This study investigates the incorporation of a standardised flexibility protocol within a physics-based models to enable controllable demand-side flexibility in residential energy systems. A heating subsystem is developed using MATLAB/Simulink and Simscape, serving as a testbed for protocol-driven control within a Multi-Energy System (MES). A conventional thermostat controller is first established, followed by the implementation of an OpenADR event engine in Stateflow. Simulations conducted under consistent boundary conditions reveal that protocol-enabled control enhances system performance in several respects. It maintains a more stable and pronounced indoor–outdoor temperature differential, thereby improving thermal comfort. It also reduces fuel consumption by curtailing or shifting heat output during demand-response events, while remaining within acceptable comfort limits. Additionally, it improves operational stability by dampening high-frequency fluctuations in mdotfuel. The resulting co-simulation pipeline offers a modular and reproducible framework for analysing the propagation of grid-level signals to device-level actions. The research contributes a simulation-ready architecture that couples standardised demand-response signalling with a physics-based MES model, alongside quantitative evidence that protocol-compliant actuation can deliver comfort-preserving flexibility in residential heating. The framework is readily extensible to other energy assets, such as cooling systems, electric vehicle charging, and combined heat and power (CHP), and is adaptable to additional protocols, thereby supporting future cross-vector investigations into digitally enabled energy flexibility.
Chen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.