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AuthorChemingui, Yassine
AuthorGastli, Adel
AuthorEllabban, Omar
Available date2022-11-23T11:25:33Z
Publication Date2020
Publication NameEnergies
ResourceScopus
Resource2-s2.0-85106639292
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en13236354
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/36636
AbstractEnergy efficiency is a key to reduced carbon footprint, savings on energy bills, and sustainability for future generations. For instance, in hot climate countries such as Qatar, buildings are high energy consumers due to air conditioning that resulted from high temperatures and humidity. Optimizing the building energy management system will reduce unnecessary energy consumptions, improve indoor environmental conditions, maximize building occupant's comfort, and limit building greenhouse gas emissions. However, lowering energy consumption cannot be done despite the occupants' comfort. Solutions must take into account these tradeoffs. Conventional Building Energy Management methods suffer from a high dimensional and complex control environment. In recent years, the Deep Reinforcement Learning algorithm, applying neural networks for function approximation, shows promising results in handling such complex problems. In this work, a Deep Reinforcement Learning agent is proposed for controlling and optimizing a school building's energy consumption. It is designed to search for optimal policies to minimize energy consumption, maintain thermal comfort, and reduce indoor contaminant levels in a challenging 21-zone environment. First, the agent is trained with the baseline in a supervised learning framework. After cloning the baseline strategy, the agent learns with proximal policy optimization in an actor-critic framework. The performance is evaluated on a school model simulated environment considering thermal comfort, CO2 levels, and energy consumption. The proposed methodology can achieve a 21% reduction in energy consumption, a 44% better thermal comfort, and healthier CO2 concentrations over a one-year simulation, with reduced training time thanks to the integration of the behavior cloning learning technique. 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
SponsorAcknowledgments: This publication was made possible by the National Priority Research Program (NPRP) grant [NPRP10-1203-160008] from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation) and the co-funding by IBERDROLA QSTP LLC. The findings achieved herein are solely the responsibility of the authors.
Languageen
PublisherMDPI AG
SubjectEnergy efficiency
Energy management
Indoor air quality
Reinforcement learning
Smart building
Thermal comfort
TitleReinforcement learning-based school energy management system
TypeArticle
Issue Number23
Volume Number13


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