SYLGDec 15, 2020

LSTM-based Space Occupancy Prediction towards Efficient Building Energy Management

arXiv:2012.08114v23 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of inefficient building energy management for building operators and occupants by optimizing HVAC operation based on predicted occupancy, offering substantial energy savings.

This paper proposes using LSTM-based predictive time-series models to forecast room occupancy patterns, enabling more efficient HVAC control. The approach demonstrated a 50% energy saving compared to conventional rule-based control in a university building setting.

Energy consumed in buildings takes significant portions of the total global energy usage. A large amount of building energy is used for heating, cooling, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC). However, compared to its importance, building energy management systems nowadays are limited in controlling HVAC based on simple rule-based control (RBC) technologies. The ability to design systems that can efficiently manage HVAC can reduce energy usage and greenhouse gas emissions, and, all in all, it can help us to mitigate climate change. This paper proposes predictive time-series models of occupancy patterns using LSTM. Prediction signal for future room occupancy status on the next time span (e.g., next 30 minutes) can be directly used to operate HVAC. For example, based on the prediction and considering the time for cooling or heating, HVAC can be turned on before the room is being used (e.g., turn on 10 minutes earlier). Also, based on the next room empty prediction timing, HVAC can be turned off earlier, and it can help us increase the efficiency of HVAC while not decreasing comfort. We demonstrate our approach's capabilities using real-world energy data collected from multiple rooms of a university building. We show that LSTM's room occupancy prediction based HVAC control could save energy usage by 50% compared to conventional RBC based control.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes