Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Data-Based Mechanistic Modelling (DBM) and cont...
View graph of relations

Data-Based Mechanistic Modelling (DBM) and control of mass and energy transfer in agricultural buildings

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
Close
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>1999
<mark>Journal</mark>Annual Reviews in Control
Issue number1
Volume23
Number of pages12
Pages (from-to)71-82
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

This paper discusses the Data-Based Mechanistic (DBM) approach to modelling the micro-climate in agricultural buildings. Here, the imperfect mixing processes that dominate the system behaviour during forced ventilation are first modelled objectively, in purely data-based terms, by continuous-time transfer function relationships. In their equivalent differential equation form, however, these models can be interpreted in terms of the Active Mixing Volume (AMV) concept, developed previously at Lancaster in connection with pollution transport in rivers and soils and, latterly, in modelling the micro-climate of horticultural glasshouses. The data used in the initial stages of the research project, as described in the paper, have been obtained from a series of planned ventilation experiments carried out in a large instrumented chamber at Leuven. The overall objectives of this collaborative study are two-fold: first, to gain a better understanding of the mass and heat transfer dynamics in the chamber; and second, to develop models that can form the basis for the design of optimal Proportional-Integral-Plus, Linear Quadratic (PIP-LQ) climate control systems for livestock buildings of a kind used previously for controlling the micro-climate in horticultural glasshouses.