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Showing papers on "Efficient energy use published in 2012"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An architectural framework and principles for energy-efficient Cloud computing are defined and the proposed energy-aware allocation heuristics provision data center resources to client applications in a way that improves energy efficiency of the data center, while delivering the negotiated Quality of Service (QoS).

2,511 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey the literature till 2011 on the enabling technologies for the Smart Grid and explore three major systems, namely the smart infrastructure system, the smart management system, and the smart protection system.
Abstract: The Smart Grid, regarded as the next generation power grid, uses two-way flows of electricity and information to create a widely distributed automated energy delivery network. In this article, we survey the literature till 2011 on the enabling technologies for the Smart Grid. We explore three major systems, namely the smart infrastructure system, the smart management system, and the smart protection system. We also propose possible future directions in each system. colorred{Specifically, for the smart infrastructure system, we explore the smart energy subsystem, the smart information subsystem, and the smart communication subsystem.} For the smart management system, we explore various management objectives, such as improving energy efficiency, profiling demand, maximizing utility, reducing cost, and controlling emission. We also explore various management methods to achieve these objectives. For the smart protection system, we explore various failure protection mechanisms which improve the reliability of the Smart Grid, and explore the security and privacy issues in the Smart Grid.

2,433 citations


BookDOI
01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: WEO-2012 as discussed by the authors presents authoritative projections of energy trends through to 2035 and insights into what they mean for energy security, environmental sustainability, and economic development, together with an update on climate change issues.
Abstract: Industry and government decision-makers and others with a stake in the energy sector all need WEO-2012. It presents authoritative projections of energy trends through to 2035 and insights into what they mean for energy security, environmental sustainability and economic development. Oil, coal, natural gas, renewables and nuclear power are all covered, together with an update on climate change issues. Global energy demand, production, trade, investment and carbon dioxide emissions are broken down by region or country, by fuel and by sector. Special strategic analyses cover -What unlocking the purely economic potential for energy efficiency could do, country by country and sector by sector, for energy markets, the economy and the environment. -The Iraqi energy sector, examining both its importance in satisfying the country’s own needs and its crucial role in meeting global oil and gas demand. -An examination of the cost of delaying action on climate change. -The water-energy nexus,as water resources become increasingly stressed and access more contentious. -Measures of progress towards providing universal access to modern energy services. There are many uncertainties; but many decisions cannot wait. The insights of WEO‑2012 are invaluable to those who must shape our energy future.

1,081 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how ModelPredictive control and weatherpredictions can increase the energy efficiency in Integrated Room Automation (IRA) while respecting occupant comfort.

1,070 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a systematic approach to proper selection and identification of the best retrofit options for existing buildings and provide a better understanding of how to effectively conduct a building retrofit to promote energy conservation and sustainability.

982 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A systematic overview of the state of the art in energy and resource efficiency increasing methods and techniques in the domain of discrete part manufacturing, with attention for the effectiveness of the available options is provided in this paper.
Abstract: A B S T R A C T This paper aims to provide a systematic overview of the state of the art in energy and resource efficiency increasing methods and techniques in the domain of discrete part manufacturing, with attention for the effectiveness of the available options. For this purpose a structured approach, distinguishing different system scale levels, is applied: starting from a unit process focus, respectively the multi-machine, factory, multi-facility and supply chain levels are covered. Determined by the research contributions reported in literature, the de facto focus of the paper is mainly on energy related aspects of manufacturing. Significant opportunities for systematic efficiency improving measures are identified and summarized in this area. 2012 CIRP.

936 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
06 Jan 2012-Science
TL;DR: It is found that technically feasible levels of energy efficiency and decarbonized energy supply alone are not sufficient; widespread electrification of transportation and other sectors is required.
Abstract: The Technology Path to Deep Greenhouse Gas Emissions Cuts by 2050: The Pivotal Role of Electricity James H. Williams, 1,2 Andrew DeBenedictis, 1 Rebecca Ghanadan, 1,3 Amber Mahone, 1 Jack Moore, 1 William R. Morrow III, 4 Snuller Price, 1 Margaret S. Torn 3 * Several states and countries have adopted targets for deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, but there has been little physically realistic modeling of the energy and economic transformations required. We analyzed the infrastructure and technology path required to meet California’s goal of an 80% reduction below 1990 levels, using detailed modeling of infrastructure stocks, resource constraints, and electricity system operability. We found that technically feasible levels of energy efficiency and decarbonized energy supply alone are not sufficient; widespread electrification of transportation and other sectors is required. Decarbonized electricity would become the dominant form of energy supply, posing challenges and opportunities for economic growth and climate policy. This transformation demands technologies that are not yet commercialized, as well as coordination of investment, technology development, and infrastructure deployment. n 2004, Pacala and Socolow (1) proposed a way to stabilize climate using existing green- house gas (GHG) mitigation technologies, vi- sualized as interchangeable, global-scale “wedges” of equivalent emissions reductions. Subsequent work has produced more detailed analyses, but none combines the sectoral granularity, physical and resource constraints, and geographic scale needed for developing realistic technology and policy roadmaps (2–4). We addressed this gap by analyzing the specific changes in infrastructure, technology, cost, and governance required to de- carbonize a major economy, at the state level, that has primary jurisdiction over electricity supply, transportation planning, building standards, and other key components of an energy transition. California is the world’s sixth largest econ- omy and 12th largest emitter of GHGs. Its per capita GDP and GHG emissions are similar to those of Japan and western Europe, and its policy and technology choices have broad rele- vance nationally and globally (5, 6). California’s Assembly Bill 32 (AB32) requires the state to reduce GHG emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, a reduction of 30% relative to business-as-usual assumptions (7). Previous modeling work we per- formed for California’s state government formed the analytical foundation for the state’s AB32 implementation plan in the electricity and natural gas sectors (8, 9). California has also set a target of reducing 2050 emissions 80% below the 1990 level, con- I Energy and Environmental Economics, 101 Montgomery Street, Suite 1600, San Francisco, CA 94104, USA. 2 Monterey Institute of International Studies, 460 Pierce Street, Monterey, CA 93940, USA. 3 Energy and Resources Group, University of Cali- fornia,& Earth Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL),, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. 4 Environmental Energy Technologies Division, LBNL, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. *To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mstorn@lbl.gov sistent with an Intergovernmental Panel on Cli- mate Change (IPCC) emissions trajectory that would stabilize atmospheric GHG concentrations at 450 parts per million carbon dioxide equivalent (CO 2 e) and reduce the likelihood of dangerous an- thropogenic interference with climate (10). Work- ing at both time scales, we found a pressing need for methodologies that bridge the analytical gap between planning for shallower, near-term GHG reductions, based entirely on existing commercialized technology, and deeper, long-term GHG reduc- tions, which will depend substantially on technol- ogies that are not yet commercialized. We used a stock-rollover methodology that simulated physical infrastructure at an aggregate level, and built scenarios to explore mitigation options (11, 12). Our model divided California’s economy into six energy demand sectors and two energy supply sectors, plus cross-sectoral eco- nomic activities that produce non-energy and non-CO 2 GHG emissions. The model adjusted the infrastructure stock (e.g., vehicle fleets, build- ings, power plants, and industrial equipment) in each sector as new infrastructure was added and old infrastructure was retired, each year from 2008 to 2050. We constructed a baseline scenario from government forecasts of population and gross state product, combined with regression-based infra- structure characteristics and emissions intensities, producing a 2050 emissions baseline of 875 Mt CO 2 e (Fig. 1). In mitigation scenarios, we used backcasting, setting 2050 emissions at the state target of 85 Mt CO 2 e as a constrained outcome, and altered the emissions intensities of new in- frastructure over time as needed to meet the tar- get, employing 72 types of physical mitigation measures (13). In the short term, measure selec- tion was driven by implementation plans for AB32 and other state policies (table S1). In the long term, technological progress and rates of in- troduction were constrained by physical feasi- bility, resource availability, and historical uptake rates rather than relative prices of technology, en- ergy, or carbon as in general equilibrium models (14). Technology penetration levels in our model are within the range of technological feasibility for the United States suggested by recent assess- ments (table S20) (15, 16). We did not include technologies expected to be far from commercial- ization in the next few decades, such as fusion- based electricity. Mitigation cost was calculated as the difference between total fuel and measure costs in the mitigation and baseline scenarios. Our fuel and technology cost assumptions, including learning curves (tables S4, S5, S11, and S12, and fig. S29), are comparable to those in other recent studies (17). Clearly, future costs are very uncertain over such a long time horizon, especially for technologies that are not yet commercialized. We did not assume explicit life-style changes (e.g., vegetarianism, bicycle transportation), which could have a substantial effect on mitigation requirements and costs (18); behavior change in our model is subsumed within conservation measures and en- ergy efficiency (EE). To ensure that electricity supply scenarios met the technical requirements for maintaining reli- able service, we included an electricity system dispatch algorithm that tested grid operability. Without a dispatch model, it is difficult to de- termine whether a generation mix has infeasibly high levels of intermittent generation. We devel- oped an electricity demand curve bottom-up from sectoral demand, by season and time of day. On the basis of the demand curve, the model con- strained generation scenarios to satisfy in succes- sion the energy, capacity, and system-balancing requirements for reliable operation. The operabil- ity constraint set physical limits on the penetra- tion of different types of generation and specified the requirements for peaking generation, on-grid energy storage, transmission capacity, and out-of- state imports and exports for a given generation mix (table S13 and figs.S20 to S31). It was as- sumed that over the long run, California would not “go it alone” in pursuing deep GHG reduc- tions, and thus that neighboring states would de- carbonize their generation such that the carbon intensity of imports would be comparable to that of California in-state generation (19). Electrification required to meet 80% reduc- tion target. Three major energy system transfor- mations were necessary to meet the target (Fig. 2). First, EE had to improve by at least 1.3% year −1 over 40 years. Second, electricity supply had to be nearly decarbonized, with 2050 emissions in- tensity less than 0.025 kg CO 2 e/kWh. Third, most existing direct fuel uses had to be electrified, with electricity constituting 55% of end-use energy in 2050 versus 15% today. Results for a mitigation scenario, including these and other measures, are shown in Fig. 1. Of the emissions reductions relative to 2050 baseline emissions, 28% came from EE, 27% from decarbonization of electricity generation, 14% from a combination of energy

723 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a detailed analysis of such optimum sizing approaches in the literature that can make significant contributions to wider renewable energy penetration by enhancing the system applicability in terms of economy.
Abstract: Public awareness of the need to reduce global warming and the significant increase in the prices of conventional energy sources have encouraged many countries to provide new energy policies that promote the renewable energy applications. Such renewable energy sources like wind, solar, hydro based energies, etc. are environment friendly and have potential to be more widely used. Combining these renewable energy sources with back-up units to form a hybrid system can provide a more economic, environment friendly and reliable supply of electricity in all load demand conditions compared to single-use of such systems. One of the most important issues in this type of hybrid system is to optimally size the hybrid system components as sufficient enough to meet all load requirements with possible minimum investment and operating costs. There are many studies about the optimization and sizing of hybrid renewable energy systems since the recent popular utilization of renewable energy sources. In this concept, this paper provides a detailed analysis of such optimum sizing approaches in the literature that can make significant contributions to wider renewable energy penetration by enhancing the system applicability in terms of economy.

635 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the research in this area in the past one decade is presented in this paper, where an attempt has been made to present a comprehensive review on the research on the unit sizing, optimization, energy management and modeling of hybrid renewable energy system components.
Abstract: It has become imperative for the power and energy engineers to look out for the renewable energy sources such as sun, wind, geothermal, ocean and biomass as sustainable, cost-effective and environment friendly alternatives for conventional energy sources. However, the non-availability of these renewable energy resources all the time throughout the year has led to research in the area of hybrid renewable energy systems. In the past few years, a lot of research has taken place in the design, optimization, operation and control of the renewable hybrid energy systems. It is indeed evident that this area is still emerging and vast in scope. The main aim of this paper is to review the research on the unit sizing, optimization, energy management and modeling of the hybrid renewable energy system components. Developments in research on modeling of hybrid energy resources (PV systems), backup energy systems (Fuel Cell, Battery, Ultra-capacitor, Diesel Generator), power conditioning units (MPPT converters, Buck/Boost converters, Battery chargers) and techniques for energy flow management have been discussed in detail. In this paper, an attempt has been made to present a comprehensive review of the research in this area in the past one decade.

627 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that OECD countries have better carbon emission performance and integrated energy-carbon performance than non-OECD countries in electricity generation, while the difference in energy performance is not significant.

621 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A simulation environment for energy-aware cloud computing data centers is presented and the effectiveness of the simulator in utilizing power management schema, such as voltage scaling, frequency scaling, and dynamic shutdown that are applied to the computing and networking components are demonstrated.
Abstract: Cloud computing data centers are becoming increasingly popular for the provisioning of computing resources. The cost and operating expenses of data centers have skyrocketed with the increase in computing capacity. Several governmental, industrial, and academic surveys indicate that the energy utilized by computing and communication units within a data center contributes to a considerable slice of the data center operational costs. In this paper, we present a simulation environment for energy-aware cloud computing data centers. Along with the workload distribution, the simulator is designed to capture details of the energy consumed by data center components (servers, switches, and links) as well as packet-level communication patterns in realistic setups. The simulation results obtained for two-tier, three-tier, and three-tier high-speed data center architectures demonstrate the effectiveness of the simulator in utilizing power management schema, such as voltage scaling, frequency scaling, and dynamic shutdown that are applied to the computing and networking components.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study focused specifically on lighting, small power and catering equipment in a high density office building is analyzed and presented, showing that by combining monitoring data with predictive energy modelling, it was possible to increase the accuracy of the model to within 3% of actual electricity consumption values.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simple model of investment in energy-using capital stock with two types of market failures: first, uninternalized externalities from energy consumption, and second, forces such as imperfect information that cause consumers and firms not to exploit privately-profitable energy efficiency investments.
Abstract: Many analysts have argued that energy efficiency investments offer an enormous “win-win” opportunity to both reduce negative externalities and save money. This overview paper presents a simple model of investment in energy-using capital stock with two types of market failures: first, uninternalized externalities from energy consumption, and second, forces such as imperfect information that cause consumers and firms not to exploit privately-profitable energy efficiency investments. The model clarifies that only if the second type of market failure cannot be addressed directly through mechanisms such as information provision, energy efficiency subsidies and standards may be merited. This chapter therefore reviews the empirical work on the magnitude of profitable unexploited energy efficiency investments, a literature which frequently does not meet modern standards for credibly estimating the net present value of energy cost savings and often leaves other benefits and costs unmeasured. These problems notwithstanding, recent empirical work in a variety of contexts implies that on average the magnitude of profitable unexploited investment opportunities is much smaller than engineering-accounting studies suggest. Finally, there is tremendous opportunity and need for policy-relevant research that utilizes randomized controlled trials and quasi-experimental techniques to estimate the returns to energy efficiency investments and the welfare effects of energy efficiency programs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two energy-conscious task consolidation heuristics are presented, which aim to maximize resource utilization and explicitly take into account both active and idle energy consumption and demonstrate their promising energy-saving capability.
Abstract: The energy consumption of under-utilized resources, particularly in a cloud environment, accounts for a substantial amount of the actual energy use. Inherently, a resource allocation strategy that takes into account resource utilization would lead to a better energy efficiency; this, in clouds, extends further with virtualization technologies in that tasks can be easily consolidated. Task consolidation is an effective method to increase resource utilization and in turn reduces energy consumption. Recent studies identified that server energy consumption scales linearly with (processor) resource utilization. This encouraging fact further highlights the significant contribution of task consolidation to the reduction in energy consumption. However, task consolidation can also lead to the freeing up of resources that can sit idling yet still drawing power. There have been some notable efforts to reduce idle power draw, typically by putting computer resources into some form of sleep/power-saving mode. In this paper, we present two energy-conscious task consolidation heuristics, which aim to maximize resource utilization and explicitly take into account both active and idle energy consumption. Our heuristics assign each task to the resource on which the energy consumption for executing the task is explicitly or implicitly minimized without the performance degradation of that task. Based on our experimental results, our heuristics demonstrate their promising energy-saving capability.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the extent to which the use of gas and electricity is determined by the technical specifications of the dwelling as compared to the demographic characteristics of the residents, and they find that even absent price increases for residential energy, the aging of the population and their increasing wealth will roughly offset improvements in the building stock resulting from policy interventions and natural revitalization.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a scalable, probabilistic methodology that can support large scale investments in energy retrofit of buildings while accounting for uncertainty, based on Bayesian calibration of normative energy models.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new type of safe, fast, inexpensive, long-life aqueous electrolyte battery, which relies on the insertion of potassium ions into a copper hexacyanoferrate cathode and a novel activated carbon/polypyrrole hybrid anode and an electrochemically active additive to tune its potential.
Abstract: New types of energy storage are needed in conjunction with the deployment of solar, wind and other volatile renewable energy sources and their integration with the electric grid. No existing energy storage technology can economically provide the power, cycle life and energy efficiency needed to respond to the costly short-term transients that arise from renewables and other aspects of grid operation. Here we demonstrate a new type of safe, fast, inexpensive, long-life aqueous electrolyte battery, which relies on the insertion of potassium ions into a copper hexacyanoferrate cathode and a novel activated carbon/polypyrrole hybrid anode. The cathode reacts rapidly with very little hysteresis. The hybrid anode uses an electrochemically active additive to tune its potential. This high-rate, high-efficiency cell has a 95% round-trip energy efficiency when cycled at a 5C rate, and a 79% energy efficiency at 50C. It also has zero-capacity loss after 1,000 deep-discharge cycles.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of building design criteria that can reduce the energy demand for the heating and cooling of residential buildings is provided in this paper. But, the authors do not consider the impact of these parameters on the overall energy consumption.
Abstract: Energy saving is a high-priority in developed countries. For this reason, energy-efficient measures are being increasingly implemented in all sectors. The residential sector is responsible for an important part of the energy consumption in the world. Most of this energy is used in heating, cooling, and artificial ventilation systems.With a view to developing energy-efficient structures, this article provides an overview of building design criteria that can reduce the energy demand for the heating and cooling of residential buildings. These criteria are based on the adoption of suitable parameters for building orientation, shape, envelope system, passive heating and cooling mechanisms, shading, and glazing. An analysis was made of previous studies that evaluated the influence of these parameters on the total energy demand and suggested the best design options. This study is useful for professionals who are responsible for decision-making during the design phase of energy-efficient residential buildings.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the technical and economic aspects, as well as the market evolution of the organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) is presented in this article. But it is not a suitable working fluid for these systems since there is as yet none that provides all aspects that must be taken into account in ORCs.
Abstract: This paper presents an overview of the technical and economic aspects, as well as the market evolution of the Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC). This is an unconventional but very promising technology for the conversion of thermal energy, at low and medium temperatures, into electrical and/or mechanical energy on a small scale. As it makes a greater and/or more intensive use of its energy source, this technology could facilitate an electricity supply to unconnected areas, the self-production of energy, the desalination of seawater for human consumption, or even to increase the energy efficiency in the industrial sector respecting the environment. A look at the scientific publications on this topic shows an open research line, namely the selection of a suitable working fluid for these systems, since there is as yet none that provides all aspects that must be taken into account in ORCs. Furthermore, a description and an analysis of the applications of the proposed technology is carried out, specifying the main providers, which at the present time is limited mainly to the range 0.2–2 MWe with a cost of around 1 and 4 × 103 €/kWe. Lower powers are in pre-commercial status.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-objective optimization model is presented to assist stakeholders in the definition of intervention measures aimed at minimizing the energy use in the building in a cost effective manner, while satisfying the occupant needs and requirements.

01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a comprehensive and timely overview of renewable energy market, industry, investment, and policy developments worldwide, based on the most recent data available, provided by a network of more than 400 contributors and researchers from around the world.
Abstract: Renewable energy markets and policy frameworks have evolved rapidly in recent years. This report provides a comprehensive and timely overview of renewable energy market, industry, investment, and policy developments worldwide. It relies on the most recent data available, provided by a network of more than 400 contributors and researchers from around the world, all of which is brought together by a multi-disciplinary authoring team. The report covers recent developments, current status, and key trends; by design, it does not provide analysis or forecast the future. As such, this report and subsequent editions will serve as a benchmark for measuring global progress in the deployment of renewable energy, which is of particular interest in this International Year of Sustainable Energy for All. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has marked the occasion with a new global initiative, Sustainable Energy for All, which seeks to mobilise global action on three interlinked objectives to be achieved by 2030: universal access to modern energy services, improved rates of energy efficiency, and expanded use of renewable energy sources.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the determinants of renewable energy consumption in a panel of six major emerging economies, namely Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Philippines and Turkey, were analyzed using FMOLS, DOLS and Granger causality methods.

Book
13 Dec 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the world of materials and its use of steel and aluminium are discussed. But where does the money go, and where does it come from, and how it can be used?
Abstract: Part I The world of materials 1 Material wealth and health 2 Scale, uncertainty and estimation 3 Our uses of steel and aluminium 4 Metal journeys 5 Energy and emissions 6 Where does the money go? Part II With one eye open 7 Energy efficiency 8 Opportunities for capturing heat 9 Novel process routes 10 Carbon sequestration 11 Future energy use and emissions Part III With both eyes open 12 Using less metal by design 13 Reducing yield losses 14 Diverting manufacturing scrap 15 Re-using metal components 16 Longer life products 17 Reducing final demand 18 Options for change 19 Future energy use and emissions Part IV Other materials 20 Cement 287 21 Plastic 301 22 Paper 313 Part V Creating a sustainable material future 23 Business activity evaluation 24 The influence of policy 25 The actions of individuals References Index Acknowledgements

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review examines a set of energy policy interventions, which can make a major contribution to the sustainable economic, environmental, and social development of Africa's most populated country, Nigeria.
Abstract: Access to clean modern energy services is an enormous challenge facing the African continent because energy is fundamental for socioeconomic development and poverty eradication. Today, 60% to 70% of the Nigerian population does not have access to electricity. There is no doubt that the present power crisis afflicting Nigeria will persist unless the government diversifies the energy sources in domestic, commercial, and industrial sectors and adopts new available technologies to reduce energy wastages and to save cost. This review examines a set of energy policy interventions, which can make a major contribution to the sustainable economic, environmental, and social development of Africa's most populated country, Nigeria. Energy efficiency leads to important social benefits, such as reducing the energy bills for poor households. From an economic point of view, implementing the country's renewable energy target will have significant costs, but these can partly be offset by selling carbon credits according to the rules of the ‘Clean Development Mechanism’ agreed some 10 years ago, which will result in indirect health benefits. Nigeria could benefit from the targeted interventions that would reduce the local air pollution and help the country to tackle greenhouse gas emissions. Many factors that need to be considered and appropriately addressed in the shift to its sustainable energy future are examined in this article. These include a full exploitation and promotion of renewable energy resources, energy efficiency practices, as well as the application of energy conservation measures in various sectors such as in the construction of industrial, residential, and office buildings, in transportation, etc.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2012-Energy
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of energy consumption and CO2 emission on GDP (gross domestic product) growth and the financial development in thirty Sub Saharan African Countries, from the period 1980 to 2008.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate the building sector energy end-use intensity (kwh/m2 floor area) for space heating, domestic hot water, electricity for space cooling and electricity for non-space cooling applications in New York City.

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2012
TL;DR: This work studies the energy consumption of BLE by measuring real devices with a power monitor and derive models of the basic energy consumption behavior observed from the measurement results, and investigates the overhead of Ipv6-based communication over BLE, relevant for future IoT scenarios.
Abstract: Ultra low power communication mechanisms are essential for future Internet of Things deployments. Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) is one promising candidate for such deployments. We study the energy consumption of BLE by measuring real devices with a power monitor and derive models of the basic energy consumption behavior observed from the measurement results. We investigate also the overhead of Ipv6-based communication over BLE, which is relevant for future IoT scenarios. We contrast our results by performing similar measurements with ZigBee/802.15.4 devices. Our results show that when compared to ZigBee, BLE is indeed very energy efficient in terms of number of bytes transferred per Joule spent. In addition, IPv6 communication energy overhead remains reasonable. We also point out a few specific limitations with current stack implementations and explain that removing those limitations could improve energy utility significantly.

01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: This article focuses on the specific issue of advanced control system design for energy efficient buildings and its applications in building design and construction.
Abstract: The building sector is the largest energy consumer in the world. Therefore, it is economically, socially, and environmentally significant to reduce the energy consumption of buildings. Achieving substantial energy reduction in buildings may require rethinking the whole processes of design, construction, and operation of a building. This article focuses on the specific issue of advanced control system design for energy efficient buildings.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the specific issue of advanced control system design for energy efficient buildings, and propose an approach to reduce the energy consumption of buildings by rethinking the whole process of design, construction, and operation of a building.
Abstract: The building sector is the largest energy consumer in the world. Therefore, it is economically, socially, and environmentally significant to reduce the energy consumption of buildings. Achieving substantial energy reduction in buildings may require rethinking the whole processes of design, construction, and operation of a building. This article focuses on the specific issue of advanced control system design for energy efficient buildings.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper surveys and discusses various remarkable techniques toward green mobile networks to date, mainly targeting mobile cellular networks, and summarizes the current research projects related to greenMobile networks, along with the taxonomy of energy-efficiency metrics.
Abstract: The explosive development of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has significantly enlarged both the energy demands and the CO 2 emissions, and consequently contributes to make the energy crisis and global warming problems worse. However, as the main force of the ICT field, the mobile networks, are currently focusing on the capacity, variety and stability of the communication services, without paying too much severe concerns on the energy efficiency. The escalating energy costs and environmental concerns have already created an urgent need for more energy-efficient "green" wireless communications. In this paper, we survey and discuss various remarkable techniques toward green mobile networks to date, mainly targeting mobile cellular networks. We also summarize the current research projects related to green mobile networks, along with the taxonomy of energy-efficiency metrics. We finally discuss and elaborate future research opportunities and design challenges for green mobile networks.