LAPSE:2023.33095
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.33095
How Can Floor Covering Influence Buildings’ Demand Flexibility?
Hyeunguk Ahn, Jingjing Liu, Donghun Kim, Rongxin Yin, Tianzhen Hong, Mary Ann Piette
April 20, 2023
Abstract
Although the thermal mass of floors in buildings has been demonstrated to help shift cooling load, there is still a lack of information about how floor covering can influence the floor’s load shifting capability and buildings’ demand flexibility. To fill this gap, we estimated demand flexibility based on the daily peak cooling load reduction for different floor configurations and regions, using EnergyPlus simulations. As a demand response strategy, we used precooling and global temperature adjustment. The result demonstrated an adverse impact of floor covering on the building’s demand flexibility. Specifically, under the same demand response strategy, the daily peak cooling load reductions were up to 20−34% for a concrete floor whereas they were only 17−29% for a carpet-covered concrete floor. This is because floor covering hinders convective coupling between the concrete floor surface and the zone air and reduces radiative heat transfer between the concrete floor surface and the surrounding environment. In hot climates such as Phoenix, floor covering almost negated the concrete floor’s load shifting capability and yielded low demand flexibility as a wood floor, representing low thermal mass. Sensitivity analyses showed that floor covering’s effects can be more profound with a larger carpet-covered area, a greater temperature adjustment depth, or a higher radiant heat gain. With this effect ignored for a given building, its demand flexibility would be overestimated, which could prevent grid operators from obtaining sufficient demand flexibility to maintain a grid. Our findings also imply that for more efficient grid-interactive buildings, a traditional standard for floor design could be modified with increasing renewable penetration.
Keywords
cooling load, demand response, grid-interactive building, precooling, thermal inertia
Suggested Citation
Ahn H, Liu J, Kim D, Yin R, Hong T, Piette MA. How Can Floor Covering Influence Buildings’ Demand Flexibility?. (2023). LAPSE:2023.33095
Author Affiliations
Ahn H: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA [ORCID]
Liu J: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Kim D: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Yin R: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA [ORCID]
Hong T: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA [ORCID]
Piette MA: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
14
Issue
12
First Page
3658
Year
2021
Publication Date
2021-06-19
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en14123658, Publication Type: Journal Article
Record Map
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.33095
This Record
External Link

https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123658
Publisher Version
Download
Files
Apr 20, 2023
Main Article
License
CC BY 4.0
Meta
Record Statistics
Record Views
180
Version History
[v1] (Original Submission)
Apr 20, 2023
 
Verified by curator on
Apr 20, 2023
This Version Number
v1
Citations
Most Recent
This Version
URL Here
https://psecommunity.org/LAPSE:2023.33095
 
Record Owner
Auto Uploader for LAPSE
Links to Related Works
Directly Related to This Work
Publisher Version