Abstract

AbstractAdvocacy for climate mitigation aims to minimize the use of fossil fuel and to support clean energy adaptation. While alternative energies (e.g., biofuels) extracted from feedstock (e.g., micro‐algae) represent a promising role, their production requires reliably modeled photosynthetically active radiation (PAR). PAR models predict energy parameters (e.g., algal carbon fixation) to aid in decision‐making at PAR sites. Here, we model very short‐term (5‐min scale), sub‐tropical region's PAR with an Adaptive Neuro‐Fuzzy Inference System model with a Centroid‐Mean (ANFIS‐CM) trained with a non‐climate input (i.e., only the solar angle, θZ). Accuracy is benchmarked against genetic programming (GP), M5Tree, Random Forest (RF), and multiple linear regression (MLR). ANFIS‐CM integrates fuzzy and neural network algorithms, whereas GP adopts an evolutionary approach, M5Tree employs binary decision, RF employs a bootstrapped ensemble, and MLR uses statistical tools to link PAR with θZ. To design the ANFIS‐CM model, 5‐min θZ (01–31 December 2012; 0500H–1900H) for sub‐tropical, Toowoomba are utilized to extract predictive features, and the testing accuracy (i.e., differences between measurements and forecasts) is evaluated with correlation (r), root‐mean‐square error (RMSE), mean absolute error (MAE), Willmott (WI), Nash–Sutcliffe (ENS), and Legates & McCabes (ELM) Index. ANFIS‐CM and GP are equivalent for 5‐min forecasts, yielding the lowest RMSE (233.45 and 233.01μ mol m−2s−1) and MAE (186.59 and 186.23 μmol m−2s−1). In contrast, MLR, M5Tree, and RF yields higher RMSE and MAE [(RMSE = 322.25 μmol m−2s−1, MAE = 275.32 μmol m−2s−1), (RMSE = 287.70 μmol m−2s−1, MAE = 234.78 μmol m−2s−1), and (RMSE = 359.91 μmol m−2s−1, MAE = 324.52 μmol m−2s−1)]. Based on normalized error, ANFIS‐CM is considerably superior (MAE = 17.18% versus 19.78%, 34.37%, 26.39%, and 30.60% for GP, MLR, M5Tree, and RF models, respectively). For hourly forecasts, ANFIS‐CM outperforms all other methods (WI = 0.964 vs. 0.942, 0.955, 0.933 & 0.893, and ELM = 0.741 versus 0.701, 0.728, 0.619 & 0.490 for GP, MLR, M5Tree, and RF, respectively). Descriptive errors support the versatile predictive skills of the ANFIS‐CM model and its role in real‐time prediction of the photosynthetic‐active energy to explore biofuel generation from micro‐algae, studying food chains, and supporting agricultural precision.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND REVIEWBesides rare extremophile chemoautotrophs, the survival of life on the earth is dependent upon incident solar radiation

  • Similar comparisons were made for equivalent genetic programming (GP), M5 Tree, Random Forest (RF), and multiple linear regression (MLR) model-f­orecasted photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) (Figure 7)

  • Using a set of limited input data defined by θZ, the present paper established the utility of the Adaptive Neuro-­Fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS) algorithm for modeling very short-t­erm (5-­min) and hourly values of PAR in a sub-t­ropical regional location in Australia

Read more

Summary

Introduction

BACKGROUND REVIEWBesides rare extremophile chemoautotrophs, the survival of life on the earth is dependent upon incident solar radiation. Food chains are driven by the solar energy component termed as the photosynthetically active radiation (PAR; 400 nm ≤ λPAR ≤ 700 nm), which is critical to biosphere functions. Near real-­time PAR forecasts are a key parameter for renewable energy production (Eltbaakh et al, 2011; Jacovides, Tymvios, Boland, & Tsitouri, 2015), including global biomass systems that generate approximately 46 EJ of bioenergy per year. These provide food, fodder, fiber, hydrocarbons for heating, electrical power, liquid fuels, and other chemicals (IPCC 2007). PAR is considered crucial for supporting the demand of sustainable and environmentally friendly energy production solutions

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call