[TRNSYS-users] predictive control

George Kyriakarakos gk at aua.gr
Fri Nov 9 14:22:41 PST 2012


Dear Leen,

 

This has been done in the past. Essentially Mr. Coffey ran TRNSYS inside
TRNSYS so as to simulate a predictive controller based on a combination of
TRNSYS and GenOPT. His thesis is available from the link below and the
software files are also available online. Check Annex A especially.

 

http://simulationresearch.lbl.gov/GO/publications/BCoffey-MAScThesis-Jun08.p
df

 

George

-------------------------------------------------------------------

George Kyriakarakos, Agricultural Engineer

MSc Energy Systems & Renewable Energy Sources

Agricultural University of Athens,

Dept. of Natural Resources and Agricultural Engineering

Iera odos street, 75, Athens 11855, Greece

Tel. +30.210.5294046 (direct), Fax: +30.210.5294023

Mobile +30.6942.046895

e-mail: <gk at aua.gr>

--------------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

 

From: trnsys-users-bounces at cae.wisc.edu
[mailto:trnsys-users-bounces at cae.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of leen peeters
Sent: Friday, November 9, 2012 11:46 PM
To: trnsys-users at cae.wisc.edu
Subject: [TRNSYS-users] predictive control

 

Hi all,

 

I want to design the control of my heating system such that it anticipates
upcoming demands. Assume I want the kitchen to heat up to 21 DC at 8 a.m.
during week days. 

When I would model an ideal model prediction, that would mean calling TRNSYS
during a TRNSYS simulation. Or in other words stopping the simulation at a
certain moment to check what would happen if I provide this or that amount
of heat.

 

is there an example for such a trick?

 

thanks,

 

leen

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.onebuilding.org/pipermail/trnsys-users-onebuilding.org/attachments/20121110/1c010c3d/attachment-0001.htm>


More information about the TRNSYS-users mailing list