Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Large-scale simulation-based parametric analysis of an optimal precooling strategy for demand flexibility in a commercial office building

Journal Article · · Energy and Buildings
Achieving success with grid-interactive efficient buildings (GEBs) is closely tied to the utilization of flexible loads. A valuable strategy involves the implementation of precooling techniques before high-demand events, such as peak hours, by adjusting zone air temperature setpoints. This leads to a reduction in thermal loads and peak electricity demand during these times, as the building’s thermal mass stores and subsequently releases thermal energy. However, the effectiveness of the pre-cooling optimization is highly contingent on specific conditions such as building thermal properties, weather conditions, utility rate structure, HVAC equipment sizing, etc. Therefore, investigating the impacts of these condition-specific factors is crucial, especially when considering precooling strategies that utilize thermal mass in commercial buildings. In this paper, we first devised a novel heuristic control approach that incorporates parameterized optimal precooling thermostat schedules to enhance demand flexibility in a commercial office building. Subsequently, we conducted a thorough performance evaluation of this control strategy. Here, the optimal thermostat schedule was parameterized using three optimization variables: the precooling start time, the precooling end time, and the precooling temperature setpoint. Utilizing the DOE medium-sized office building as the virtual testbed, we showed that the parameterized schedule effectively approximates model predictive control and requires drastically reduced computational overhead. In addition, we investigated the impact of different influencing factors on the optimal precooling strategy. These factors include building thermal mass, outdoor air conditions, and energy price profiles. Using high-performance computing, we simulated a total of 225 scenarios, consisting of three levels of thermal mass, five typical outdoor air temperature profiles, and fifteen time-of-use price plans. The results demonstrate that optimal thermostat scheduling could save substantial energy cost in medium-sized office buildings with heavy thermal mass but with some energy penalty. Although the potential for cost savings is lower in buildings with low and medium thermal mass, the energy penalty remains consistent in all three thermal mass scenarios. The study also highlights the need to account for zone diversity and recognize that a one-size-fits-all-zone setpoint schedule may not be suitable for all zones and can lead to unnecessary energy wastage. Furthermore, the results highlight that while outdoor air conditions play a role in cost and energy performance, the cooling load exerts a more immediate and substantial influence on cost savings in precooling strategies. Although cost savings are comparable under certain conditions with the same cooling load, observed deviations in energy penalty indicate potential disparities in the efficiency of the HVAC system during the load-shifting process. In addition, the duration of peak pricing and the ratio between peak and off-peak times exhibit clear correlations with cost savings and energy consumption, aligning with intuitive expectations. These findings offer valuable insights for optimizing precooling strategies in office buildings.
Research Organization:
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), Richland, WA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC05-76RL01830
OSTI ID:
2496207
Report Number(s):
PNNL-SA--192632
Journal Information:
Energy and Buildings, Journal Name: Energy and Buildings Vol. 316; ISSN 0378-7788
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (24)

Peak load reduction by preconditioning buildings at night journal December 1991
Evaluating the impact of thermostat control strategies on the energy flexibility of residential buildings for space heating journal January 2021
Quantifying flexibility of commercial and residential loads for demand response using setpoint changes journal September 2016
Nationwide HVAC energy-saving potential quantification for office buildings with occupant-centric controls in various climates journal December 2020
Analysis of precooling optimization for residential buildings journal October 2022
A comparison of deterministic and probabilistic optimization algorithms for nonsmooth simulation-based optimization journal August 2004
Model-based demand-limiting control of building thermal mass journal October 2008
Integrating physics-based models with sensor data: An inverse modeling approach journal May 2019
Study on Auto-DR and pre-cooling of commercial buildings with thermal mass in California journal July 2010
Design and analysis of optimal pre-cooling in residential buildings journal June 2020
Experimental investigation on thermal inertia characterization of commercial buildings for demand response journal December 2021
Load shifting and energy conservation using smart thermostats in contemporary high-rise residential buildings: Estimation of runtime changes using field data journal January 2022
MPC solution for optimal load shifting for buildings with ON/OFF staged packaged units: Experimental demonstration, and lessons learned journal July 2022
Consumer cost savings, improved thermal comfort, and reduced peak air conditioning demand through pre-cooling in Australian housing journal September 2022
Demand response via pre-cooling and solar pre-cooling: A review journal October 2022
Optimization-informed rule extraction for HVAC system: A case study of dedicated outdoor air system control in a mixed-humid climate zone journal September 2023
Multi-objective optimization for thermal mass model predictive control in small and medium size commercial buildings under summer weather conditions journal October 2016
Efficient Genetic Algorithm sets for optimizing constrained building design problem journal June 2016
Evaluating the Performance of Building Thermal Mass Control Strategies journal October 2001
Evaluation of commercial building demand response potential using optimal short-term curtailment of heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning loads journal April 2013
Perceptions of thermal conditions in contemporary high-rise apartment buildings under different temperature control strategies journal June 2021
Finite-Time Parameter Estimation in Adaptive Control of Nonlinear Systems journal April 2008
Residential Demand Response: Dynamic Energy Management and Time-Varying Electricity Pricing journal March 2016
Model Development and Identification for Fast Demand Response in Commercial HVAC Systems journal July 2014