posted on 2010-11-05, 16:17authored byIan Richardson, Murray ThomsonMurray Thomson, David Infield, Conor Clifford
The pattern of electricity use in an individual domestic dwelling is highly dependent upon the
activities of the occupants and their associated use of electrical appliances. This paper
presents a high-resolution model of domestic electricity use, that is based upon a combination
of patterns of active occupancy (i.e. when people are at home and awake), and daily activity
profiles that characterise how people spend their time performing certain activities. One-minute
resolution synthetic electricity demand data is created through the simulation of appliance use;
the model covers all major appliances commonly found in the domestic environment. In order
to validate the model, electricity demand was recorded over the period of a year within 22
dwellings in the East Midlands, UK. A thorough quantitative comparison is made between the
synthetic and measured data sets, showing them to have similar statistical characteristics. A
freely downloadable example of the model is made available and may be configured to the
particular requirements of users or incorporated into other models.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Research Unit
Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology (CREST)
Citation
RICHARDSON, I. ... et al, 2010. Domestic electricity use: a high-resolution energy demand model. Energy and Buildings, 42 (10), pp.1878-1887.