1,618 research outputs found
Quantitative Evaluation of Residential Virtual Energy Storage in Comparison to Battery Energy Storage: A Cyber-Physical Systems
Virtual energy storage (VES) refers to an indirect method of storing energy without using a battery. In a residential setting, VES uses the building structure interior appurtenances together with its physical properties as an energy storage device. It represents a methodology in energy storage mechanisms to help with load management in residential microgrids. It is an approach that is critical to the necessary paradigm shift from the less flexible and more costly demand response energy market of the present to the more flexible and potentially less costly availability response energy market of the future. This work quantifies VES monetary cost-savings potential for residential homes, as part of an effort to develop smart systems (using power sensors, and simple computation and control mechanisms) to assist individuals in making decisions about energy use that will save energy and, consequently, electricity costs. The project also compares the cost-effectiveness of VES to that of battery energy storage (BES)¿currently the more traditional and widely-advocated-for approach to energy storage for load management. In addition, this project devises a load management framework for a residential microgrid, where strategies that enable energy and cost savings for both utilities and consumers are tested. To make a home act as its own storage device, we need to intelligently control its heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system. Through this control, we can harness the house\u27s thermal storage abilities by methods such as preheating or precooling the house (with due consideration to user comfort) during periods when energy is less expensive so that this heat or coolness will be retained during higher-cost periods. A well-insulated residential home equipped with sensing technology and intermittent generation resources will be utilized as a testbed for this project. Using a testbed is advantageous as it provides realistic results as well as a platform where behavior of the home can be learned. By combining modeling techniques with test results from a live testbed, cost-saving solutions can be simulated and later evaluated. This work provides a means to determine how to reduce peak demand and save costs for both utilities and consumers by changing consumer behavior, while respecting consumer thermal comfort preferences. Additionally, by creating the aforementioned modeling framework, we provide the load management community with tools by which they can readily test their optimization algorithms. By so doing, more efficient algorithms can be developed (potentially leading to increased residential energy efficiency)
Intelligent Energy Management with IoT Framework in Smart Cities Using Intelligent Analysis: An Application of Machine Learning Methods for Complex Networks and Systems
Smart buildings are increasingly using Internet of Things (IoT)-based
wireless sensing systems to reduce their energy consumption and environmental
impact. As a result of their compact size and ability to sense, measure, and
compute all electrical properties, Internet of Things devices have become
increasingly important in our society. A major contribution of this study is
the development of a comprehensive IoT-based framework for smart city energy
management, incorporating multiple components of IoT architecture and
framework. An IoT framework for intelligent energy management applications that
employ intelligent analysis is an essential system component that collects and
stores information. Additionally, it serves as a platform for the development
of applications by other companies. Furthermore, we have studied intelligent
energy management solutions based on intelligent mechanisms. The depletion of
energy resources and the increase in energy demand have led to an increase in
energy consumption and building maintenance. The data collected is used to
monitor, control, and enhance the efficiency of the system
Towards Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) in the Internet of Things (IoT): Opportunities and Challenges
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), possessing the capacity to comprehend,
learn, and execute tasks with human cognitive abilities, engenders significant
anticipation and intrigue across scientific, commercial, and societal arenas.
This fascination extends particularly to the Internet of Things (IoT), a
landscape characterized by the interconnection of countless devices, sensors,
and systems, collectively gathering and sharing data to enable intelligent
decision-making and automation. This research embarks on an exploration of the
opportunities and challenges towards achieving AGI in the context of the IoT.
Specifically, it starts by outlining the fundamental principles of IoT and the
critical role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in IoT systems. Subsequently, it
delves into AGI fundamentals, culminating in the formulation of a conceptual
framework for AGI's seamless integration within IoT. The application spectrum
for AGI-infused IoT is broad, encompassing domains ranging from smart grids,
residential environments, manufacturing, and transportation to environmental
monitoring, agriculture, healthcare, and education. However, adapting AGI to
resource-constrained IoT settings necessitates dedicated research efforts.
Furthermore, the paper addresses constraints imposed by limited computing
resources, intricacies associated with large-scale IoT communication, as well
as the critical concerns pertaining to security and privacy
Thinking- Skins
Under the guiding concept of a thinking skin, the research project examines the transferability of cyber-physical systems to the application field of façades. It thereby opens up potential increases in the performance of automated and adaptive façade systems and provides a conceptual framework for further research and development of intelligent building envelopes in the current age of digital transformation.
The project is characterized by the influence of digital architectural design methods and the associated computational processing of information in the design process. The possible establishment of relationships and dependencies in an architecture understood as a system, in particular, are the starting point for the conducted investigation. With the available automation technologies, the possibility of movable building constructions, and existing computer-based control systems, the technical preconditions for the realisation of complex and active buildings exist today. Against this background, dynamic and responsive constructions that allow adaptations in the operation of the building are a current topic in architecture. In the application field of the building envelope, the need for such designs is evident, particularly with regards to the concrete field of adaptive façades. In its mediating role, the façade is confronted with the dynamic influences of the external microclimate of a building and the changing comfort demands of the indoor climate. The objective in the application of adaptive façades is to increase building efficiency by balancing dynamic influencing factors and requirements. Façade features are diverse and with the increasing integration of building services, both the scope of fulfilled façade functions and the complexity of today’s façades increase. One challenge is the coordination of adaptive functions to ensure effective reactions of the façade as a complete system. The ThinkingSkins research project identifies cyber-physical systems as a possible solution to this challenge. This involves the close integration of physical systems with their digital control. Important features are the decentralized organization of individual system constituents and their cooperation via an exchange of information. Developments in recent decades, such as the miniaturisation of computer technology and the availability of the Internet, have established the technical basis required for these developments. Cyber-physical systems are already employed in many fields of application. Examples are decentralized energy supply, or transportation systems with autonomous vehicles. The influence is particularly evident in the transformation of the industrial sector to Industry 4.0, where formerly mechatronic production plants are networked into intelligent technical systems with the aim of achieving higher and more flexible productivity.
In the ThinkingSkins research project it is assumed that the implementation of cyber-physical systems based on the role model of cooperating production plants in IIndustry 4.0 can contribute to an increase in the performance of façades. Accordingly, the research work investigates a possible transfer of cyber-physical systems to the application field of building envelopes along the research question:
How can cyber-physical systems be applied to façades, in order to enable coordinated adaptations of networked individual façade functions?
To answer this question, four partial studies are carried out, which build upon each other. The first study is based on a literature review, in which the understanding and the state-of-the-art development of intelligent façade systems is examined in comparison to the exemplary field of application of cyber-physical systems in the manufacturing industry. In the following partial study, a second literature search identifies façade functions that can be considered as components of a cyber-physical façade due to their adaptive feasibility and their effect on the façade performance. For the evaluation of the adaptive capabilities, characteristics of their automated and adaptive implementation are assigned to the identified façade functions. The resulting superposition matrix serves as an organizational tool for the third investigation of the actual conditions in construction practice. In a multiple case study, realized façade projects in Germany are examined with regard to their degree of automation and adaptivity. The investigation includes interviews with experts involved in the projects as well as field studies on site. Finally, an experimental examination of the technical feasibility of cyber-physical façade systems is carried out through the development of a prototype. In the sense of an internet of façade functions, the automated adaptive façade functions ventilation, sun protection as well as heating and cooling are implemented in decentrally organized modules. They are connected to a digital twin and can exchange data with each other via a communication protocol.
The research project shows that the application field of façades has not yet been exploited for the implementation of cyber-physical systems. With the automation technologies used in building practice, however, many technical preconditions for the development of cyber-physical façade systems already exist. Many features of such a system are successfully implemented within the study by the development of a prototype. The research project therefore comes to the conclusion that the application of cyber-physical systems to the façade is possible and offers a promising potential for the effective use of automation technologies. Due to the lack of artificial intelligence and machine learning strategies, the project does not achieve the goal of developing a façade in the sense of a true ThinkingSkin as the title indicates. A milestone is achieved by the close integration of the physical façade system with a decentralized and integrated control system. In this sense, the researched cyber-physical implementation of façades represents a conceptual framework for the realisation of corresponding systems in building practice, and a pioneer for further research of ThinkingSkins
ThinkingSkins:
New technologies and automation concepts emerge in the digitalization of our environment. This is, for example, reflected by intelligent production systems in Industry 4.0. A core aspect of such systems is their cyber-physical implementation, which aims to increase productivity and flexibility through embedded computing capacities and the cooperation of decentrally networked production plants. This development stage of automation has not yet been achieved in the current state-of-the-art of façades. Being responsible for the execution of adaptive measures, façade automation is part of hierarchically and centrally organised Building Automation Systems (BAS). The research project ThinkingSkins is guided by the hypothesis that, aiming at an enhanced overall building performance, façades can be implemented as cyber-physical systems. Accordingly, it addresses the research question:
How can cyber-physical systems be applied to façades, in order to enable coordinated adaptations of networked individual façade functions?
The question is approached in four partial investigations. First, a comprehensive understanding of intelligent systems in both application fields, façades and Industry 4.0, is elaborated by a literature review. Subsequently, relevant façade functions are identified by a second literature review in a superposition matrix, which also incorporates characteristics for a detailed assessment of each function’s adaptive capacities. The third investigation focuses on existing conditions in building practice by means of a multiple case study analysis. Finally, the technical feasibility of façades implemented as cyber-physical systems is investigated by developing a prototype. The research project identifies the possibility and promising potential of cyberphysical façades. As result, the doctoral dissertation provides a conceptual framework for the implementation of such systems in building practice and for further research
Scenarios for the development of smart grids in the UK: literature review
Smart grids are expected to play a central role in any transition to a low-carbon energy future, and much research is currently underway on practically every area of smart grids. However, it is evident that even basic aspects such as theoretical and operational definitions, are yet to be agreed upon and be clearly defined. Some aspects (efficient management of supply, including intermittent supply, two-way communication between the producer and user of electricity, use of IT technology to respond to and manage demand, and ensuring safe and secure electricity distribution) are more commonly accepted than others (such as smart meters) in defining what comprises a smart grid.
It is clear that smart grid developments enjoy political and financial support both at UK and EU levels, and from the majority of related industries. The reasons for this vary and include the hope that smart grids will facilitate the achievement of carbon reduction targets, create new employment opportunities, and reduce costs relevant to energy generation (fewer power stations) and distribution (fewer losses and better stability). However, smart grid development depends on additional factors, beyond the energy industry. These relate to issues of public acceptability of relevant technologies and associated risks (e.g. data safety, privacy, cyber security), pricing, competition, and regulation; implying the involvement of a wide range of players such as the industry, regulators and consumers.
The above constitute a complex set of variables and actors, and interactions between them. In order to best explore ways of possible deployment of smart grids, the use of scenarios is most adequate, as they can incorporate several parameters and variables into a coherent storyline. Scenarios have been previously used in the context of smart grids, but have traditionally focused on factors such as economic growth or policy evolution. Important additional socio-technical aspects of smart grids emerge from the literature review in this report and therefore need to be incorporated in our scenarios. These can be grouped into four (interlinked) main categories: supply side aspects, demand side aspects, policy and regulation, and technical aspects.
- …