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<title>Civil and Environmental Engineering - PhD Theses</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/195</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Mon, 20 May 2013 22:32:54 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2013-05-20T22:32:54Z</dc:date>
<item>
<title>Specification of optimum holistic building environmental and energy performance information to support informed decision making</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/603</link>
<description>Specification of optimum holistic building environmental and energy performance information to support informed decision making
O'Donnell, James Thomas
Political drivers such as the Kyoto protocol, the EU Energy Performance of Buildings&#13;
Directive and the Energy end use and Services Directive have been implemented&#13;
in response to an identified need for a reduction in human related CO2&#13;
emissions. Buildings account for a significant portion of global CO2 emissions,&#13;
approximately 25-30%, and it is widely acknowledged by industry and research&#13;
organisations that they operate inefficiently. In parallel, unsatisfactory indoor environmental&#13;
conditions have proven to negatively impact occupant productivity.&#13;
Legislative drivers and client education are seen as the key motivating factors&#13;
for an improvement in the holistic environmental and energy performance of a&#13;
building. A symbiotic relationship exists between building indoor environmental&#13;
conditions and building energy consumption. However traditional Building&#13;
Management Systems and Energy Management Systems treat these separately.&#13;
Conventional performance analysis compares building energy consumption with a&#13;
previously recorded value or with the consumption of a similar building and does&#13;
not recognise the fact that all buildings are unique. Therefore what is required is a&#13;
new framework which incorporates performance comparison against a theoretical&#13;
building specific ideal benchmark. Traditionally Energy Managers, who work at&#13;
the operational level of organisations with respect to building performance, do not&#13;
have access to ideal performance benchmark information and as a result cannot&#13;
optimally operate buildings.&#13;
This thesis systematically defines Holistic Environmental and Energy Management&#13;
and specifies the Scenario Modelling Technique which in turn uses an&#13;
ideal performance benchmark. The holistic technique uses quantified expressions&#13;
of building performance and by doing so enables the profiled Energy Manager to&#13;
visualise his actions and the downstream consequences of his actions in the context&#13;
of overall building operation. The Ideal Building Framework facilitates the use of&#13;
this technique by acting as a Building Life Cycle (BLC) data repository through&#13;
which ideal building performance benchmarks are systematically structured and&#13;
stored in parallel with actual performance data. The Ideal Building Framework&#13;
utilises transformed data in the form of the Ideal Set of Performance Objectives&#13;
and Metrics which are capable of defining the performance of any building at any&#13;
stage of the BLC. It is proposed that the union of Scenario Models for an individual&#13;
building would result in a building specific Combination of Performance Metrics&#13;
which would in turn be stored in the BLC data repository. The Ideal Data Set&#13;
underpins the Ideal Set of Performance Objectives and Metrics and is the set of&#13;
measurements required to monitor the performance of the Ideal Building.&#13;
A Model View describes the unique building specific data relevant to a particular&#13;
project stakeholder. The energy management data and information exchange&#13;
requirements that underlie a Model View implementation are detailed and incorporate&#13;
traditional and proposed energy management. This thesis also specifies&#13;
the Model View Methodology which complements the Ideal Building Framework.&#13;
The developed Model View and Rule Set methodology process utilises stakeholder&#13;
specific rule sets to define stakeholder pertinent environmental and energy performance&#13;
data. This generic process further enables each stakeholder to define&#13;
the resolution of data desired. For example, basic, intermediate or detailed. The&#13;
Model View methodology is applicable for all project stakeholders, each requiring&#13;
its own customised rule set. Two rule sets are defined in detail, the Energy&#13;
Manager rule set and the LEED Accreditor rule set. This particular measurement&#13;
generation process accompanied by defined View would filter and expedite data&#13;
access for all stakeholders involved in building performance.&#13;
Information presentation is critical for effective use of the data provided by the&#13;
Ideal Building Framework and the Energy Management View definition. The specifications&#13;
for a customised Information Delivery Tool account for the established&#13;
profile of Energy Managers and best practice user interface design. Components&#13;
of the developed tool could also be used by Facility Managers working at the&#13;
tactical and strategic levels of organisations. Informed decision making is made&#13;
possible through specified decision assistance processes which incorporate the Scenario&#13;
Modelling and Benchmarking techniques, the Ideal Building Framework, the&#13;
Energy Manager Model View, the Information Delivery Tool and the established&#13;
profile of Energy Managers. The Model View and Rule Set Methodology is effectively&#13;
demonstrated on an appropriate mixed use existing ‘green’ building, the&#13;
Environmental Research Institute at University College Cork, using the Energy&#13;
Management and LEED rule sets. Informed Decision Making is also demonstrated&#13;
using a prototype scenario for the demonstration building.
</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2009 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2009-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item>
<title>Building effectiveness communication ratios (BECs): an integrated ‘life-cycle’ methodology for mitigating energy-use in buildings</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/624</link>
<description>Building effectiveness communication ratios (BECs): an integrated ‘life-cycle’ methodology for mitigating energy-use in buildings
Morrissey, Elmer D.
Current building regulations are generally prescriptive in nature. It is widely accepted in&#13;
Europe that this form of building regulation is stifling technological innovation and&#13;
leading to inadequate energy efficiency in the building stock. This has increased the&#13;
motivation to move design practices towards a more ‘performance-based’ model in order&#13;
to mitigate inflated levels of energy-use consumed by the building stock.&#13;
A performance based model assesses the interaction of all building elements and the&#13;
resulting impact on holistic building energy-use. However, this is a nebulous task due to&#13;
building energy-use being affected by a myriad of heterogeneous agents. Accordingly, it&#13;
is imperative that appropriate methods, tools and technologies are employed for energy&#13;
prediction, measurement and evaluation throughout the project’s life cycle. This research&#13;
also considers that it is imperative that the data is universally accessible by all&#13;
stakeholders. The use of a centrally based product model for exchange of building&#13;
information is explored.&#13;
This research describes the development and implementation of a new building energy-use&#13;
performance assessment methodology. Termed the Building Effectiveness&#13;
Communications ratios (BECs) methodology, this performance-based framework is&#13;
capable of translating complex definitions of sustainability for energy efficiency and&#13;
depicting universally understandable views at all stage of the Building Life Cycle (BLC)&#13;
to the project’s stakeholders. The enabling yardsticks of building energy-use&#13;
performance, termed Ir and Pr, provide continuous design and operations feedback in&#13;
order to aid the building’s decision makers.&#13;
Utilised effectively, the methodology is capable of delivering quality assurance&#13;
throughout the BLC by providing project teams with quantitative measurement of energy&#13;
efficiency. Armed with these superior enabling tools for project stakeholder&#13;
communication, it is envisaged that project teams will be better placed to augment a&#13;
knowledge base and generate more efficient additions to the building stock.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2006 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2006-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item>
<title>Uncertainty in wind energy forecasting</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/193</link>
<description>Uncertainty in wind energy forecasting
Moehrlen, Corinna
Wind energy is the energy source that contributes most to the renewable energy mix of European countries. While there are good wind resources throughout Europe, the intermittency of the wind represents a major problem for the deployment of wind energy into the electricity networks. To ensure grid security a Transmission System Operator needs today for each kilowatt of wind energy either an equal amount of spinning reserve or a forecasting system that can predict the amount of energy that will be produced from wind over a period of 1 to 48 hours. In the range from 5m/s to 15m/s a wind turbine’s production increases with a power of three. For this reason, a Transmission System Operator requires an accuracy for wind speed forecasts of 1m/s in this wind speed range. Forecasting wind energy with a numerical weather prediction model in this context builds the background of this work. The author’s goal was to present a pragmatic solution to this specific problem in the ”real world”. This work therefore has to be seen in a technical context and hence does not provide nor intends to provide a general overview of the benefits and drawbacks of wind energy as a renewable energy source. In the first part of this work the accuracy requirements of the energy sector for wind speed predictions from numerical weather prediction models are described and analysed. A unique set of numerical experiments has been carried out in collaboration with the Danish Meteorological Institute to investigate the forecast quality of an operational numerical weather prediction model for this purpose. The results of this investigation revealed that the accuracy requirements for wind speed and wind power forecasts from today’s numerical weather prediction models can only be met at certain times. This means that the uncertainty of the forecast quality becomes a parameter that is as important as the wind speed and wind power itself. To quantify the uncertainty of a forecast valid for tomorrow requires an ensemble of forecasts. In the second part of this work such an ensemble of forecasts was designed and verified for its ability to quantify the forecast error. This was accomplished by correlating the measured error and the forecasted uncertainty on area integrated wind speed and wind power in Denmark and Ireland. A correlation of 93% was achieved in these areas. This method cannot solve the accuracy requirements of the energy sector. By knowing the uncertainty of the forecasts, the focus can however be put on the accuracy requirements at times when it is possible to accurately predict the weather. Thus, this result presents a major step forward in making wind energy a compatible energy source in the future.
</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jan 2004 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/10468/193</guid>
<dc:date>2004-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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