DocumentCode
184787
Title
Model-predictive control techniques for hydronic systems implemented on wireless sensor and actuator networks
Author
Kane, Michael B. ; Scruggs, Jeff ; Lynch, Jerome P.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Civil & Env. Eng., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
4-6 June 2014
Firstpage
3542
Lastpage
3547
Abstract
Motivated by the need to control complex hydronic systems, this paper presents and analyzes control strategies for energy efficient thermal load regulation by means of a model-predictive control (MPC) embedded into a low-power wireless controller. Hydronic systems are found in a wide variety of applications such as building controls, industrial plants, and naval vessels. A laboratory test-bed which models a simple hydronic system is used to assess the proposed control solutions. The key design parameters analyzed by this paper are the form of the objective function and the structure of the model used for open-loop (OL) optimization during each step of the MPC solution. Objective functions were evaluated based on complexity and efficacy in meeting the stated goal of efficient thermal load regulation. The hydronics were modeled as first-order linear differential equations with non-linear time-varying constraints on control, and as bi-linear differential equations in which the control variable is multiplied by the state but constrained linearly. To minimize the objective functions associated with OL trajectories, a gradient descent algorithm was selected which balanced real-time execution with microcontroller (MCU) computing power. Parametric studies were performed in simulation and experiment to show that a low-power MCU could be used to efficiently control hydronic plants using MPC.
Keywords
electric heating; energy conservation; linear differential equations; microcontrollers; optimisation; predictive control; ships; wireless sensor networks; OL trajectories; actuator networks; bilinear differential equations; building controls; complex hydronic systems; control variable; energy efficient thermal load regulation; first-order linear differential equations; gradient descent algorithm; hydronic plants; industrial plants; low-power wireless controller; microcontroller computing power; model-predictive control techniques; naval vessels; nonlinear time-varying constraints; open-loop optimization; real-time execution; wireless sensor networks; Equations; Mathematical model; Thermal loading; Trajectory; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; Control applications; Process control; Wireless;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
American Control Conference (ACC), 2014
Conference_Location
Portland, OR
ISSN
0743-1619
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3272-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ACC.2014.6859285
Filename
6859285
Link To Document