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Evaluation of energy-efficiency in lighting systems using sensor networks
Date Issued
2009-11
Date Available
2010-03-29T16:31:35Z
Abstract
In modern energy aware buildings, lighting control systems are put in place so to maximise the energy-efficiency of
the lighting system without effecting the comfort of the occupant.
In many cases this involves utilising a set of presence sensors, with actuators, to determine when to turn on/off or
dim lighting, when it is deemed necessary. Such systems are installed using standard tuning values statically fixed by
the system installer. This can cause inefficiencies and energy
wastage as the control system is never optimised to its surrounding environment. In this paper, we investigate a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) as a viable tool that can
help in analysing and evaluating the energy-efficiency of an existing lighting control system in a low-cost and portable
solution. We introduce LightWiSe (LIGHTting evaluation through WIreless SEnsors), a wireless tool which aims to
evaluate lighting control systems in existing office buildings.
LightWiSe determines points in the control system that exhibit energy wastage and to highlight areas that can be optimised
to gain a greater efficiency in the system. It will also evaluate the effective energy saving to be obtained by replacing
the control system with a more judicious energy saving solution. During a test performed in an office space, with a
number of different lighting control systems we could highlight a number of areas to reduce waste and save energy. Our
findings show that each system tested can be optimised to achieve greater efficiency. LightWiSe can highlight savings
in the region of 50% to 70% that are achievable through optimising
the current control system or installing an alternative.
the lighting system without effecting the comfort of the occupant.
In many cases this involves utilising a set of presence sensors, with actuators, to determine when to turn on/off or
dim lighting, when it is deemed necessary. Such systems are installed using standard tuning values statically fixed by
the system installer. This can cause inefficiencies and energy
wastage as the control system is never optimised to its surrounding environment. In this paper, we investigate a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) as a viable tool that can
help in analysing and evaluating the energy-efficiency of an existing lighting control system in a low-cost and portable
solution. We introduce LightWiSe (LIGHTting evaluation through WIreless SEnsors), a wireless tool which aims to
evaluate lighting control systems in existing office buildings.
LightWiSe determines points in the control system that exhibit energy wastage and to highlight areas that can be optimised
to gain a greater efficiency in the system. It will also evaluate the effective energy saving to be obtained by replacing
the control system with a more judicious energy saving solution. During a test performed in an office space, with a
number of different lighting control systems we could highlight a number of areas to reduce waste and save energy. Our
findings show that each system tested can be optimised to achieve greater efficiency. LightWiSe can highlight savings
in the region of 50% to 70% that are achievable through optimising
the current control system or installing an alternative.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Copyright (Published Version)
2009 ACM
Subject – LCSH
Lighting--Energy consumption
Wireless sensor networks
Buildings--Energy conservation
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Conference Details
Paper presented at Buildsys: First ACM Workshop On Embedded Sensing Systems For Energy-Efficiency In Buildings, 3 Nov, Berkeley, USA
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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buildLight.pdf
Size
855.12 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
e2b7cee3c70ec59bb56c9f8cf4de895c
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