Engine Feature Comparison
Update: it would be good if this table (see Google Spreadsheet linked from @JulienMarrec answer) could be completed soon so that I can use it in a DOE document. Thanks everyone. Any DOE-2.1E (@JoeHuang) and HAP experts out there?
Also note 10 additional rows added to spreadsheet.
At the risk of starting a war on a Friday, I want to try to use UH to crowd-source some information about features available in various engines. For each of the following features, I am looking for one answer per engine and each answer to consist of a list of yes/no/partial/user-hook to the ability to model each of the following. Feel free to append to the list if you want to expand scope.
- Dedicated outdoor air systems (DOAS)
- Variable refrigerant flow (VRF) systems
- Variable-speed drives
- Commercial refrigeration
- Air-source heat-pump
- Water-source heat-pump
- Ground-source heat-pump
- Multi-function heat-pump
- Radiant heating
- Radiant cooling
- Evaporative cooling
- Absorption chiller
- Condensing boiler
- Heat recovery
- Ice storage
- Equipment cycling
- Optimal start/stop
- Static pressure reset
- User defined control
- Photo-voltaics
- Building integrated photo-voltaics
- Solar thermal
- Natural ventilation
- Displacement ventilation
- Underfloor air distribution
- Illuminance calculations (i.e., virtual sensors)
- Illuminance calculation-driven lighting control
- Illuminance calculation-driven shade/blind control
- Thermal mass
- Thermal bridges
- Phase-change-material
Adding to the list: 32. Electrical Storage (e.g. electric battery model)
33. Complex Electric Power calculations (ie. magnitude and phase)
Is #33 really a BEM feature?
It should be. Complex electrical building loads are needed for microgrid, distribution, and transmission network design and control. NERC just made a requirement that transmission operators needed new complex dynamic load models for buildings for better reliability.
I added columns for EnergyPro and Carrier HAP in the spreadsheet, if someone wants to go after those. Thanks to everyone who has contributed so far. This is valuable.
Added additional rows based on my understanding of capabilities of E+ v8.4 and eQUEST v3.65 build 7163. Would be useful to have a consistent definition of Yes and No applied to this document, as many times a creative work-around can be used to abstract a physical phenomena into restrictive model inputs. In that spirit - does 'No' mean 'without a work-around requiring pre-processing or post-processing' to evaluate? And does "Yes' mean that the data model supports direct modeling of the physical phenomena..? That leaves the 3rd option partial/user hook even more unclear to me.