Integrated Design of Optimisation and Inverse Dynamics Control for Home Heating Systems
Abstract
This paper presents a novel controller design methodology for multi-input multi-output linear time invariant systems using a realisable system’s inverse dynamics whilst simultaneously aiming to optimize the systems performance. This is very useful for energy system type controller design problems, especially heating systems as described in this paper. The new methodology, OPTimal Inverse Control (OPTIC) integrates the challenge to minimize a cost function and introduce it into the feedback control solution, thus allowing for simultaneous fast acting stable and non-interacting feedback control with cost function minimisation to provide a robust and optimal solution. The cost function presented acts to minimise weighted proportions of Carbon Intensity (c I ) of the energy supply system and the Cost of the Tariff (c Tar ) depending on the policy weighing potential fuel poverty against net zero carbon heating solutions. It is described how the OPTIC method is applied to a heating system control problem using a home heating dynamic model Inverse Dynamics based Energy Assessment and Simulation (IDEAS). IDEAS calibrated with UK’s Part L building regulations models a home’s building physics, heating demand using a standard type of occupancy over a whole year. This allows the OPTIC method to control the heating system to reach the required home comfort whilst continuously heading towards the minimum cost function value at all times, minute by minute instead of a much slower period of optimisation that is achieved by other complementary methods, like General Predictive Control (GPC).Citation
Downing, C. P. D., & Counsell, J. M. (2024, 1-4 July). Integrated design of optimisation and inverse dynamics control for home heating systems. 10th International Conference on Control, Decision and Information Technologies (CoDIT) (pp. 236-241), Vallette, Malta. https://doi.org/10.1109/CoDIT62066.2024.10708129Publisher
IEEEAdditional Links
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10708129Type
Conference ContributionDescription
This conference paper is not available on ChesterRepEISSN
2576-3555Sponsors
Unfundedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1109/CoDIT62066.2024.10708129