Development of an office tenant electricity use model and its application for right-sizing HVAC equipment
Authored by William O'Brien, Aly Abdelalim, H Burak Gunay
Date Published: 2019
DOI: 10.1080/19401493.2018.1463394
Sponsors:
National Research Council of Canada (NRC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
As a consequence of considerable uncertainty about occupancy, occupant
behaviour, and the corresponding effect on thermal loads in buildings,
it is difficult to correctly size heating, ventilation, and
air-conditioning (HVAC) equipment. Mechanical engineers avoid liability
of potential under-capacity and corresponding thermal discomfort by
making conservative assumptions about occupants. Meanwhile, there has
been a surge in research on characterizing occupants through
increasingly advanced modelling approaches to support building
performance simulation, but these have focused on agent-based models
representing individual occupants, which may be impractical for
building-level HVAC equipment sizing. This paper describes the
development of a data-driven stochastic tenant model using 15 months of
data from 17 independent commercial tenants. The model is implemented in
EnergyPlus to examine its potential for an improved HVAC
equipment-sizing procedure. The results show: the standard schedules are
reasonable though conservative; oversizing equipment does not greatly
improve comfort; and the tremendous importance of modelling inter-tenant
diversity.
Tags
Diversity
Occupant behavior
Buildings
Demand
Energy-consumption
Plug
Occupant modelling
Plug loads
Lighting loads
Office building
Hvac
sizing
Loads