Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes

Space-heating accounts for more than 40% of residential energy consumption in some countries (e.g., the UK and the US) and thus is a key area to address for en- ergy effciency improvement. To do so, intelligent domestic heating systems (IDHS) equipped with sensors and technologies that minimise user...

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Main Authors: Alam, M, Rogers, A, Scott, J, Ali, K, Auffenberg, F
Format: Journal article
Published: Taylor and Francis 2017
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author Alam, M
Rogers, A
Scott, J
Ali, K
Auffenberg, F
author_facet Alam, M
Rogers, A
Scott, J
Ali, K
Auffenberg, F
author_sort Alam, M
collection OXFORD
description Space-heating accounts for more than 40% of residential energy consumption in some countries (e.g., the UK and the US) and thus is a key area to address for en- ergy effciency improvement. To do so, intelligent domestic heating systems (IDHS) equipped with sensors and technologies that minimise user-input, have been pro- posed for optimal heating control in homes. However, a key challenge for IDHS is to obtain sufficient knowledge of the thermal dynamics of the home to build a thermal model that can reliably predict the spatial and temporal effects of its actions (e.g., turning the heating on or off or use of multiple heaters). This challenge of learning a thermal model has been studied extensively for decades in large purpose-built buildings (such as offices, educational, commercial or communual residential build- ings) where machine learning is used to infer suitable thermal models. However, we believe that the technological gap between homes and buildings is fast vanishing with the advent of home automation and cloud computing, and the techniques and lessons learned in purpose-built buildings are increasingly applicable to homes too; with necessary modifications to tackle the challenges unique to homes (e.g., impact of household activities, diverse heating systems, more lenient occupancy schedule). Following this philosophy, we present a methodical study where stochastic grey-box modelling is used to develop thermal models and an extended Kalman filter (EKF) is used for parameter estimation. To demonstrate the applicability in homes, we present the case-study of a room in a family house equipped with under oor heat- ing and custom-built .NET Gadgeteer hardware. We built grey-box models and use the EKF to infer the thermal model of the room. In doing so, we use our in-house collected data to show that, in this instance, our thermal model predicts the in- door air temperature where the 95th percentile of the absolute prediction error is 0:95C and 1:37C for 2 and 4 hours predictions, respectively; in contrast to the corresponding 2:09C and 3:11C errors of the existing (historical-average based) thermal model.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7ea91e0a-fc6b-4a74-992c-6673a5139fdb2022-03-26T21:11:31ZApplying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7ea91e0a-fc6b-4a74-992c-6673a5139fdbSymplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2017Alam, MRogers, AScott, JAli, KAuffenberg, FSpace-heating accounts for more than 40% of residential energy consumption in some countries (e.g., the UK and the US) and thus is a key area to address for en- ergy effciency improvement. To do so, intelligent domestic heating systems (IDHS) equipped with sensors and technologies that minimise user-input, have been pro- posed for optimal heating control in homes. However, a key challenge for IDHS is to obtain sufficient knowledge of the thermal dynamics of the home to build a thermal model that can reliably predict the spatial and temporal effects of its actions (e.g., turning the heating on or off or use of multiple heaters). This challenge of learning a thermal model has been studied extensively for decades in large purpose-built buildings (such as offices, educational, commercial or communual residential build- ings) where machine learning is used to infer suitable thermal models. However, we believe that the technological gap between homes and buildings is fast vanishing with the advent of home automation and cloud computing, and the techniques and lessons learned in purpose-built buildings are increasingly applicable to homes too; with necessary modifications to tackle the challenges unique to homes (e.g., impact of household activities, diverse heating systems, more lenient occupancy schedule). Following this philosophy, we present a methodical study where stochastic grey-box modelling is used to develop thermal models and an extended Kalman filter (EKF) is used for parameter estimation. To demonstrate the applicability in homes, we present the case-study of a room in a family house equipped with under oor heat- ing and custom-built .NET Gadgeteer hardware. We built grey-box models and use the EKF to infer the thermal model of the room. In doing so, we use our in-house collected data to show that, in this instance, our thermal model predicts the in- door air temperature where the 95th percentile of the absolute prediction error is 0:95C and 1:37C for 2 and 4 hours predictions, respectively; in contrast to the corresponding 2:09C and 3:11C errors of the existing (historical-average based) thermal model.
spellingShingle Alam, M
Rogers, A
Scott, J
Ali, K
Auffenberg, F
Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title_full Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title_fullStr Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title_full_unstemmed Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title_short Applying extended Kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
title_sort applying extended kalman filters to adaptive thermal modelling in homes
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