IEEE Access (Jan 2021)
A Smart Home Architecture for Smart Energy Consumption in a Residence With Multiple Users
Abstract
Smart Energy Control Systems (SECS) has been increasingly implemented in the Smart homes scenario, due to the possibility of conditioning and controlling residential energy consumption, thus contributing to reducing energy losses and unnecessary electrical consumption. With the evolution of embedded systems in conjunction with the Internet of Things (IoT), Smart Outlet (SO), and devices that promote the Users Indoor Identification (UII) environments, they have assumed fundamental roles in the acquisition of data from electrical devices and also in the mapping of the individualized consumption of each resident throughout the day, providing essential information for SECS Systems as a way to assist in energy balance with minimal impact on the daily usability of electrical equipment. However, in most of the works that propose these types of assistance to SECS based on SO and UII, they have a massive implementation of sensors throughout the residence, misinterpretation of the data generated by the residents, difficulty in the identification of multiple residents. Thus, the present work proposes an evolution of an SECS architecture called SmartCom, with the implementation of accurate identification of electrical equipment through Near Field Communication (NFC)-based SO (data transfer between the appliance and the SO) and of multiple inhabitants through Wi-Fi handover using smartphones, with the least possible impact on the user's comfort, as well as in the building structure, achieving a rebalanced residential energy consumption 87.3% of the time it was used.
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