January 31, 2017
Journal Article

Transactive Control of Commercial Buildings for Demand Response

Abstract

Transactive control is a type of distributed control strategy that uses market mechanism to engage self-interested responsive loads to achieve power balance in the electrical power grid. In this paper, we propose a transactive control approach of commercial building Heating, Ventilation, and Air- Conditioning (HVAC) systems for demand response. We first describe the system models, and identify their model parameters using data collected from Systems Engineering Building (SEB) located on our Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) campus. We next present a transactive control market structure for commercial building HVAC system, and describe its agent bidding and market clearing strategies. Several case studies are performed in a simulation environment using Building Control Virtual Test Bed (BCVTB) and calibrated SEB EnergyPlus model. We show that the proposed transactive control approach is very effective at peak clipping, load shifting, and strategic conservation for commercial building HVAC systems.

Revised: February 21, 2017 | Published: January 31, 2017

Citation

Hao H., C.D. Corbin, K. Kalsi, and R.G. Pratt. 2017. Transactive Control of Commercial Buildings for Demand Response. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems 32, no. 1:774-783. PNNL-SA-114721. doi:10.1109/TPWRS.2016.2559485