oriented intelligent paradigms within multi-layer IoT energy infrastructures. In addition, the research establishes a cross-layer mapping between Smart Grid operational challenges, enabling technologies, and corresponding analytical approaches while identifying interoperability constraints, scalability limitations, and coordination challenges associated with decentralized energy ecosystems. The conducted synthesis demonstrates that hybrid-oriented intelligent approaches represent the most promising direction for future Smart Grid evolution due to their ability to integrate AI, ML, digital twins, semantic reasoning, and decentralized multi-agent coordination within unified IoT architectures. The conducted comparative synthesis identifies the ongoing transition from isolated intelligent solutions toward integrated hybrid cyber–physical energy ecosystems and highlights key characteristics of future adaptive, interoperable, scalable, and explainable Smart Grid architectures.