Abstract

Machine learning models have been widely used to study the prediction of heating and cooling loads in residential buildings. However, most of these methods use the default hyperparameters, resulting in inaccurate prediction accuracy. In this work, based on hyperparametric optimization algorithms of random search (Random), grid search (Grid), covariance matrix adaptive evolution strategy (CMA-ES), and tree-structured parzen estimator (TPE), were combined with the light gradient boosting machine (LightGBM) model, to construct four hybrid models (Random-LightGBM, Grid-LightGBM, CMA-ES-LightGBM and TPE-LightGBM) for improved prediction accuracy of heating and cooling loads. The LightGBM model was trained using a dataset consisting of building features, cooling set points, and occupant behavior parameters. Feature selection was performed by a random forest-based feature selection method, which determines the input features of the load prediction model. The TPE- LightGBM model achieved the best prediction accuracy among all proposed models with a root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.2714, mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.1416, coefficient of determination (R2) of 0.9981, and mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 0.4699% for heating load prediction, and RMSE of 0.1901, MAE of 0.1394, R2 of 0.9924, and MAPE of 2.3509% for cooling load prediction. The proposed TPE-LightGBM model provides an efficient strategy for predicting heating and cooling loads, which can provide better energy efficiency measures at the early design stages of residential buildings.

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