Thermal comfort and energy efficiency are two main goals of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, which use about 40% of the total energy in buildings. This paper aims to predict optimal room temperature, enhance comfort, and reduce energy consumption while avoiding extra energy use from overheating or overcooling. Six Machine Learning (ML) models were tested to predict the optimal temperature in the classroom based on the occupancy characteristic detected by a Deep Learning (DL) model, You Only Look Once (YOLO). The decision tree achieved the highest accuracy at 97.36%, demonstrating its effectiveness in predicting the preferred temperature. To measure energy savings, the study used RETScreen software version 9.4 to compare intelligent temperature control with traditional operation of HVAC. Genetic algorithm (GA) was further employed to optimize HVAC energy consumption while keeping the thermal comfort level by adjusting set-points based on real-time occupancy. The GA showed how to balance comfort and efficiency, leading to better system performance. The results show that adjusting from default HVAC settings to preferred thermal comfort levels as well controlling the HVAC to work only if the room is occupied can reduce energy consumption and costs by approximately 76%, highlighting the substantial impact of even simple operational adjustments. Further improvements achieved through GA-optimized temperature settings provide additional savings of around 7% relative to preferred comfort levels, demonstrating the value of computational optimization techniques in fine-tuning building performance. These results show that intelligent, data-driven HVAC control can improve comfort, save energy, lower costs, and support sustainability in buildings.
Darwish et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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