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The purpose of this study is to use existing simulation tools to quantify the energy savings benefits of integrated control in office buildings. An EnergyPlus medium office benchmark simulation model (V1.0_3.0) developed by the Department of Energy (DOE) was used as a baseline model for this study. The baseline model was modified to examine the energy savings benefits of three possible control strategies compared to a benchmark case across 16 DOE climate zones. Two controllable subsystems were examined: (1) dimming of electric lighting, and (2) controllable window transmission. Simulation cases were run in EnergyPlus V3.0.0 for building window-to-wall ratios (WWR) of 33% and 66%. All three strategies employed electric lighting dimming resulting in lighting energy savings in building perimeter zones ranging from 64% to 84%. Integrated control of electric lighting and window transmission resulted in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) energy savings ranging from -1% to 40%. Control of electric lighting and window transmission with HVAC integration (seasonal schedule of window transmission control) resulted in HVAC energy savings ranging from 3% to 43%. HVAC energy savings decreased moving from warm climates to cold climates and increased when moving from humid, to dry, to marine climates.

Publication history
Copyright
Acknowledgements

Publication history

Received: 08 September 2009
Revised: 05 November 2009
Accepted: 12 November 2009
Published: 04 December 2009
Issue date: December 2009

Copyright

© Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag 2009

Acknowledgements

This study was a portion of a collaborative research project on integrated building controls between Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and Philips Research North America (PRNA). The authors would like to acknowledge Philip Haves, Robert Hitchcock, and Peng Xu from LBNL for their previous research in this area. The authors would like to thank Francis Rubinstein and Michael Wetter from LBNL, and Eric Meulenkamp, Satyen Mukherjee, and Dagnachew Birru from PRNA, for their valuable comments and suggestions.

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