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Occupants' on-demand control of individual heating devices in rural residential buildings: An experimental scheme and on-site study.

Authors :
Ding, Xingli
Ma, Rongjiang
Shan, Ming
Wang, Xianlin
Yang, Xudong
Source :
Energy & Buildings. Mar2022, Vol. 259, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• Occupants on-demand heating control behavior in a rural residential building is investigated. • Independently controlled split-type heating equipment were used to elucidate actual demand patterns. • Data collection over three years under an interference avoidance scheme. • Five representative intermittent heating patterns were obtained from a real-world case study. A better understanding of actual heating demands is crucial for optimizing operational heating systems, because disparities between expected load and actual demand are key factors in inefficient heating system design, implementation, and corresponding energy loss. Additionally, the discrete, energy consumption-based billing systems applied to freestanding rural residential buildings encourages reductions in energy waste but produces spatially and temporally distinct heating patterns. Conventional heating systems have only basic controls and slow response times that cannot reflect actual user demand. Hence, this paper presents an experimental scheme for measuring room-wise heating demands, and thus, the actual heating demand patterns of rural residential buildings. A case study was conducted on a typical rural residential building in Beijing to validate the method's feasibility. Real-world usage patterns were obtained using indoor environment sensors and independently-controlled heating devices that collected the operational parameters of each room over three years, in a long-term non-intervention study design. Clustering analysis and various indicators were used to characterize heating demand for each room: heating patterns, usage intensity, and temporal variation. In most case, the occupants heated only a few rooms, rather than the whole building. These results have potential real-word implications for predicting occupant heating behavior and energy conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03787788
Volume :
259
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Energy & Buildings
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155488926
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2022.111862