Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation

Demand Response (DR) programs under the umbrella of Demand Side Management (DSM) tend to involve end users in optimizing their Power Consumption (PC) patterns and offer financial incentives to shift the load at “low-priced” hours. However, users have their own preferences of anticipating the amount o...

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Main Authors: Danish Mahmood, Nadeem Javaid, Sheraz Ahmed, Imran Ahmed, Iftikhar Azim Niaz, Wadood Abdul, Sanaa Ghouzali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-03-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
DSM
EMS
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/10/3/335
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spelling doaj-10dbe3bd30644324a7ddedf58308ba2c2020-11-24T23:14:12ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732017-03-0110333510.3390/en10030335en10030335Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to InstallationDanish Mahmood0Nadeem Javaid1Sheraz Ahmed2Imran Ahmed3Iftikhar Azim Niaz4Wadood Abdul5Sanaa Ghouzali6COMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Islamabad 44000, PakistanCOMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Islamabad 44000, PakistanCOMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Islamabad 44000, PakistanInstitute of Management Sciences (IMS), Peshawar 25000, PakistanCOMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Islamabad 44000, PakistanDepartment of Computer Engineering, College of Computer and Information Sciences, King Saud University, Riyadh 11633, Saudi ArabiaInformation Technology Department, College of Computer and Information Sciences, King Saud University, Riyadh 11633, Saudi ArabiaDemand Response (DR) programs under the umbrella of Demand Side Management (DSM) tend to involve end users in optimizing their Power Consumption (PC) patterns and offer financial incentives to shift the load at “low-priced” hours. However, users have their own preferences of anticipating the amount of consumed electricity. While installing an Energy Management System (EMS), the user must be assured that this investment gives optimum comfort of bill savings, as well as appliance utility considering Time of Use (ToU). Moreover, there is a difference between desired load distribution and optimally-scheduled load across a 24-h time frame for lowering electricity bills. This difference in load usage timings, if it is beyond the tolerance level of a user, increases frustration. The comfort level is a highly variable phenomenon. An EMS giving optimum comfort to one user may not be able to provide the same level of satisfaction to another who has different preferences regarding electricity bill savings or appliance utility. Under such a diversity of human behaviors, it is difficult to select an EMS for an individual user. In this work, a numeric performance metric,“User Comfort Level (UCL)”isformulatedonthebasisofuserpreferencesoncostsaving,toleranceindelayregardinguse of an appliance and return of investment. The proposed framework (UCL) allows the user to select an EMS optimally that suits his.her preferences well by anticipating electricity bill reduction, tolerable delay in ToU of the appliance and return on investment. Furthermore, an extended literature analysis is conducted demonstrating generic strategies of EMSs. Five major building blocks are discussed and a comparative analysis is presented on the basis of the proposed performance metric.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/10/3/335user comfortDSMDR programsappliance utilityEMSschedulingBPSOenergy efficiency gap
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danish Mahmood
Nadeem Javaid
Sheraz Ahmed
Imran Ahmed
Iftikhar Azim Niaz
Wadood Abdul
Sanaa Ghouzali
spellingShingle Danish Mahmood
Nadeem Javaid
Sheraz Ahmed
Imran Ahmed
Iftikhar Azim Niaz
Wadood Abdul
Sanaa Ghouzali
Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
Energies
user comfort
DSM
DR programs
appliance utility
EMS
scheduling
BPSO
energy efficiency gap
author_facet Danish Mahmood
Nadeem Javaid
Sheraz Ahmed
Imran Ahmed
Iftikhar Azim Niaz
Wadood Abdul
Sanaa Ghouzali
author_sort Danish Mahmood
title Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
title_short Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
title_full Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
title_fullStr Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
title_full_unstemmed Orchestrating an Effective Formulation to Investigate the Impact of EMSs (Energy Management Systems) for Residential Units Prior to Installation
title_sort orchestrating an effective formulation to investigate the impact of emss (energy management systems) for residential units prior to installation
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Demand Response (DR) programs under the umbrella of Demand Side Management (DSM) tend to involve end users in optimizing their Power Consumption (PC) patterns and offer financial incentives to shift the load at “low-priced” hours. However, users have their own preferences of anticipating the amount of consumed electricity. While installing an Energy Management System (EMS), the user must be assured that this investment gives optimum comfort of bill savings, as well as appliance utility considering Time of Use (ToU). Moreover, there is a difference between desired load distribution and optimally-scheduled load across a 24-h time frame for lowering electricity bills. This difference in load usage timings, if it is beyond the tolerance level of a user, increases frustration. The comfort level is a highly variable phenomenon. An EMS giving optimum comfort to one user may not be able to provide the same level of satisfaction to another who has different preferences regarding electricity bill savings or appliance utility. Under such a diversity of human behaviors, it is difficult to select an EMS for an individual user. In this work, a numeric performance metric,“User Comfort Level (UCL)”isformulatedonthebasisofuserpreferencesoncostsaving,toleranceindelayregardinguse of an appliance and return of investment. The proposed framework (UCL) allows the user to select an EMS optimally that suits his.her preferences well by anticipating electricity bill reduction, tolerable delay in ToU of the appliance and return on investment. Furthermore, an extended literature analysis is conducted demonstrating generic strategies of EMSs. Five major building blocks are discussed and a comparative analysis is presented on the basis of the proposed performance metric.
topic user comfort
DSM
DR programs
appliance utility
EMS
scheduling
BPSO
energy efficiency gap
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/10/3/335
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