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doctoral thesis

Simulating occupant presence and behaviour in buildings

Page, Jessen  
2007

Various factors play a part in the energy consumption of a building : its physical properties, the equipment installed for its functioning (the heating, ventilation and air-conditioning system, auxiliary production of electricity or hot water), the outdoor environment and the behaviour of its occupants. While software tool designers have made great progress in the simulation of the first three factors, for the latter they have generally relied on fixed profiles of typical occupant presence and associated implications of their presence. As a result the randomness linked to occupants, i.e. the differences in behaviour between occupants and the variation in time of each behaviour, plays an ever more important role in the discrepancy between the simulated and real performances of buildings. This is most relevant in estimating the peak demand of energy (for heating, cooling, electrical appliances, etc.) which in turn influences the choice of technology and the size of the equipment installed to service the building. To fill this gap we have developed a family of stochastic models able to simulate the presence of occupants and their interactions with the building and the equipment present. A central model of occupant presence, based on an inhomogeneous Markov chain, produces a time series of the number of occupants within a predefined zone of a building. Given a weekly profile of the probability of presence, simplified parameters relating to the periods of long absence and the mobility of the person to be simulated, it has proven itself capable of reproducing that person's patterns of occupancy (times of first arrival, of last departure and periods of intermediate absence and presence) to a good degree of accuracy. Its output is used as an input for models for the simulation of the behaviour of occupants regarding the use of appliances in general, the use of lighting devices, the opening of windows and the production of waste. The appliance model adopts a detailed bottom-up approach, simulating each appliance with a black-box algorithm based on the probability of switching it on and the distribution of the duration and power of its use, whereas the interaction of the occupant with windows is determined by randomly changing environmental stimuli and the related thresholds of comfort randomly selected for each occupant. When integrated within a building simulation tool, these stochastic models will provide realistic profiles of the electricity and water consumed, the wastewater and solid waste produced and the heat emitted or rejected, both directly or indirectly by the occupant.

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Type
doctoral thesis
DOI
10.5075/epfl-thesis-3900
Author(s)
Page, Jessen  
Advisors
Scartezzini, Jean-Louis  
•
Robinson, Darren  
Jury

Fergus Nicol, Gerhard Zweifel, Stephan Morgenthaler

Date Issued

2007

Publisher

EPFL

Publisher place

Lausanne

Public defense year

2007-10-19

Thesis number

3900

Total of pages

134

Subjects

Simulation

•

stochastic processes

•

Markov chains

•

inverse function method

•

occupant presence

•

occupant behaviour

•

appliance use

•

window opening

•

Simulation

•

processus stochastiques

•

chaînes de Markov

•

méthode de la fonction inverse

•

présence de l'occupant

•

comportement de l'occupant

•

utilisation d'appareils

•

ouverture de fenêtres

EPFL units
LESO-PB  
Faculty
ENAC  
School
ICARE  
Doctoral School
EDEN  
Available on Infoscience
August 2, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/10000
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