Smart Buildings & Cities PDEng programThe Smart Buildings & Cities (SBC) PDEng program wants to contribute to the transition towards smart, intelligent and sustainable cities where quality of life is high. This transition requires new solutions which can only be created through multiscale and transdisciplinary (design) approaches. This requires technical designers who are able to work in a multidisciplinary environment and know how to communicate with different disciplines and stake holders. This PDEng program educates trainees to become those technical designers! Please note that this program is about technological design, i.e., the process of solving problems by means of a technological design, this in contrast to (PhD) research, which is the process of understanding problems.
The trainee position leads to the degree of 'Professional Doctorate in Engineering' (PDEng).
The program consists of two main parts running in parallel:
- Half of the program consists of post-master level education in the form of generic design projects and courses about design methods, entrepreneurship and professional skills. Furthermore, it includes several technical courses about topics relevant to SBC.
- The other half of the program is dedicated to an individual design project in collaboration with a company. It is the main responsibility of the trainee to manage and execute the project. Each trainee is supported by an advisor from the company and an advisor from the university.
The company design project connected to this traineeship is related to energy flexibility services that can be offered by office buildings.
Providing energy flexibility as a service to balance the (local) electricity grid offers interesting (business) opportunities to the building owner. The building can for example offer/sell its energy flexibility to an aggregator on the market and thus reduce its operational costs; the aggregator can group the flexibility of multiple buildings in order to generate enough flexibility volume for the market.
The goal of this project is to develop a tool that predicts the potential energy flexibility that a specific office building design can provide by using adaptive comfort control strategies (without compromising thermal comfort). The tool compares the predicted energy flexibility to the other available energy flexibility sources in the building. The business case associated with the predicted building energy flexibility will be investigated, i.e., it will show if the energy flexibility provided by the building is of interest to an aggregator on the energy market.The tool can be used by energy consultants to identify which building design show the most potential to be used as an energy flexibility source.
The PDEng trainee will be embedded in the Building Performance research group -
https://www.tue.nl/en/research/research-groups/building-physics-and-services/building-performance/