04 February 2024

 

BICEPS Poster

Project Description

Human industrial societies today require over 70 times more energy per day than natural ecosystems, and all the while our societies are draining and polluting the invaluable life services that the natural world provides. Further, our societies are experiencing frequent power outages due to human threats (e.g. cyber-attacks) and natural disasters (e.g. wildfires, hurricanes), causing serious losses in property, economics, and life. The Biomimetic Integrated Community Energy and Power System (BICEPS) is a holistic innovative community energy system that integrates multiple renewable energy resources (solar electricity, hot/cold water, biofuel) to create sustainable and resilient energy networks. Energy resources in BICEPS are diverse, distributed, and life-friendly, mimicking mature natural ecosystems like a old growth forest. The BICEPS’s design and operational schemes are tested using the cutting-edge computer modeling and simulation language Modelica, which is the Department of Energy’s next-generation platform for building and community energy modeling.

Collaborators

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Sponsor

U.S. Department of Energy IBUILD Research Fellowship

Papers

Exergy-based ecological network analysis for building and community energy systems

Ecosystem-level biomimicry for the built environment: adopting systems ecology principles for the control of heterogeneous energy systems

Design methodologies and engineering applications for ecosystem biomimicry: An interdisciplinary review spanning cyber, physical, and cyber-physical systems