March 2019 |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
|
Smart energy management with KNX IoT
Articles |
Interviews |
Releases |
New Products |
Reviews |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
Editorial |
Events |
Sponsors |
Site Search |
Newsletters |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
Archives |
Past Issues |
Home |
Editors |
eDucation |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
Training |
Links |
Software |
Subscribe |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
With KNX IoT, sector coupling has become a reality
In order to achieve meaningful climate
protection goals, it is essential that we take a holistic view of
energy consumption across a number of sectors, including electricity
use, heat generation and transport. The aim is to promote the use of
green electricity and accelerate the take-up of energy-efficient
technologies, and thus reduce fossil energy consumption, by linking
these sectors to an smart management system.
Energy-consuming applications in buildings can already be networked and
automated to regulate and monitor their consumption and increase energy
efficiency. But energy management can now also be used in a number of
other fields, including photovoltaic systems for self-generation and,
in the future, charging stations for electromobility. There are huge
amounts of energy to be managed in all of these fields. This makes the
coordinated coupling and optimisation of the individual energy sectors
increasingly important for climate protection.
KNX IoT implements smart energy systems The technical prerequisites to
network the energy sectors have already been met. The technical jargon
uses the terms "sector coupling" or "Integrated Energy". With KNX IoT,
these "smart energy systems" can be installed in buildings. KNX
installations connect all energy-consuming applications, including
electricity consumers, power generators, heating, air conditioning and
charging stations for electromobility via KNX IP. For example, solar
power generation, flexible charging processes for energy storage
systems and load management can all be optimally coordinated.
Generation peaks can be stored for later, peak loads avoided and a
continuous cost-optimised energy flow achieved. This has been achieved
in an ongoing model installation, which couples the various consumers
in a smart residential house equipped with a battery buffer to a smart
energy management that takes account of the house's self-generated
solar power.
Charging management in smart homes Smart homes, for example, may
feature one or more controllable charging stations for electric
vehicles, as well as the usual household appliances, electric heaters,
a heat pump system, a cooling ceiling and a photovoltaic system with an
inverter, along with an electric battery storage system fitted with a
charge controller. The KNX IoT technology regulates the energy flows to
ensure that self-generated solar power is used in a cost-optimised way.
Additional energy from the grid is also available, of course. Load
management also ensures that the maximum permissible connected load is
not exceeded. Depending on the control strategy, the electric vehicle
batteries are charged either in an eco-balance-optimised manner or in a
cost-optimised manner, using solar power in conjunction with the energy
storage system. The charging process is also flexible, taking the
vehicle's life cycle into account to utilise peaks in energy. The
individual energy sectors are coupled via Internet protocol, in this
case KNX/IP or Modbus/IP interfaces. Data for management logic is
provided, among others, by intelligent energy meters, inverters,
battery charge controllers, heat pump control and switching actuators
with current sensors. The smart energy management can be operated and
controlled via KNX visualisation. Building automation with KNX IoT is
ready for the transition to green electricity.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]Sector
coupling The term "sector coupling" means the networking of sectors of
the energy industry that have been considered independent of each other
until now: electricity, heat and e-mobility, so that renewable energies
can be optimally used and integrated. This concept entails support for
a holistic energy transition away from fossil fuels to renewable energy
sources. Additionally, smart coupling can promote the use of
energy-efficient technologies, reduce overall energy consumption and
offset fluctuations in electricity demand and wind and solar energy
generation. Sector coupling uses energy management to support the
desired climate protection goals.
For more information visit https://knx.org/knx-en/
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
[Click Banner To Learn More]
[Home Page] [The Automator] [About] [Subscribe ] [Contact Us]