Occupancy measurement in commercial office buildings for demand-driven control applications—A survey and detection system evaluation

Building occupancy Mechanical Engineering Demand-driven control 0211 other engineering and technologies Building and Construction 02 engineering and technology 7. Clean energy Energy efficiency 11. Sustainability SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy Electrical and Electronic Engineering SDG 7 – Betaalbare en schone energie Civil and Structural Engineering
DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2015.02.028 Publication Date: 2015-02-17T19:47:21Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractCommercial office buildings represent the largest in floor area in most developed countries and utilize substantial amount of energy in the provision of building services to satisfy occupants’ comfort needs. This makes office buildings a target for occupant-driven demand control measures, which have been demonstrated as having huge potential to improve energy efficiency. The application of occupant-driven demand control measures in buildings, most especially in the control of thermal, visual and indoor air quality providing systems, which account for over 30% of the energy consumed in a typical office building is however hampered due to the lack of comprehensive fine-grained occupancy information. Given that comprehensive fine-grained occupancy information improves the performance of demand-driven measures, this paper presents a review of common existing systems utilized in buildings for occupancy detection. Furthermore, experimental results from the performance evaluation of chair sensors in an office building for providing fine-grained occupancy information for demand-driven control applications are presented.
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