Commercial buildings are significant consumers of electricity. We propose a number of methods for managing power in commercial buildings. The first step toward better energy management in commercial buildings is… Click to show full abstract
Commercial buildings are significant consumers of electricity. We propose a number of methods for managing power in commercial buildings. The first step toward better energy management in commercial buildings is monitoring consumption. However, instrumenting every electrical panel in a large commercial building is an expensive proposition. In this article, we demonstrate that it is also unnecessary. Specifically, we propose a greedy meter (sensor) placement algorithm based on maximization of information gain subject to a cost constraint. The algorithm provides a near-optimal solution guarantee, and our empirical results demonstrate a 15% improvement in prediction power over conventional methods. Next, to identify power-saving opportunities, we use an unsupervised anomaly detection technique based on a low-dimensional embedding. Furthermore, to enable a building manager to effectively plan for demand response programs, we evaluate several solutions for fine-grained, short-term load forecasting. Our investigation reveals that support vector regression and an ensemble model work best overall. Finally, to better manage resources such as lighting and HVAC, we propose a semisupervised approach combining hidden Markov models (HMMs) and a standard classifier to model occupancy based on readily available port-level network statistics. We show that the proposed two-step approach simplifies the occupancy model while achieving good accuracy. The experimental results demonstrate an average occupancy estimation error of 9.3% with a potential reduction of 9.5% in lighting load using our occupancy models.
               
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