1.1. Relevance of Building Energy Analysis
Reducing the energy usage in buildings is of great importance. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (Washington, DC, USA), commercial, residential, and industrial buildings accounted for nearly three-quarters of all energy consumption in the United States during 2020, with the remainder being used for transportation [
1]. The major consumers of electricity inside facilities were lighting, refrigeration, ventilation, cooling, and computer systems, totaling an approximate use of 913 billion kWh [
2]. With nearly four-fifths of all energy generation coming from carbon-based fuels in the United States [
1], it can be reasoned that the majority of energy used in buildings directly contributes to greenhouse gas emissions either through the usage of electricity that relies on carbon-based fuels for generation or through the direct utilization of these fuels.
While it is possible to change the methods of electrical generation in the United States, it is much more simple to reduce the usage of electricity downstream. The large cost to design, build, and maintain generation capacity outweighs the benefits of adding capacity. Additionally, it does not solve the root problem: too much energy usage. Excessive energy usage leads to increased fossil fuel usage. This naturally leads to increased emissions, exacerbating global warming effects. Rather than increase the energy produced, consumers should be employing more efficient versions of the equipment they operate.
Energy efficient building systems are not strictly limited to new buildings, as great energy savings can be realized in existing infrastructure. Xing, Hewitt, and Griffiths estimate that by the year 2050, 80% of the buildings humans will occupy will have already been built [
3]; therefore, existing buildings are where the greatest capacity for energy savings lie [
3]. Given this information, it is more important than ever that building managers look at ways to reduce energy usage in the buildings they currently operate.
1.2. Impact of Washington State Law
As a response to the current energy market, some state and federal legislatures have taken action to reduce energy consumption. One such state to adopt new guidelines is the state of Washington. On 17 January 2019, HB 1257 was introduced to the Washington State Legislature, commonly referred to as the Clean Buildings bill [
4]. It sought to set limits on covered commercial building energy usage for facilities of 50,000 gross square feet and over, citing improved air quality, reduced capital spending on power generation, lower building operating costs, and reducing greenhouse emissions as motivations for the bill [
4]. The bill uses ASHRAE Standard 100-2018 as a base, specifying several energy use intensity targets (EUI
) for each type of building affected [
4].
The ASHRAE standard that powers the bill includes three important dates for compliance in non-residential commercial structures. Buildings bigger than 220,000 square feet must comply by 1 June 2026 [
5]. For buildings more than 90,000 square feet but less than 220,001 square feet, the compliance date is moved out a year to 1 June 2027 [
5]. Finally, buildings that have less than 90,001 square feet but more than 50,000 square feet are required to comply by the year after, 1 June 2028 [
5]. For early adopters, incentives are available of
$0.85 per square foot minimum are available [
5].
One way in which building owners can be in compliance with the law is through exemption. According to Normative Annex Z4.1 of the Washington State Clean Buildings Performance Standard, the building must meet one of the following criteria [
5]:
The building did not have a certificate of occupancy for 12 consecutive months within a 2 year period prior to the compliance date.
The building was not physically occupied by either the owner or tenant in no less than 50% of the conditioned floor area for the 12 consecutive months prior to the compliance date.
More than half of the gross floor area is used for manufacturing activities in Group F or Group H as specified in the Washington State Building Code.
The building is for agricultural use.
The building is pending demolition.
The building has undergone financial hardship.
If the exemption is submitted but not approved, the building owner must then begin to determine if their building is to comply with the EUI
guidelines or through investment criteria [
5]. If the EUI
for a building is measurable and there is a defined target for the building type in question, the EUI
path must be taken [
5]. To determine the building’s EUI (Energy Usage Intensity), the net energy consumption is divided by the gross floor area of the building [
5]. Once this is done, the EUI
is determined by a weighting of the floor area by specific factors defined in the standard. In order to comply with the law, the calculated EUI must not exceed the EUI
determined previously [
5].
In the event that the EUI is not measurable for a building or that is does not have a specific target listed in the law, the final path to compliance is through investment [
5]. In order to comply through this path, the building owner must “complete a LCCA (life-cycle cost analysis) and implement an optimized bundle of energy efficiency measures that provide maximum energy savings without resulting in a savings-to-investment ratio of less than one” [
5].
In addition to the above compliance requirements, building owners are also required to submit plans detailing operations and maintenance of building systems as well as an energy management plan [
5]. Building owners are to come up with plans to maintain the systems in the building envelope, building systems, and building equipment that consume energy to ensure efficient operation over the useful lifespan of the systems [
5].
1.3. Lighting Systems
The earliest forms of artificial light employed by humans were the lights of campfires and torches. Primitive oil lamps were also available that utilized animal and vegetable fats. Candles for general illumination were also common. It was not until the discovery of whale oil in the mid 1800’s that lighting technology began to rapidly transform [
6]. Kerosene production overtook whale oil as the primary fuel source for lanterns and dominated the majority of light fixtures. This was the result of kerosene being able to brighter and be manufactured more economically. Once electricity became more ubiquitous, arc lights and incandescent bulbs arose, replacing fuel-based lights for general indoor and outdoor activities. In the modern day, most lights used are fluorescent lights as well as other discharge lamps like metal halide and high pressure sodium lamps; however, LED lights are emerging to the forefront as the next replacement. LED lights are more efficient, can easily emit a variety of colors, are easily dimmable through pulse-width modulation, generally last longer, and can be suited for small or large applications. In addition, occupancy sensors are also another modern invention to control lighting in an efficient manner, while light is necessary to see, leaving the lights on when they are not needed leads to waste. Occupancy sensors seek to solve this problem by switching the lights on whenever occupants are in the room and off when they leave. This is done via (1) ultrasonic sensors, (2) measuring environmental changes in the room, (3) infrared sensors, and (4) other activation methods.
A technical definition for light comes from The Society of Light and Lighting and is defined as “part of the electromagnetic spectrum that stretches from cosmic rays to radio waves” [
7]. Human photoreceptors are only able to absorb electromagnetic waves in the 380–780 nm range, so this range of light is defined as visible light [
7]. Light’s most fundamental measure for electromagnetic radiation is radiant flux, defined to be the rate of flow of energy emitted from an electromagnetic wave, and in the SI system is measured with the watt [
7]. Light in the visible spectrum is classified by luminous flux (lumens). For the visible spectrum, it is calculated by the following product:
where
is the luminous flux in lumens,
is a constant based on the definition of the observer,
is the radiant flux in a wavelength interval
, and
is the relative luminous efficiency function based on the light condition [
7].
The final important measure for light is illuminance, defined to be the amount of luminous flux per area illuminated (lumens/m
in the SI system, named lux). Spaces with activities that involve detailed work require higher illuminance than spaces with less-detailed work, and illuminance is a way to quantify this independently of workplane area since illuminance is effectively a light density. Standards define space lighting requirements via illuminance as it allows for direct comparisons of spaces irregardless of their size. For field verification purposes, illuminance meters are employed to measure a space’s illuminance in lux. On a basic level, illuminance meters consist of a photodiode and a photopic correction filter [
7]. Through the appropriate signal processing components (i.e., operational amplifiers, filters, microprocessors), the measured lux is then displayed to an LCD screen. Illuminance meters come in a range of form factors, from simple handheld devices all the way to rack-mounted laboratory-grade equipment [
7].
Literature has attempted to identify ways in which lighting energy can be reduced. In Nagy et al., it was reported that with proper calibration, occupancy sensors can be employed to reduce the power consumption in lighting fixtures while maintaining comfortable lighting levels, obtaining from 23.2% to 37.9% energy savings in typical office spaces [
8]. Previous literature reported similar reductions in power consumption, with Reinhart observing 20% to 60% reductions with combinations of occupancy sensing and automatic blinds control [
9].
Labeodan et al. investigated the effects of occupancy control in lighting systems and demonstrated two important findings. The first was that energy savings were on average 24% as compared to normal operations, and the second being that the first could be done with satisfactory occupant comfort [
10], while occupants noted distractions to their day-to-day work arising from the operation of occupancy sensors in the first week of the study, a combination of becoming used to their operation and tweaks to the luminaire switching interval were cited for being the reason behind increasing user satisfaction as the weeks of the study progressed [
10]. It should also be noted that the study proposed that occupancy sensing was not a compelling investment based on the rate of return from the reduced electricity usage, but it is still a way to increase the energy performance nevertheless [
10].
South African schools were able to save 21–39% of their electric energy costs by retrofitting fluorescent fixtures with LED tubes as reported by Booysen, Samuels, Grobbelaar [
11]. In the article, 60 W fluorescent lamps were compared to various LED lamp offerings, and a model was created to rapidly assess the benefits from retrofitting the school with LED lamps [
11]. The authors’ long-term projections found that “the most expensive [LED] light in the short them yielded the most savings in the long term, and that the price tag and long-term savings do not necessarily correspond to light quality”, demonstrating that the higher costs of quality LED lights may be deceiving when the entire life cycle cost is considered [
11].
LED lighting as a technology has made significant improvements in being a viable alternative to traditional discharge lamps like fluorescent, metal halide, and high pressure sodium lights; however, heat dissipation remains a key factor to bulb life. Using a traditional Galerkin-method finite element analysis in COMSOL, Hamida and Hatami were able to design and optimize a heatsink for the cooling of the circuitry in LED lights [
12]. Their work demonstrated that using Al
O
-water as a working fluid and through the usage of thin, long fins, the nanofluid temperature can be increased by up to 6.5% through the design optimization, enhancing the LED package to resist heat better [
12]. Work from Hamida, Almeshaal, and Hajlaoui add to the improved thermal regulation of LED packages by using COMSOL to model the junction temperature [
13]. Similar to their previous work, the LED package is attached to a heatsink and nanofluid motion through the heat sink is modeled via microchannel flow [
13]. It was demonstrated that MWCNT-Water was able to promote a 8.3% reduction in temperature of the junction when compared to MWCNT-Ethylene Glycol and a 14.9% for MWCNT-Engine Oil [
13]. In addition to these studies, several other papers have published demonstrating the advancements in LED component cooling [
14,
15,
16,
17]. Other improvements to LED lights were noted in Danyali and Moteiri where a photovoltaic LED light setup is driven by a Zeta-Sepic converter, managing the LED light to run at peak efficiency [
18]. Their system considered the optimization of light emission, electrical, and thermal energy in the design, validating their results both with a numerical simulation in MATLAB and experimentally [
18]. The control system was able to work well to balance each consideration and provide an efficient LED package for street lighting [
18].
Exterior lights have also been a field of heavy study, as many of the lights that illuminate walkways and entryways are considerably higher power than interior lights. Gorgulu and Kocabey investigated the energy-savings potential of exterior lights on a Turkish campus by calculating the energy consumption of several different scenarios and found that a combination of strategies; namely, dimming, LED retrofitting, and occupancy timing, could save up to 762 MWh of energy and
1,300,000 over 12 years [
19]. Another case they considered was to simply turn the exterior lights off 30 min after foot traffic should cease, yielding the second-largest CO
emissions and energy savings; however, they noted the obvious negative safety implications for campus security at night [
19]. They also note that while the LED retrofits do provide a return on investment, they also require a significant upfront cost compared to traditional high pressure sodium and metal halide lights [
19]. In 2015, an article by Tähkämö, Räsänen, and Halonen investigated the life cycle costs of high-pressure sodium and LED bulbs in Finland for street lighting, citing the European Union ban of high-pressure mercury bulbs as the driving factor behind the analysis [
20]. Using 30 years as the time frame, a combination of part purchase prices, freight charges, and installation fees were considered in the initial investment cost in addition to operational and maintenance fees associated with each luminaire [
20]. In the end, it was found that the LED bulbs were overall less economically viable; however, they also noted that the price is expected to continuously drop and that LED lights can offer better lighting controls and more favorable light color rendering [
20].
A energy retrofit case study was performed on the Santi Romano Dormitory on the Palermo University campus by Curto, Franzitta, Guercio, and Panno where thermal insulation, mechanical/thermal systems, and lighting were analyzed [
21]. In their study, the dormitory was first audited for its relevant features and subsequently analyzed through models created in Excel [
21]. The insulation losses, water heating load, summer cooling load, and lighting loads were generated [
21]. Once the initial loading was generated, subsequent retrofits were suggested and then analyzed such as window replacements, sunscreen films, and chiller and boiler replacements [
21]. In total, 514,477 kWh/year (65%) of electrical energy savings and 482,671 kWh/year (33%) of thermal energy savings were possible through the retrofits described in their analysis [
21].