DocumentCode
164414
Title
An investigation for improved home energy management
Author
Arif, Mohammad T. ; Oo, Amanullah Maung Than ; Stojcevski, Alex
Author_Institution
Sch. of Eng., Deakin Univ., Geelong, VIC, Australia
fYear
2014
fDate
Sept. 28 2014-Oct. 1 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
8
Abstract
Increasing household energy consumption and increasing primary energy cost urged to improve home energy efficiency. Improved energy management can suggest the ways to improve home energy efficiency. Various home appliances are the prime cause to the increased power demand. Appliance´s energy rating information helps to develop awareness and reduce energy consumption. Load shifting can help to reduce overall cost of used energy bill by shifting peak time load to off-peak time. However most of the present appliances remains in standby mode (active or passive) for a significant part of the day, and load shifting cannot reduce the total energy consumption. Therefore investigation is required to identify any possible scopes to improve energy management at home. This paper investigated several home appliances and monitored daily time of use power consumption. It was found that by controlling standby power from a daily home load of 4.482 kWh, power demand can be reduced 12.56% moreover energy related greenhouse gas (GHG) emission can be reduced 133.08kg/year.
Keywords
air pollution control; cost reduction; domestic appliances; energy conservation; energy consumption; energy management systems; power system economics; GHG emission reduction; appliance energy rating information; daily home load; energy bill; greenhouse gas emission reduction; home appliances; home energy efficiency management improvement; household energy consumption reduction; load shifting peak time; primary energy cost reduction; standby mode control; Australia; Educational institutions; Energy consumption; Energy efficiency; Home appliances; Power demand; TV; Energy Management; Energy efficiency; Stand-by power;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Engineering Conference (AUPEC), 2014 Australasian Universities
Conference_Location
Perth, WA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AUPEC.2014.6966596
Filename
6966596
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