Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.

BS ISO/IEC 15067-3-3:2019

$142.49

Information technology. Home electronic system (HES) application model – Model of a system of interacting energy management agents (EMAs) for demand-response energy management

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2019 30
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Category:

If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to our online customer service team by clicking on the bottom right corner. We’re here to assist you 24/7.
Email:[email protected]

This part of ISO/IEC 15067 specifies a high-level architecture and a set of models for a demand-response energy management system with multiple interacting EMAs in a home or community housing (such as one or more apartment buildings or a campus of houses). These models specify the structure among multiple EMAs, which can be arranged in a mesh or hierarchical structure. This document builds upon ISO/IEC 15067‑3.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 undefined
4 CONTENTS
6 FOREWORD
7 INTRODUCTION
8 1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Terms and definitions
9 3.2 Abbreviations
4 Conformance
10 5 Energy management agent for home or residential community
5.1 Overview for home or residential community
5.2 System architecture for an energy management system with multiple EMAs
Figures
Figure 1 – Example of an energy management system in a building with two homes
11 Figure 2 – System architecture of an energy management systemfor a home with multiple EMAs
12 5.3 Interacting energy management agents
13 Figure 3 – Example model of hierarchical interacting energy management agents
Figure 4 – Example model of mesh interacting energy management agents
14 6 Topology of energy management systems
6.1 Overview of topologies
Figure 5 – Example model of mixed hierarchical and mesh interacting energy management agents
15 6.2 Local EMA topology model
Figure 6 – Topology models for a system of interacting EMAs
16 6.3 Hybrid EMA topology model
Figure 7 – Physical topology example of local EMA topology model
Figure 8 – Physical topology example of hybrid EMA topology model
18 Annex A (informative)An energy management system with multiple energy management agents
A.1 Use cases for energy management systems with multiple energy management agents
Figure A.1 – Example of local EMA topology model for a home
19 Figure A.2 – Example of local EMA topology model for a residential community
Figure A.3 – Hybrid EMA topology model example for a home
20 Figure A.4 – Hybrid EMA topology model example for a residential community
21 A.2 Demand-response functionality of interacting EMAs
22 Figure A.5 – Function of hierarchical interacting energy management agents
Figure A.6 – Function of mesh interacting energy management agents
23 A.3 Communication capability among EMAs
24 Annex B (informative)Service scenarios of an interacting energy management agent
B.1 A service scenario of hierarchical interacting energy management agents
25 Figure B.1 – EMA to EMA interaction model in a hierarchical interacting EMA environment
26 B.2 A service scenario of mesh interacting energy management agents
Table B.1 – Information flows between server EMA and client EMA
27 Figure B.2 – EMA to EMA interactions to achieve user’s energy cost budget
28 Table B.2 – Information flows among EMAs
29 Bibliography
BS ISO/IEC 15067-3-3:2019
$142.49