Publication | Closed Access
Calibrating building energy models using supercomputer trained machine learning agents
24
Citations
4
References
2014
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEngineeringMachine LearningUrban Energy ModelingEnergy EfficiencyGreen BuildingBuilding Energy ConservationSocial SciencesBuilt EnvironmentData ScienceBuilding AutomationModeling And SimulationSmart BuildingComputer EngineeringEnergy UsageComputer ScienceBuilding EnergyEnergy PredictionEnergy ModelingEnergy ManagementBuilding Energy ModelsEnergy SoftwareSmart BuildingsUs Building Stock
SUMMARY Building energy modeling (BEM) is an approach to model the energy usage in buildings for design and retrofit purposes. EnergyPlus is the flagship Department of Energy software that performs BEM for different types of buildings. The input to EnergyPlus can often extend in the order of a few thousand parameters that have to be calibrated manually by an expert for realistic energy modeling. This makes it challenging and expensive thereby making BEM unfeasible for smaller projects. In this paper, we describe the ‘Autotune’ research that employs machine learning algorithms to generate agents for the different kinds of standard reference buildings in the US building stock. The parametric space and the variety of building locations and types make this a challenging computational problem necessitating the use of supercomputers. Millions of EnergyPlus simulations are run on supercomputers that are subsequently used to train machine learning algorithms to generate agents. These agents, once created, can then run in a fraction of the time thereby allowing cost‐effective calibration of building models. Published 2014. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
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