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Igor Mezic, Director Center for Energy Efficient Design (CEED), Head,

Igor Mezic, Director Center for Energy Efficient Design (CEED), Head, Buildings & Design Solutions Group, Institute for Energy Efficiency. Integrated, Energy-Efficient Design. Center for Energy Efficient Design. Integrated Building Systems Energy Efficiency in Transportation

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Igor Mezic, Director Center for Energy Efficient Design (CEED), Head,

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  1. Igor Mezic, Director Center for Energy Efficient Design (CEED), Head, Buildings & Design Solutions Group, Institute for Energy Efficiency Integrated, Energy-Efficient Design

  2. Center for Energy Efficient Design • Integrated Building Systems • Energy Efficiency in Transportation • Energy Storage • Energy Harvesting and Micropower (off-grid) Generation • Data Center Cooling • Smart Grid Interdisciplinary.Unifying theme: Dynamics. Control. Computation. http://iee.ucsb.edu/ceed

  3. Energy Breakdown by Sector What are we trying to do? Why does it matter? Can we do 70% better in NEW buildings? 90% better? 50% better in RETROFITS?

  4. How is it done today, and what are the limitations of current practice? • “Properly applied offtheshelf or state-of-the-shelf technologies are available to • achieve low-energy buildings. However, these strategies must be applied together • and properly integrated in the design, installation, and operation to realize • energy savings. There is no single efficiency measure or checklist of measures • to achieve low-energy buildings.” • -NEED FOR INTEGRATION OF BEST-In-CLAS COMPONENTS • “-There was often a lack of control software or appropriate control logic to allow the • technologies to work well together. • -Design teams were too optimistic about the behavior of the occupants and their • acceptance of systems. • -Energy savings from daylighting were substantial, but were generally less than • expected. • -Plug loads were often greater than design predictions. • -Effective insulation values are often inflated when comparing the actual building • to the asdesigned building. • -PV systems experienced a range of operational performance degradations. • Common degradation sources included snow, inverter faults, shading, and parasitic • standby losses. “ • -NEED INTEGRATED CONTROL SOFTWARE AND UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS • Each of these buildings saved energy, with energy use 25% to 70% lower than code. • Although each building is a good energy performer, additional energy efficiency • and on-site generation is required for these buildings to reach DOE’s ZEB goal. • -NEED FOR FOR ENERGY EFFICIENT DESIGN BLUEPRINTS Unique Faculty in CCDC Cookie-cutter

  5. How is it done today, and what are the limitations of current practice? • “Properly applied offtheshelf or state-of-the-shelf technologies are available to • achieve low-energy buildings. However, these strategies must be applied together • and properly integrated in the design, installation, and operation to realize • energy savings. There is no single efficiency measure or checklist of measures • to achieve low-energy buildings.” • -NEED FOR INTEGRATION OF BEST-In-CLAS COMPONENTS • “-There was often a lack of control software or appropriate control logic to allow the • technologies to work well together. • -Design teams were too optimistic about the behavior of the occupants and their • acceptance of systems. • -Energy savings from daylighting were substantial, but were generally less than • expected. • -Plug loads were often greater than design predictions. • -Effective insulation values are often inflated when comparing the actual building • to the asdesigned building. • -PV systems experienced a range of operational performance degradations. • Common degradation sources included snow, inverter faults, shading, and parasitic • standby losses. “ • -NEED INTEGRATED CONTROL SOFTWARE AND UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS • Each of these buildings saved energy, with energy use 25% to 70% lower than code. • Although each building is a good energy performer, additional energy efficiency • and on-site generation is required for these buildings to reach DOE’s ZEB goal. • -NEED FOR FOR ENERGY EFFICIENT DESIGN BLUEPRINTS What does the DNA of a Zero Energy Building LOOK LIKE? Unique Faculty in CCDC Cookie-cutter

  6. From tracking an visualizing temperature sensor data… APRIL OCTOBER Stanford Precourt Institute building

  7. …to providing REAL-TIME actionable inteligence on Energy Efficiency trouble spots… OCTOBER APRIL Action needed here Action needed here Stanford Precourt Institute building

  8. DOE seed project (with LBL,UTC) Energy Efficiency in a UC Merced building The Classroom and Office Building at UC Merced A small number of parameters affect energy output! • 92000sq ft. Leed gold building

  9. …and CRITICAL PARAMETER MANAGEMENT for large Energy savings… Optimize for ENERGY SAVINGS

  10. PARTNERSHIPS University partnerships: Caltech, Stanford, Princeton,… National laboratories Student Affairs CEED Facilities Commercial partners Funding agencies International partnerships HONG KONG POLYTECHNIC KYOYO UNIVERSITY

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