OPTi
Luleå University of Technology is the coordinator of the OPTi project. Eight partners participate in the project, which has totaled EUR 2.1 million from EU Horizon 2020 under the Energy Program. The project has a duration of 38 months starting March 2015.
The OPTi project aspires to create a long-lasting impact by rethinking the way DHC systems are architected and controlled. The overarching goal is to create business benefit for the industry as well as to ensure optimal end-consumer satisfaction.
OPTi will deliver methodologies and tools that will enable accurate modelling, analysis and control of current and envisioned DHC systems. The methodology will be deployed both on a complete system level, and on the level of a building(s).
OPTi will treat the DHC system as a system subject to dynamic control, and will treat thermal energy as a resource to be controlled for DHC systems towards saving energy and reducing peak loads. This will lead to the most environmentally-friendly way of utilizing energy sources, thus reducing the reliance on additional boilers running on oil and/or electricity and overall providing a socio-economically sustainable environment.
OPTi will help energy companies to operate both today’s and future DHC systems in an optimal way:
- System level: We envision opportunities for SMEs to provide new services/solutions
- House level: More intelligent home DHC control systems like remote control and the consumer “virtual knob”
- General: We foresee that the OPTi framework will enable engineers to design and plan DHC
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