Ch1
Ch1
1
Control and Automation Systems
Building Automation
It is the integration of
HVAC control system; lighting control system; fire/safety protection system; security
control system; and the access control system, through some sort of data communication
link.
Electrical system, PA system, vertical transport system, car-parking system are
becoming part of it.
It improves the operational efficiency.
It allows distributed processing.
It has multizones control capabilities.
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Control and Automation Systems
4
Intelligent Building Pyramid
Control and Automation Systems
Energy Management System
Energy Management
Building Automation System play a major role.
Energy management system (EMS) optimizes the operations, conditioning
processes, and indoor environmental parameters of building systems in order to
maintain a satisfactory indoor environment at minimum energy use (mainly in
HVAC and Lighting control).
On top of the requirement imposed by ASHRAE/IES Standard 90.1-1989 and
the DOE Standard (see appendix A), for buildings larger than 20,000 ft2 gross
area, HVAC EMS should include the following functions (the first four are also
required by ASHRAE/IES Standard):
free cooling economizer cycle
unoccupied period setback
dead-band control
supply air and space air temperature reset
optimal preoccupancy warm-up and cool down
duty cycling
chiller optimization
boiler optimization
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ability to investigate worn or faulty equipment or component
Control and Automation Systems
Energy Management System
load limiting and shifting, kW demand
control
submetering of gas and electricity end-use
for building tenants
Example
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Control and Automation Systems
Energy Management System
Time Schedule
Only run the plant when the space is occupied
May need multiple switching periods of occupancy on
different days.
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Control and Automation Systems
Energy Management System
Calendar Schedules
Use different switching patterns on different
calendar dates
Enable varied time scheduling to match varying
working working patterns
Good for exhibition halls or meeting rooms
Save operator time as can be configured once
Holiday schedule enable further
saving. (e.g. 8 public holiday,
5 working days/week, equate
to 3% saving)
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Control and Automation Systems
Energy Management System
Economizer
For cooling system that has a capacity of 7.5 tons or more.
Basic principle is to compare the external and internal temperatures, i.e.
based on how mild it is outside, and how high the internal temperature is
the cooling plant will be switched on at the least possible time, and
opposite for the optimum off function.
A properly operating economizer can cut energy costs by as much as 10
percent of a building's total energy consumption, depending mostly on
local climate and internal cooling loads.
Today, a choice of algorithms such as linear relationship between rate of
rise and internal temperature to enable a more accurate calculations of start
and stop time.
But, malfunctioning economizers waste much more energy than they were
intended to save.
If it breaks down when its damper is in a fairly wide-open position, peak
loads shoot up as cooling or heating systems try to compensate for the excess
air entering the building, resulting from cooling excessive outside air. 11
Control and Automation Systems
Economizer example
Load cycling(cont’)
Should allow override in the event of exceeding pre-set
such as high space temperature
Disadvantage: may cause an increase in electrical load
during start up; decrease the overall life of the plant.
Maximum demand
Applied to buildings where a limit is set for the maximum
consumption allowed(normally over a half-hour period)
A cost reduction measure by preventing this limit being
exceeded. When exceeded, a higher tariff per KW/H apply
Cost reduction is typically 3-5%
Some electrical loads will be shed and reinstated 14
Control and Automation Systems
BMS - Example Architecture
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Control and Automation Systems
BMS - Example Architecture
Automation Level (Cont’)
Controllers can communicate with each other
– Peer-to-Peer
Event based operation
– Function at the highest efficiency
– No repetitive information is transmitted
Controllers only react with the Management Level when
– Plant goes out of limits
– Adjustments are made through a user interface.
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Control and Automation Systems
BMS - Example Architecture
Field Level
Information is gather here
– Through sensors
– Through other intelligent devices
Information will be sent back to the controllers.
Third party equipment is integrated into the
Automation and Field levels with control at the
Management level
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Control and Automation Systems
Invensys System
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Control and Automation Systems
Remote/Dial-Up
Operator Workstation Operator
Workstation
VAV Controller
Lighting Controller
Fire Controller
Access Controller NEU Controller
UNT Controller
VAV Controller
N2
AHU Controller
⚫ Distributed Network
LCP Controller ⚫ Standard Components
N2
⚫ Dynamic Data Access
DX-9100 ⚫ Object Oriented Architecture
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Control and Automation Systems
Control system implementation
Distributed control
A control system in which control computations and
intelligence are made at different locations and the
result coordinated.
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Control and Automation Systems
Network Topology in BAS
Bus topology- All devices are connected to a
central cable, called the bus or backbone.
Ring topology- All devices are connected to one
another in the shape of a closed loop, so that
each device is connected directly to two other
devices, one on either side of it.
Star topology- All devices are connected to a
central hub. Star networks are relatively easy
to install and manage, but bottlenecks can
occur because all data must pass through the
hub.
Hybrid Topology - Network topology which
combines more than one basic topology such as
bus, ring, or star.
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Control and Automation Systems
Example
Backbone Star Topology Wiring in Building
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Control and Automation Systems
Example
Backbone Bus Topology Wiring in Building
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Control and Automation Systems
Example
Backbone Ring Topology Wiring in Building
Adv
disedu
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Control and Automation Systems
Consideration in Topology Layout
Automating buildings with vast amount of points require a well-designed network
segmentation, in order to achieve a good performance & infrastructure.
Well designed structured network by using repeaters, bridges or even better
using routers to improve network reliability and simplify network
troubleshooting
Some reasons why segmenting a network is important:
Isolation of individual network segments in order to limit the propagation of a
single fault to one segment and prevent this single fault from spreading out over
the entire network
Different nodes demand different communication media and different network
speeds but they all need to communicate with each other, which requires an
interconnection between the different networking media.
Increase the number of possible nodes in a single network (e.g. max. 64 nodes
per FT-10 segment)
Increase the physical dimension of a network (e.g. 500 m for an FT-10 segment)
Keep local traffic within one segment in order to avoid network traffic overload
conditions, which will make services like HVAC, lighting, … malfunction. 27
Control and Automation Systems
Example Structured Layout
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Control and Automation Systems
Example System Design
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Control and Automation Systems