| Articles
“UCB center wins funding to develop wireless lighting
controls”, © University of California Newsroom, 9/24/04
Building science researchers at the University of
California, Berkeley, have received a grant from the
California Energy Commission to develop a flexible,
low-cost lighting control system that could provide
commercial building owners with significant energy savings
and more satisfied tenants. The research team, based at
the campus's Center for the Built Environment (CBE), will
construct the system using miniature, low-power radio
technology being developed at UC Berkeley.
Because lighting energy accounts for nearly 50 percent of
electricity use in commercial buildings, the new wireless
system holds great potential for energy savings. In many
buildings, lights are left on unnecessarily because of
inadequate controls. Traditional switches are typically
expensive to install, inflexible, and generally unable to
respond to available daylight or occupancy.
By building the new system using a wireless network
instead of traditional wiring, CBE's research team aims to
greatly reduce installation costs for the new system, and
to allow for cost-effective retrofits in existing
buildings.
According to CBE Research Specialist Charlie Huizenga, the
cost of installing today's wired switches is approximately
$150 to $200 per switch. "Improvements in wireless
technology will make our system cost effective for many
applications. We estimate that within a few years, the
installed cost of our wireless devices could be as low as
$25 per device," he said.
Unlike lighting control systems now available, CBE's
proposed system will be compatible with a wide variety of
existing light fixtures, lamps and ballasts. In
pilot installations, CBE has installed light controllers
in a matter of minutes.
Huizenga said that the new system will have advanced
features that enable building occupants to control
lighting to suit their individual preferences.
"In rooms or areas of a building with adequate daylight,
lights could be turned off manually by occupants, or
automatically with daylight sensors," he said. "In large
open offices, lights could be controlled above individual
workspaces. This will allow us to avoid the common
scenario in which you have an enormous office area with
all the lights blazing, when there are only a handful of
people actually working in the space."
The wireless system will provide flexibility by allowing a
single switch to control a variety of lights. Switches
will be designed so that they may be easily reprogrammed
when workers move to new locations, or when office layouts
change.
Previous research conducted by CBE and other groups has
shown that building occupants who have some element of
control of their workspaces are generally more satisfied
that occupants with no control.
Another important application of the new lighting control
technology would come during periods of peak electrical
demand. CBE's proposed system could automatically
eliminate 50 percent or more of the lighting load in many
buildings during peak times, without compromising health
and safety.
CBE's $75,000 grant comes through the Energy Innovations
Small Grant Program, part of the California Energy
Commission's Public Interest Energy Research (PIER)
program.
The small grants programs are aimed at small businesses,
academic institutions and non-profit organizations that
would not normally qualify for PIER funding. The objective
of PIER is to provide seed funding for small but
innovative projects that will reduce the cost of producing
electricity, save energy and improve the environment.
CBE may seek more funding from its industry partners to
take its prototype to the next level, said Huizenga,
noting intense interest from leading building industry
firms and organizations that follow and support the
center's work to improve the performance of
non-residential buildings.
|