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Articles

Deriving sequences of operation for air handling units through building performance optimization

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Pages 501-515 | Received 08 May 2020, Accepted 02 Jul 2020, Published online: 20 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

Operational parameters of air handling units (AHUs) play an important role in the energy and comfort performance of commercial buildings. Current guidelines to determine these parameters are based on heuristics and are not informed by formal optimization. This paper presents a building performance optimization method to derive sequence of operations for multi-zone AHUs. To this end, 27 variants of a generic EnergyPlus office building model are built representing three levels of occupancy, envelope, and HVAC capacity scenarios. The supply temperature, morning start time, and economizer settings of the model are optimized for the 27 scenarios by using a genetic algorithm. The results highlight that optimal supply temperature setpoints transition from ∼12°C to a range of ∼16°C to ∼20°C over an outdoor temperature range of ∼20°C to ∼0°C. Energy savings are estimated as ∼20% relative to a reference case with a constant supply temperature and preheating/precooling period.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by National Research Council Canada [grant number 935464].

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