2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2017.10.017
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Evaluation of a cost-responsive supply air temperature reset strategy in an office building

Abstract: This paper describes a new supply air temperature control strategy for multi-zone variable air volume systems. We developed the strategy with the intent that it is simple enough to implement within existing building management systems. At 5-minute intervals, the strategy estimates the cost of fan, heating and cooling energy at three different supply air temperatures (current, higher, lower), and chooses the one with the lowest cost as the setpoint. We then implemented this strategy in a seven floor, 13,000 m 2… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The HVAC system modeled in this study has an air handling unit that provides a VAV system to each room and a freezer that can be used also as a heat source in cold weather. Numerous controllable settings are required to manage a VAV system, from heating and cooling temperature settings and minimum airflow rate settings at the zone level to the minimum outside airflow, supply air temperature, and duct static pressure settings at the system level [25]. Among the various controllable variables in an HVAC system, the settings for supply air temperature and duct static pressure are selected specially for the study as the control variables in the VAV air-conditioning system.…”
Section: Generation Of Simulated Reference Building and Description Omentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The HVAC system modeled in this study has an air handling unit that provides a VAV system to each room and a freezer that can be used also as a heat source in cold weather. Numerous controllable settings are required to manage a VAV system, from heating and cooling temperature settings and minimum airflow rate settings at the zone level to the minimum outside airflow, supply air temperature, and duct static pressure settings at the system level [25]. Among the various controllable variables in an HVAC system, the settings for supply air temperature and duct static pressure are selected specially for the study as the control variables in the VAV air-conditioning system.…”
Section: Generation Of Simulated Reference Building and Description Omentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some control strategies require a dynamic estimation of hot water reheat energy consumption using the instrumentation that is typically installed in a building management system. One example is a cost-responsive supply air temperature reset strategy [27], which dynamically selects the optimal AHU supply air temperature setpoint to minimize the combined cost of fan, cooling, and reheat energy consumption. The work presented in this document is in part a validation and refinement of the earlier method used to estimate reheat energy consumption by that control strategy.…”
Section: Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We re-analyzed the reheat data from a previous study by the authors [27]in a different 10 building using an earlier version of the reheat estimation method 11 . In that building, extrapolating from the 6-month study period (September to February), the intentional reheat result was 9.7 kWh/m 2 per annum, or an average of 1.1 W/m 2 during operating hours.…”
Section: Comparisons To Other Buildingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the authors neglected that there is a supply air temperature (SAT) set point, which is conventionally based on outside air temperature [2], which is also the current best practice as proposed by ASHRAE GPC 36. The optimized SAT set point could also be a function of outside air temperature, outside air relative humidity, outdoor air flow rate and supply air flow rate [3], outside air temperature, minimum reheat valve position or return air temperature [4], outside air temperature, load ratio and power exponents [5], outside air temperature and total number of people [2], energy cost signal, and cooling demand [6]. If properly tuned, the SAT should be able to meet its set point.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%