Calibration usually is not limited by a lack of variables. It is limited by having too many.
When calibrating an energy model, there are essentially unlimited inputs that can be adjusted. That is why calibration can become overwhelming very quickly.
The good news is that if the model was built carefully, many inputs are probably already close.
For example, if documented wall constructions and fenestration performance values were used, those inputs are often reasonably accurate. They usually do not need major adjustment during calibration.
A few other inputs, however, tend to dominate the process because they are difficult to predict in the real world.
This is often the number one factor that makes or breaks a calibration. Plug loads, process loads, and equipment usage frequently differ from the assumptions used in design models.
True infiltration rates are nearly impossible to know with certainty because they depend heavily on occupant behavior. Doors opening, building pressurization, and operational practices can all change infiltration significantly.
On new buildings, cooling performance depends heavily on part-load performance. Models often do not get that exactly right the first time.
On older buildings, cooling equipment may have degraded enough that the nominal efficiency is no longer realistic. One common sign is when the summer months refuse to line up with the utility bills.
Another issue that frequently gets overlooked is minimum airflow in VAV systems.
In newer buildings, oversized fans can affect true operating flow. In existing buildings, minimums are often overridden over time.
Mismatched VAV minimums can create calibration chaos because they affect cooling energy, heating energy, and fan energy at the same time.
Calibration almost always requires multiple iterations. You run the model, compare the results to utility data, adjust assumptions, and run it again.
That is where time disappears.
To speed that process up, I built a spreadsheet that allows you to import monthly simulation results directly from the output file and immediately compare them to utility data.
The charts help you see how the model is drifting, and that matters because different calibration problems often create different monthly patterns.
I have refined this spreadsheet over several years and recently made it available publicly.
If you want to see how it works, including a demo video, you can view it here:
For modelers doing repeated calibration runs, the goal is simple: spend less time moving data around and more time understanding what the model is telling you.
Bob Fassbender is the founder of Energy-Models.com and Fassbender Energy Advisory. A former Trane software engineer and instructor, Bob has more than 20 years of experience in energy modeling, building performance, utility incentives, and energy strategy. His work spans whole-building energy modeling, calibration, independent technical review, decarbonization planning, utility incentive strategy, renewable energy analysis, and owner advisory services. Bob has supported projects ranging from commercial buildings and utility programs to large-scale data center developments involving power infrastructure, geothermal systems, heat recovery, and long-term energy planning. Through Energy-Models.com, Bob has trained thousands of energy professionals in eQUEST, OpenStudio, EnergyPlus, LEED modeling, and building performance analysis. He continues to advise owners, engineers, architects, and developers on energy-related decisions while exploring emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and advanced building analytics.
Energy-Models.com is a site for energy modelers, building simulators, architects, and engineers who want learn the basics, to advanced concepts of energy modeling. We've got online training courses and tutorials for eQUEST, Trane TRACE 700, OpenStudio, and LEED for energy modeling. All our energy modeling courses are video based. What better way to learn energy modeling software than screen-casts of exactly how things are done?
Copyright © 2010-2024 CosmoLogic LLC. TRACE 700 and eQUEST are ™ of Trane Inc. and James J. Hirsch respectively. Energy-Models.com is built in San Francisco, CA and Slinger, WI USA.