Reducing Energy Waste through Eco-Aware Everyday Things
Author(s) -
Juan López-de-Armentia,
Diego Casado–Mansilla,
Sergio López-Pérez,
Diego López–de–Ipiña
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
mobile information systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.346
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1875-905X
pISSN - 1574-017X
DOI - 10.1155/2014/956135
Subject(s) - computer science , energy (signal processing) , efficient energy use , everyday life , function (biology) , computer security , invoice , embedding , environmental economics , electrical engineering , artificial intelligence , world wide web , statistics , mathematics , evolutionary biology , political science , law , engineering , economics , biology
Society wastes much more energy than it should. This produces tons of unnecessary CO 2 emissions. This is partly due to the inadequate use of electrical devices given the intangible and invisible nature of energy. This misuse of devices and energy unawareness is particularly relevant in public spaces (offices, schools, hospitals and so on), where people use electrical appliances, but they do not directly pay the invoice to energy providers. Embedding intelligence within public, shared appliances, transforming them into Eco-aware things, is valuable to reduce a proportion of the unnecessarily consumed energy. To this end, we present a twofold approach for better energy efficiency in public spaces: (1) informing persuasively to concerned users about the misuse of electronic appliances; (2) Customizing the operating mode of this everyday electrical appliances as a function of their real usage pattern. To back this approach, a capsule-based coffee machine placed in a research laboratory has been augmented. This device is able to continuously collect its usage pattern to offer feedback to coffee consumers about the energy wasting and also, to intelligently adapt its operation to reduce wasted energy. To this aim, several machine learning approaches are compared and evaluated to forecast the next-day device usage.
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