907 research outputs found
Integration of Legacy Appliances into Home Energy Management Systems
The progressive installation of renewable energy sources requires the
coordination of energy consuming devices. At consumer level, this coordination
can be done by a home energy management system (HEMS). Interoperability issues
need to be solved among smart appliances as well as between smart and
non-smart, i.e., legacy devices. We expect current standardization efforts to
soon provide technologies to design smart appliances in order to cope with the
current interoperability issues. Nevertheless, common electrical devices affect
energy consumption significantly and therefore deserve consideration within
energy management applications. This paper discusses the integration of smart
and legacy devices into a generic system architecture and, subsequently,
elaborates the requirements and components which are necessary to realize such
an architecture including an application of load detection for the
identification of running loads and their integration into existing HEM
systems. We assess the feasibility of such an approach with a case study based
on a measurement campaign on real households. We show how the information of
detected appliances can be extracted in order to create device profiles
allowing for their integration and management within a HEMS
Surveying human habit modeling and mining techniques in smart spaces
A smart space is an environment, mainly equipped with Internet-of-Things (IoT) technologies, able to provide services to humans, helping them to perform daily tasks by monitoring the space and autonomously executing actions, giving suggestions and sending alarms. Approaches suggested in the literature may differ in terms of required facilities, possible applications, amount of human intervention required, ability to support multiple users at the same time adapting to changing needs. In this paper, we propose a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) that classifies most influential approaches in the area of smart spaces according to a set of dimensions identified by answering a set of research questions. These dimensions allow to choose a specific method or approach according to available sensors, amount of labeled data, need for visual analysis, requirements in terms of enactment and decision-making on the environment. Additionally, the paper identifies a set of challenges to be addressed by future research in the field
NILMTK: An Open Source Toolkit for Non-intrusive Load Monitoring
Non-intrusive load monitoring, or energy disaggregation, aims to separate
household energy consumption data collected from a single point of measurement
into appliance-level consumption data. In recent years, the field has rapidly
expanded due to increased interest as national deployments of smart meters have
begun in many countries. However, empirically comparing disaggregation
algorithms is currently virtually impossible. This is due to the different data
sets used, the lack of reference implementations of these algorithms and the
variety of accuracy metrics employed. To address this challenge, we present the
Non-intrusive Load Monitoring Toolkit (NILMTK); an open source toolkit designed
specifically to enable the comparison of energy disaggregation algorithms in a
reproducible manner. This work is the first research to compare multiple
disaggregation approaches across multiple publicly available data sets. Our
toolkit includes parsers for a range of existing data sets, a collection of
preprocessing algorithms, a set of statistics for describing data sets, two
reference benchmark disaggregation algorithms and a suite of accuracy metrics.
We demonstrate the range of reproducible analyses which are made possible by
our toolkit, including the analysis of six publicly available data sets and the
evaluation of both benchmark disaggregation algorithms across such data sets.Comment: To appear in the fifth International Conference on Future Energy
Systems (ACM e-Energy), Cambridge, UK. 201
Bayesian Nonparametric Hidden Semi-Markov Models
There is much interest in the Hierarchical Dirichlet Process Hidden Markov
Model (HDP-HMM) as a natural Bayesian nonparametric extension of the ubiquitous
Hidden Markov Model for learning from sequential and time-series data. However,
in many settings the HDP-HMM's strict Markovian constraints are undesirable,
particularly if we wish to learn or encode non-geometric state durations. We
can extend the HDP-HMM to capture such structure by drawing upon
explicit-duration semi-Markovianity, which has been developed mainly in the
parametric frequentist setting, to allow construction of highly interpretable
models that admit natural prior information on state durations.
In this paper we introduce the explicit-duration Hierarchical Dirichlet
Process Hidden semi-Markov Model (HDP-HSMM) and develop sampling algorithms for
efficient posterior inference. The methods we introduce also provide new
methods for sampling inference in the finite Bayesian HSMM. Our modular Gibbs
sampling methods can be embedded in samplers for larger hierarchical Bayesian
models, adding semi-Markov chain modeling as another tool in the Bayesian
inference toolbox. We demonstrate the utility of the HDP-HSMM and our inference
methods on both synthetic and real experiments
Non-parametric modeling in non-intrusive load monitoring
Non-intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) is an approach to the increasingly important task of residential energy analytics. Transparency of energy resources and consumption habits presents opportunities and benefits at all ends of the energy supply-chain, including the end-user. At present, there is no feasible infrastructure available to monitor individual appliances at a large scale. The goal of NILM is to provide appliance monitoring using only the available aggregate data, side-stepping the need for expensive and intrusive monitoring equipment. The present work showcases two self-contained, fully unsupervised NILM solutions: the first featuring non-parametric mixture models, and the second featuring non-parametric factorial Hidden Markov Models with explicit duration distributions. The present implementation makes use of traditional and novel constraints during inference, showing marked improvement in disaggregation accuracy with very little effect on computational cost, relative to the motivating work. To constitute a complete unsupervised solution, labels are applied to the inferred components using a Res-Net-based deep learning architecture. Although this preliminary approach to labelling proves less than satisfactory, it is well-founded and several opportunities for improvement are discussed. Both methods, along with the labelling network, make use of block-filtered data: a steady-state representation that removes transient behaviour and signal noise. A novel filter to achieve this steady-state representation that is both fast and reliable is developed and discussed at length. Finally, an approach to monitor the aggregate for novel events during deployment is developed under the framework of Bayesian surprise. The same non-parametric modelling can be leveraged to examine how the predictive and transitional distributions change given new windows of observations. This framework is also shown to have potential elsewhere, such as in regularizing models against over-fitting, which is an important problem in existing supervised NILM
NILM techniques for intelligent home energy management and ambient assisted living: a review
The ongoing deployment of smart meters and different commercial devices has made electricity disaggregation feasible in buildings and households, based on a single measure of the current and, sometimes, of the voltage. Energy disaggregation is intended to separate the total power consumption into specific appliance loads, which can be achieved by applying Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) techniques with a minimum invasion of privacy. NILM techniques are becoming more and more widespread in recent years, as a consequence of the interest companies and consumers have in efficient energy consumption and management. This work presents a detailed review of NILM methods, focusing particularly on recent proposals and their applications, particularly in the areas of Home Energy Management Systems (HEMS) and Ambient Assisted Living (AAL), where the ability to determine the on/off status of certain devices can provide key information for making further decisions. As well as complementing previous reviews on the NILM field and providing a discussion of the applications of NILM in HEMS and AAL, this paper provides guidelines for future research in these topics.Agência financiadora:
Programa Operacional Portugal 2020 and Programa Operacional Regional do Algarve
01/SAICT/2018/39578
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia through IDMEC, under LAETA:
SFRH/BSAB/142998/2018
SFRH/BSAB/142997/2018
UID/EMS/50022/2019
Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La-Mancha, Spain:
SBPLY/17/180501/000392
Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (SOC-PLC project):
TEC2015-64835-C3-2-R MINECO/FEDERinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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