Open access
Date
2012-11Type
- Conference Paper
Abstract
A promising alternative to standard control strategies for heating, ventilation, air conditioning and blinds positioning of buildings is Model Predictive Control (MPC). Key to MPC is having a sufficiently simple (preferably linear) model of the building’s thermal dynamics. In this paper we propose and test a general approach to derive MPC compatible models consisting of the following steps: First, we use standard geometry and construction data to derive in an automated way a physical first-principles based linear model of the building’s thermal dynamics. This describes the evolution of room, wall, floor and ceiling temperatures on a per zone level as a function of external heat fluxes (e.g., solar gains, heating/cooling system heat fluxes etc.). Second, we model the external heat fluxes as linear functions of control inputs and predictable disturbances. Third, we tune a limited number of physically meaningful parameters. Finally, we use model reduction to derive a low-order model that is suitable for MPC. The full-scale and low-order models were tuned with and compared to a validated EnergyPlus building simulation software model. The approach was successfully applied to the modeling of a representative Swiss office building. The proposed modular approach flexibly supports stepwise model refinements and integration of models for the building’s technical subsystems. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000060559Publication status
publishedExternal links
Editor
Book title
Proceedings of the 4th ACM Workshop on Embedded Sensing Systems for Energy-Efficiency in Buildings (BuildSys '12)Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Association for Computing MachineryEvent
Organisational unit
03416 - Morari, Manfred (emeritus)08814 - Smith, Roy (Tit.-Prof.)
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