1 / 14

Operating an Intelligent Building

Intelligent and Integrated Buildings Conference Toronto, Ontario, Dec. 2-3, 2002. Operating an Intelligent Building . Meli Stylianou. Outline. Building operation and Kyoto Intelligence ? How can intelligence help in operating buildings?

finley
Télécharger la présentation

Operating an Intelligent Building

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intelligent and Integrated Buildings Conference Toronto, Ontario, Dec. 2-3, 2002 Operating an Intelligent Building Meli Stylianou

  2. Outline • Building operation and Kyoto • Intelligence ? • How can intelligence help in operating buildings? • Do we have everything we need to intelligently operate buildings? • Is building operation such a big deal? • Intelligent building operation • Conclusions

  3. Building operation and Kyoto • Commercial sector • 430,000 commercial and institutional buildings and thousands more being built each year. • 13% of secondary energy (1,015 PJ) • 12.5% of GHG emissions (54 Mt eq. CO2) • Ineffective Operation • 15%-30% energy waste • How can intelligent buildings improve operation?

  4. Intelligence ? “The ability to learn or understand or to deal with new or trying situations: REASON;” Webster’s dictionary

  5. How can intelligence help in building operation? • Continuously optimize operations • Modulate set points to respond to changing requirements • Continuous commissioning • Detect and diagnose faults • Air handling units, chillers, boilers… • Schedule maintenance • Scheduled need it or not • Analyze cost/benefit then schedule

  6. Do we have everything we need to intelligently operate buildings? • Today’s systems: • Have limited or no learning/reasoning capabilities • Depend on operators – who more often than not lack the expertise and/or time to ensure optimal operation • Are reactive – symptoms force action: complaints of indoor environment/ high energy costs/high maintenance costs • Technology is available • Buildings are already monitored as never before • Computational capabilities of today’s systems can do much more than they are asked to • Artificial intelligence techniques are no longer at the experimental stage and in fact are used in many industries

  7. Is building operation such a big deal…? • Two identical buildings • EESB • ETB –Low-E windows; T-8 lighting system; energy efficient HVAC system; LED exit lights • Complaints skyrocketed • ETB – 32% more energy consumed • Correction of problems: manual setting; simultaneous heating and cooling • Result:comfort related complaints dropped; energy consumption reduced

  8. But how can this be true…? 13°C 13°C 24°C 11°C 14°C 18°C 15°C 15°C Space maintained at 23°C (Modified from:Diagnostics and Commissioning, Karl Stum, PECI)

  9. Can intelligence be used in today’s control systems? • Diagnostic Agent for Building Operators (DABO) Existing Control System BEMS Building Energy Agent DDE/ODBC/OCX Fault Detection & Diagnostic Agent Database Diagnostic Agent for Building Operators DDE/ODBC/OCX Commissioning Agent Condition-Based Maintenance Agent Artificial Intelligence Tools

  10. CETC-Varennes, Qc Delta Controls, Surrey, BC CFF, Laval, Qc Dorval Airport, Montreal, Qc Fault detection and diagnosis applications

  11. VAV Box Report Screen

  12. …but does it work?

  13. Intelligent building operation • Sensing • Wireless sensing can reduce the life cycle cost of monitoring building systems • Interoperability • Facilitate the development of tools linking the operation and maintenance requirements of building systems • Computational capabilities • Enable the optimisation and timely detection of faulty operation and limit impact on energy costs and occupant well being • Artificial intelligence techniques • Leverage the hardware capabilities of building control systems and provide the information necessary to optimise the operation of the building

  14. Conclusions • Barrier: Building owner and operator awareness • The market pull is not there …yet • Data is available • Hardware is available • Intelligence is vital in operating buildings • Reduce operating costs • Improve indoor environmental conditions – proactively not reactively • Improve occupant satisfaction and productivity • Elimination of occupant complaints… not a dream…

More Related