Abstract:As the number of installed meters in buildings increases, there is a growing number of data time-series that could be used to develop data-driven models to support and optimize building operation. However, building data sets are often characterized by errors and missing values, which are considered, by the recent research, among the main limiting factors on the performance of the proposed models. Motivated by the need to address the problem of missing data in building operation, this work presents a data-driven approach to fill these gaps. In this study, three different autoencoder neural networks are trained to reconstruct missing indoor environment data time-series in a data set collected in an office building in Aachen, Germany. The models are applicable for different time-series obtained from room automation, such as indoor air temperature, relative humidity and $CO_{2}$ data streams. The results prove that the proposed methods outperform classic numerical approaches and they result in reconstructing the corresponding variables with average RMSEs of 0.42 {\deg}C, 1.30 % and 78.41 ppm, respectively.
Abstract:Occupant behavior (OB) and in particular window openings need to be considered in building performance simulation (BPS), in order to realistically model the indoor climate and energy consumption for heating ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC). However, the proposed OB window opening models are often biased towards the over-represented class where windows remained closed. In addition, they require tuning for each occupant which can not be efficiently scaled to the increased number of occupants. This paper presents a window opening model for commercial buildings using deep learning methods. The model is trained using data from occupants from an office building in Germany. In total the model is evaluated using almost 20 mio. data points from 3 independent buildings, located in Aachen, Frankfurt and Philadelphia. Eventually, the results of 3100 core hours of model development are summarized, which makes this study the largest of its kind in window states modeling. Additionally, the practical potential of the proposed model was tested by incorporating it in the Modelica-based thermal building simulation. The resulting evaluation accuracy and F1 scores on the office buildings ranged between 86-89 % and 0.53-0.65 respectively. The performance dropped around 15 % points in case of sparse input data, while the F1 score remained high.
Abstract:This paper addresses the question of identifying the time-window in short-term past from which the information regarding the future occupant's window opening actions and resulting window states in buildings can be predicted. The addressed sequence duration was in the range between 30 and 240 time-steps of indoor climate data, where the applied temporal discretization was one minute. For that purpose, a deep neural network is trained to predict the window states, where the input sequence duration is handled as an additional hyperparameter. Eventually, the relationship between the prediction accuracy and the time-lag of the predicted window state in future is analyzed. The results pointed out, that the optimal predictive performance was achieved for the case where 60 time-steps of the indoor climate data were used as input. Additionally, the results showed that very long sequences (120-240 time-steps) could be addressed efficiently, given the right hyperprameters. Hence, the use of the memory over previous hours of high-resolution indoor climate data did not improve the predictive performance, when compared to the case where 30/60 minutes indoor sequences were used. The analysis of the prediction accuracy in the form of F1 score for the different time-lag of future window states dropped from 0.51 to 0.27, when shifting the prediction target from 10 to 60 minutes in future.