Intelligent HVAC Control in Residential Buildings: A Review of Advanced Techniques and AI Applications

Félez Val, Ricardo and Félez Mindán, Jesús ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4501-1339 (2026). Intelligent HVAC Control in Residential Buildings: A Review of Advanced Techniques and AI Applications. "Applied Sciences", v. 16 (n. 4); pp. 1-37. ISSN 1454-5101. https://doi.org/10.3390/app16042006.

Descripción

Título: Intelligent HVAC Control in Residential Buildings: A Review of Advanced Techniques and AI Applications
Autor/es:
  • Félez Val, Ricardo
  • Félez Mindán, Jesús https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4501-1339
Tipo de Documento: Artículo
Título de Revista/Publicación: Applied Sciences
Fecha: 18 Febrero 2026
ISSN: 1454-5101
Volumen: 16
Número: 4
Materias:
ODS:
Palabras Clave Informales: Intelligent HVAC systems; Model predictive control (MPC); Deep reinforcement learning (DRL); Neural networks; Residential energy efficiency; Thermal comfort optimization; Smart building automation; Occupancy-aware control; Hybrid control strategies; AI-driven HVAC
Escuela: E.T.S.I. Industriales (UPM)
Departamento: Ingeniería Mecánica
Licencias Creative Commons: Reconocimiento - Sin obra derivada - No comercial

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Resumen

Increasing energy demand, decarbonization commitments, and growing expectations for thermal comfort are driving the need for more adaptive and efficient climate control in residential buildings. This review synthesizes contemporary intelligent HVAC control strategies, including model-predictive control (MPC), deep reinforcement learning (DRL), data-driven forecasting, and hybrid approaches. Following PRISMA guidelines, a set of studies published between 2010 and 2025 was systematically screened and analyzed to identify the dominant methodological trends, data requirements, implementation architectures, and evaluation practices reported in the literature. This review highlights how these methods differ in modeling assumptions, computational complexity, robustness to uncertainty, and suitability for residential environments characterized by stochastic occupancy and heterogeneous building stock. In addition, we examine enabling technologies such as sensing infrastructures, pricing signals, and embedded computation, as well as barriers to real-world deployment, including data availability, interpretability, and integration with existing building systems. The findings provide a consolidated framework for understanding the capabilities and limitations of intelligent HVAC control and outline research gaps that remain for achieving scalable, user-centered, and energy-efficient operation in residential buildings.

Más información

ID de Registro: 95737
Identificador DC: https://oa.upm.es/95737/
Identificador OAI: oai:oa.upm.es:95737
URL Portal Científico: https://portalcientifico.upm.es/es/ipublic/item/10487930
Identificador DOI: 10.3390/app16042006
URL Oficial: https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/16/4/2006
Depositado por: iMarina Portal Científico
Depositado el: 23 Abr 2026 14:43
Ultima Modificación: 23 Abr 2026 14:43