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  1. Home
  2. TA-23-C004 – A Simulation Framework for Analyzing the Impact of Stochastic Occupant Behaviors on Demand Flexibility in Typical Commercial Buildings

TA-23-C004 – A Simulation Framework for Analyzing the Impact of Stochastic Occupant Behaviors on Demand Flexibility in Typical Commercial Buildings ✓ Most Recent

2582208

Conference Proceeding by ASHRAE , 2023

Zhelun Chen, PhD, Associate Member ASHRAE; Yicheng Li, Student Member ASHRAE; Jin Wen, PhD, Full Member ASHRAE; Amanda Pertzborn, PhD, Associate Member ASHRAE; W. Vance Payne, PhD, Full Member ASHRAE; L. James Lo, PhD, Full Member ASHRAE; Gabriel Grajewski, Student Member ASHRAE; Zheng O’Neill, PhD, PE, Fellow ASHRAE; Steven T. Bushby, Fellow ASHRAE

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https://doi.org/10.63044/s23che04

As one of the primary users of the electric grid, buildings and building equipment, including heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, can be leveraged to provide the flexible demand needed to balance the grid. Typical strategies to achieve demand flexibility are to reduce electricity use during peak or critical periods by shutting down equipment or relaxing system setpoints, which will inevitably impact the occupants’ comfort. When occupants feel uncomfortable, they may take actions to regain their comfort, and some of those actions (such as turning on a personal fan) may have a negative impact on meeting the demand response goal. Therefore, it is important to incorporate occupant behaviors into the assessment of the building demand flexibility potential. In this study, a simulation framework that includes simulation of zone thermal loads, an HVAC system, and occupant behaviors, was developed to investigate the impact of occupant behaviors on demand flexibility.

A case study was conducted using a small office model from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Commercial Prototype Building Models to simulate the building envelope and zone loads. An agent-based occupant thermal behavior model was adapted to forecast occupants’ thermal comfort and their resulting thermal behaviors. An artificial neural network (ANN) based airflow model trained from a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model of the zone was adopted to better predict the ambient environment of each occupant. An air-source heat pump simulation model that was calibrated from a real two-stage air-source heat pump system was used as the HVAC system. A typical load shedding event during peak hours was studied. Repeated simulations were conducted to capture the stochastic effects of occupant behaviors. The interplay between the demand flexibility, occupant comfort and behavior were analyzed by evaluating key performance indicators, including the energy use, occupant discomfort duration, and occupant behavior duration during the peak period. The results suggest that this framework can be used to analyze typical commercial buildings and their HVAC systems in terms of demand flexibility potential under the impact of occupant behaviors.

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2023

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D-TA-23-C004

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