Model predictive control of a thermally activated building system to improve energy management of an experimental building: Part II - Potential of predictive strategy
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Energy and Buildings. 2018-08, vol. 172, p. 385-396
Elsevier
Résumé
Thermally Activated Building Systems (TABS) are difficult to control due to the time lag between the con- trol sending and the response of the indoor temperature. Energy management of systems having such a high inertia can ...Lire la suite >
Thermally Activated Building Systems (TABS) are difficult to control due to the time lag between the con- trol sending and the response of the indoor temperature. Energy management of systems having such a high inertia can be improved by optimizing the restart time thanks to both occupancy and weather antic- ipation. Predictive control is suitable for systems with numerous constrained inputs and outputs whose objective function varies over time such as buildings with intermittent occupancy. This work proposes to use a Model Predictive Control (MPC) for one TABS in particular: a floor heating system (FHS) of an experimental building. Conventional control techniques and a state of the art on the predictive control of FHS are presented. A complete control loop (sensor, actuator, controller) was implemented on an experi- mental room. The predictive controller that integrate the model selected in Part I is compared with two conventional control strategies. The energy saving potential of the predictive controller is confirmed by both local experimentation and simulation on three climates. The energy saving is close to 40% over the whole heating season with an improved or equivalent comfort situation compared to the other two ref- erence strategies. The absolute gain is constant over the heating period but the most significant relative gains are obtained in the mid-season.< Réduire
Mots clés
Building and Construction
Model predictive control TABS Floor heating system Energy management Optimal control
Mechanical Engineering
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche