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Title
Model predictive control for demand side management in buildings: A survey
Type of Research Article
Keywords
Demand side management . Model predictive control. Building management system. Optimization. Renewable energy sources
Abstract
Buildings are responsible for a large portion of the world’s energy consumption. Any measure that can be taken to optimize the use of energy related to them must be considered. Demand Side Management (DSM) can be used to shave demand peaks and to avoid bootstrapping highly polluting fast ramp-up generators. This though brings a control problem that is complicated by the increasing diffusion of small-scale, renewable energy sources and local storage facilities which are decentralized and, in general, hard to predict reliably. The overall goal of the control strategy is to balance energy, demand/supply, and to minimize costs. This survey focuses on control strategies to support DSM, considering buildings as the load to be managed. Among the various control strategies, model predictive control (MPC) has a predominant role due to its broad applicability and easy portability to many diverse contexts. The method is suitable for any nonlinear, multi-variable, and linear parameter varying system. The survey provides a general, unifying mathematical characterization of the approaches and lays the foundations for comparing and evaluating MPC-based DSM in buildings.
Researchers meisam Farrokhifar (First Researcher)، Hamidreza Bahmani (Second Researcher)، Behdad Faridpak (Third Researcher)، Amin Safari (Fourth Researcher)، David Pozo (Fifth Researcher)، Marco Aiello (Not In First Six Researchers)