Abstract

Digital and intelligent buildings are critical to realizing efficient building energy operations and a smart grid. With the increasing digitalization of processes throughout the life cycle of buildings, data exchanged between stakeholders and between building systems have grown significantly. However, a lack of semantic interoperability between data in different systems is still prevalent and hinders the development of energy-oriented applications that can be reused across buildings, limiting the scalability of innovative solutions. Addressing this challenge, our review paper systematically reviews metadata schemas and ontologies that are at the foundation of semantic interoperability necessary to move toward improved building energy operations. The review finds 40 schemas that span different phases of the building life cycle, most of which cover commercial building operations and, in particular, control and monitoring systems. The paper’s deeper review and analysis of five popular schemas identify several gaps in their ability to fully facilitate the work of a building modeler attempting to support three use cases: energy audits, automated fault detection and diagnosis, and optimal control. Our findings demonstrate that building modelers focused on energy use cases will find it difficult, labor intensive, and costly to create, sustain, and use semantic models with existing ontologies. This underscores the significant work still to be done to enable interoperable, usable, and maintainable building models. We make three recommendations for future work by the building modeling and energy communities: a centralized repository with a search engine for relevant schemas, the development of more use cases, and better harmonization and standardization of schemas in collaboration with industry to facilitate their adoption by stakeholders addressing varied energy-focused use cases.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBuildings are major energy end users, electricity consumers, and carbon emitters

  • The latter is the basic idea behind metadata schemas defined below

  • This paper presented a systematic survey of metadata schemas for building energy applications across the building life cycle to address three research questions

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Summary

Introduction

Buildings are major energy end users, electricity consumers, and carbon emitters. A typical commercial building has been shown to waste 30% of its energy consumption, attributable to suboptimal design, construction, and operational processes. Intelligent, or smart, buildings are understood to feature advanced sensing, communication, and control technologies that support integrated system operations; they provide the capability to react to and transfer information within and external to the building [3]. Intelligent buildings are critical to realizing efficient building operations and a smart grid [4] Advanced building modeling, control, and analytics applications deliver grid interactivity [5] and continuous efficiency [6]; increased interoperability is a noted barrier to optimizing the performance and cost-effectiveness of grid-interactive efficient buildings [5]

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