Abstract

In the UK, buildings contribute about one third of the energy-related greenhouse gas emissions. Space heating and cooling systems are among the biggest energy consumers in buildings. This research aims to develop a novel Building Energy Management System (BEMS) to reduce the energy consumption of the heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) system while fulfilling each occupant’ thermal comfort requirement. This paper presents a newly developed novel method, Epistemic-Deontic-Axiologic (EDA) Agent-based solution to support the Energy Management System meeting the dual targets of occupant thermal comfort and energy efficiency. The multi-agent solutions are applied to the BEMS. The problem decomposition method is used to define the architecture of the system. The Epistemic-Deontic-Axiologic (EDA) agent model is applied to develop the rational local and personal agents inside the system. These EDA-based agents select their optimal action plan by considering the occupants’ thermal sensations, their behavioural adaptations and the energy consumption of the HVAC system. The Newly-developed personal thermal sensation models and group-of-people-based thermal sensation models generated by support vector machine (SVM) based algorithms are applied to evaluate the occupants’ thermal sensations. These models are developed from the data collected in a real built environment. Simulation results prove that the newly-developed BEMS can help the HVAC system reduce the energy consumption by up to 10% while fulfilling the occupants’ thermal comfort requirements.

Highlights

  • Buildings have been regarded as one of the major carbon emission sources due to their high levels of energy consumption

  • This paper presents a newly developed novel method, Epistemic-Deontic-Axiologic (EDA) Agent-based solution to support the Energy Management System meeting the dual targets of occupant thermal comfort and energy efficiency

  • Simulation results prove that the newly-developed Building Energy Management System (BEMS) can help the HVAC system reduce the energy consumption by up to 10% while fulfilling the occupants’ thermal comfort requirements

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Summary

Introduction

Buildings have been regarded as one of the major carbon emission sources due to their high levels of energy consumption. Traditional BEMSs for the operation of heating and cooling systems are based on the designed or fixed range of thermal comfort in accordance with the recommendations by standards such as ANSI/ ASHRAE 55 and ISO7730 [4,5,6,7,8], which is based on the Predicted Mean Vote-Predicted Percentage of Dissatisfied (PMV-PPD) method from a large population based studies in the laboratory by Fanger [9] Such building energy management systems are usually not available for occupants to adjust the temperature range. It is revealed that decreasing the indoor air temperature setting-point by 1 °C may lead to 10% heating energy in a HVAC systems [15] It remains an open question how the energy operation system can satisfy occupants’ diverse thermal comfort demand and behaviour adaptation at the meantime time to achieve energy efficiency

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