Question-and-Answer Resource for the Building Energy Modeling Community
Get started with the Help page
Ask Your Question
3

energy management system

asked 2024-08-07 12:30:01 -0600

DW's avatar

updated 2024-08-09 10:03:40 -0600

I am modeling a residence in BEOpt 3.0.1 and using CFIS - Central Integrated Fan System for my fresh air supply. Most homes in my state have a direct intake from the outdoors ducted into the central furnace/AC system without any fan (it just pulls fresh air in whenever the central fan runs).

My question is how do I simulate this in BEOpt? The CFIS seems to run on its own schedule (just input hours per day that it's running in the option manager). But, I only want it to operate when the furnace/AC is on.

I'm trying to understand the Energy Management System Program that runs in the .idf that's generated, but it's a bit over my head. I'm trying to track the outdoor air node, but when I run the in.idf file that BEOpt generates in EPLaunch and add output:variables for the outdoor air node to track its behaviour, the output files seem much more limited than a normal EnergyPlus file and I can't locate any csv's that would normally be generated.

Any advice would be appreciated to resolve this mystery and to schedule the outdoor air to only be pulled in when the central fan is running for the furnace or AC.

edit retag flag offensive close merge delete

1 Answer

Sort by ยป oldest newest most voted
4

answered 2024-08-09 10:25:58 -0600

BEopt currently only models the most common type of CFIS system, where the blower fan will run for a set number of mins/hr to ensure that the mechanical ventilation requirement is met regardless of how much heating or cooling occurs for a given hour. For example, if it's the swing season and there is no call for heating/cooling, the blower fan will still run for a portion of the hour to provide ventilation-only air. Conversely, if it's the peak of the summer/winter and the system is running continuously, it's assumed there is an automated outdoor air damper that will close after sufficient outdoor air has been provided.

That said, the underlying modeling framework that BEopt uses (OpenStudio-HPXML) is in the process of allowing for more CFIS control scenarios. There are a lot of ways that CFIS systems can be controlled and many of them are not very good because they either provide too much or too little ventilation (i.e., do not provide equivalent levels of outdoor air). But we want to provide opportunities to analyze them.

Specifically, we are looking to allow inputs that describe:

  1. Whether the CFIS system has an automated flow control of outdoor air (if not, you can get too much ventilation when the HVAC system is running 100%)
  2. Whether blower fan control strategy runs at a fixed interval regardless of heating and cooling runtimes or whether it includes heating and cooling runtimes in the fan operation.
  3. The strategy for meeting the remainder of the ventilation target when the HVAC system has not run enough for the given hour -- using the blower fan (which is what BEopt currently assumes), using a supplemental exhaust/supply fan, or no strategy (which can result in too little ventilation)

Long story short, there are plans underway to support the CFIS control strategy you are asking about, but it will be some time before it's available in BEopt.

edit flag offensive delete link more

Your Answer

Please start posting anonymously - your entry will be published after you log in or create a new account.

Add Answer

Training Workshops

Careers

Question Tools

1 follower

Stats

Asked: 2024-08-07 12:30:01 -0600

Seen: 132 times

Last updated: Aug 09