Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6696048 | Automation in Construction | 2018 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Current urban and district energy management systems lack a common semantic referential for effectively interrelating intelligent sensing, data models and energy models with visualization, analysis and decision support tools. This paper describes the structure, as well as the rationale that led to this structure, of an ontology that captures the real-world concepts of a district energy system, such as a district heating and cooling system. This ontology (called ee-district ontology) is intended to support knowledge provision that can play the role of an intermediate layer between high-level energy management software applications and local monitoring and control software components. In order to achieve that goal, the authors propose to encapsulate queries to the ontology in a scalable web service, which will facilitate the development of interfaces for third-party applications. Considering the size of the ee-district ontology once populated with data from a specific district case study, this could prove to be a repetitive and time-consuming task for the software developer. This paper therefore assesses the feasibility of ontology-driven automation of web service development that is to be a core element in the deployment of heterogeneous district-wide energy management software.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
J.-L. Hippolyte, Y. Rezgui, H. Li, B. Jayan, S. Howell,