4.8 Article

Quantifying flexibility of commercial and residential loads for demand response using setpoint changes

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 177, Issue -, Pages 149-164

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.05.090

Keywords

Demand response; Thermostatically controlled loads; Regression models; Two-state model; Simplified DR potential estimation

Funding

  1. State Grid Corporation of China Project (Study on Key Technologies for Power and Frequency Control of System with Source-Grid-Load Interactions) [DZN17201300197]

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This paper presents a novel demand response estimation framework for residential and commercial buildings using a combination of EnergyPlus and two-state models for thermostatically controlled loads. Specifically, EnergyPlus models for commercial and multi-dwelling residential units are applied to construct exhaustive datasets (i.e., with more than 300M data points) that capture the detailed load response and complex thermodynamics of several building types. Subsequently, regression models are fit to each dataset to predict DR potential based on key inputs, including hour of day, set point change and outside air temperature. For single residential units, and residential thermostatically controlled loads (i.e. water heaters and refrigerators) a two-state model from the literature is applied. For commercial office building and Multiple Dwelling Units (MDUs) building, the fitted regression model can predict DR potential with 80-90% accuracy for more than 90% of data points. The coefficients of, determination (i.e. R-2 value) range between 0.54 and 0.78 for the office buildings and 0.39-0.81 for MDUs, respectively. The proposed framework is then validated for commercial buildings through a comparison with a dataset composed of 11 buildings during 12 demand response events. In addition, the use of the proposed simplified DR estimation framework is presented in terms of two cases (1) peak load shed prediction in an individual building and (2) aggregated DR up/down capacity from a large-scale group of different buildings. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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