4.7 Article

Ten questions concerning co-simulation for performance prediction of advanced building envelopes

Journal

BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 191, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2020.107570

Keywords

Building performance simulation; Adaptive facades; Advanced control strategies; Multi-physical model; Integrated analysis; Modular modeling

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [255252, 262198]
  2. Italian Ministry of Economic Development (MiSE) [18 -PTR_19_21_ENEA_PRG_4 2019-2022]
  3. Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA) [18 -PTR_19_21_ENEA_PRG_4 2019-2022]

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ABEs are innovative systems integrating architecture, engineering, and data science to enhance building sustainability. Their development relies on building performance simulation tools, but complexity can hinder real-world implementation, making co-simulation a promising alternative for overcoming barriers and improving performance assessments. Ongoing trends in BPS and ICT are transforming the field, creating new opportunities for modelers in research and industry.
Advanced building envelopes (ABEs) are innovative integrated systems that aim to increase the sustainability of buildings by providing flexible and efficient energy management solutions while safeguarding healthy and comfortable indoor environments. These building envelopes operate at the cross-section of architecture, engineering and data science, often involving transient multi-physical parameters and advanced material properties. The development of ABEs has increasingly relied on building performance simulation (BPS) tools to improve the understanding and management of their complex interrelationships. However, this complexity has sometimes shown to constitute barriers for their real-world implementation, in part caused by the limitations of monolithic legacy BPS tools. One of the most promising alternatives to overcoming these difficulties has been to use co-simulation. Co-simulation allows modelers to use multiple sub-models and link them to enable simultaneous data exchange during simulation runtime. This approach provides added possibilities for implementing advanced control strategies, integrating innovative data-driven inputs, and creating collaborative interdisciplinary and evolutive workflows for building envelopes at different stages and scales in projects. This article provides a critical overview of the possibilities that co-simulation approaches offer to improve performance assessments of advanced building envelopes. This article also presents current barriers to co-simulation and discusses critical elements to overcome them. Ongoing trends in BPS and information and communication technologies are highlighted, emphasizing how they transform the field and create new opportunities for modelers working in research and industry.

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