You are on page 1of 5

11/14/13 Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring

www.georgehart.com/research/nalm.html 1/5
Nonintrusive Appliance
Load Monitoring
Contents:
1. Technical Overview
2. Multistate Appliances
3. Development Status
4. People to Contact
5. References and Related Links
This page is was created by George W. Hart some 5
years ago, and is now fairly out of date. I am no longer
doing research in this area and can provide no more recent information.
Technical Overview
A Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitor (NALM) is designed to monitor an electrical circuit that contains a
number of devices (appliances) which switch on and off independently. By a sophisticated analysis of the current
and voltage waveforms of the total load, the NALM estimates the number and nature of the individual loads,
their individual energy consumption, and other relevant statistics such as time-of-day variations. No access to the
individual components is necessary for installing sensors or making measurements. This can provide a very
convenient and effective method of gathering load data compared to traditional means of placing sensors on each
of the individual components of the load. The resulting end-use load data is extremely valuable to consumers,
energy auditors, utilities, public policy makers, and appliance manufacturers, for a broad range of purposes. For
example, a monitor placed outside a home can determine how much energy goes into each of the major
appliances within the home.
In a utility application, a NALM connects with the total load using the standard revenue meter socket interface,
as shown in the figure above. This permits very easy installation, removal, and maintenance compared with
traditional intrusive load monitoring techniques that require ``submetering'' and interior wiring. The NALM
monitors the total load, checking for certain ``signatures" which provide information about the activity of the
appliances which constitute the load. For example, if the residence contains a refrigerator which consumes 250
W and 200 VAR, then a step increase of that characteristic size indicates that the refrigerator turned on, and a
decrease of that size indicates the turn-off events. Other appliances have other characteristic signatures. After
determining the exact on and off times from the signature events, any desired statistics, such as energy
consumption vs. time of day or temperature, can be tabulated.
11/14/13 Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring
www.georgehart.com/research/nalm.html 2/5
To appreciate how this works, consider this figure, which plots total (real) power consumption vs. time for a
single-family home over a two-hour period. During this interval, the total load shows activity due to a refrigerator
and a heater. Two different-sized step changes are clearly present, providing characteristic signatures of the
refrigerator and the heater. The refrigerator cycles on and off three times, the heater six times. By measuring the
total load ouside the home, it is not difficult to find these step changes and measure their size. Knowing the time
of each on and off event, the total energy consumption of the refrigerator and the heater are easily determined.
By also considering measurements of the total reactive power or harmonic current, along with the real power
shown, changes in the resulting vector function of time would reveal even more information about the particular
appliances.
Traditional load research instrumentation involves complex data-gathering hardware but simple software. A
monitoring point at each appliance of interest and wires (or sometimes power-line carrier techniques) connecting
each to a central data-gathering location provide separate data paths, so the software merely has to tabulate the
data arriving over these separate hardware channels. The NALM approach reverses this balance, with simple
hardware but complex software for signal processing and analysis. Only a single point in the circuit is
instrumented, but mathematical algorithms must separate the measured load into separate components. In many
load-monitoring applications, this is a very cost-effective tradeoff, which is a major advantage of the NALM.
In order to accurately decompose the aggregate load into its components, a model-based approach for
describing individual appliances and their combination is used. These models suggest certain signatures which can
be detected in the total load to indicate the activities of the separate components. This leads naturally to practical
architectures and algorithms for the NALM. For full details, see the references below. We have implemented
these ideas and carried out a number of initial field tests on residential loads to compare the NALM to traditional
load monitoring techniques employed by electric utilities. Based on these tests, a commercial version of the
NALM is being developed for widespread utility use.
Back to Tabl e of Contents
Multistate Appliances
My recent research has focused on appliances which can be understood as multistate devices, using finite-state
machine (FSM) models. There are three classes of appliance models from the NALM perspective:
11/14/13 Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring
www.georgehart.com/research/nalm.html 3/5
ON/OFF (Two-state)
Appliances such as light bulbs or toasters, which are either on or off at any given moment. Early research
focused on techniques for monitoring these.
Multistate
Appliances such as washing machines or dishwashers, with distinct types of ON states, e.g., fill, rinse,
spin, pump, etc. Recent research has extended the methods to apply to the multi-state case.
Continuously variable
Appliances like light dimmers and variable-speed hand tools, with a continuous range of ON states. These
are difficult to monitor nonintrusively, because they do not generate step changes in power.
To learn the FSM control structure of
different multistate appliances, we have
developed the portable instrumentation
illustrated here. This is a new tool, which
analyzes the behavior of an operating
electrical load in a novel manner by
automatically describing it with a finite-state
model of its control structure. A personal-
computer-based system collects samples of
real and reactive power consumption over time, and automatically learns the control structure of the load in real
time, drawing its finite-state diagram. The system also reports the load's state at each point in time, the total time
spent in each state, and total energy consumption for each of the states.
One use of this tool is to provide a database of common appliance FSM structures for the NALM project. This
research also has applications to behavioral analysis, energy monitoring, fault monitoring, fault analysis, and
power quality analysis of many types of electrical loads, controllers, and power sources. Although only tested on
residential loads and consumer appliances so far, the underlying methods should also work on commercial and
industrial loads, e.g., HVAC control systems.
Three-way Lamp
As an example, if a three-way lamp is operated, a plot of power
versus time shows plateaus at the low, medium, and high power
levels. The patern-recognition algorithm in the instrument detects
these, and constructs the FSM disaram shown, illustrating how
the four states are cyclically connected.

Frost-free Refrigerator with Interior Lamp
A more complex example is this frost-free refrigerator. From the
measured plots of real and reactive power, the six-state FSM
shown is generated. The inner three states correspond to the light
being off (the door closed) and the outer three occur when the
light is on. The power plot shows how on/off cycles of the
11/14/13 Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring
www.georgehart.com/research/nalm.html 4/5
compressor are followed by a single defrost cycle in which the
motor is off but a heater is on (so there is a large real power, but
no reactive power). The FSM generated captures all this
behavior


For details of the algorithm, discussion, and many more
examples, see my paper ``Automatic Construction of Finite-State
Load Behavior Models," listed in the references below.
Back to Tabl e of Contents
NALM Development Status
The Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) has sponsored
NALM research since its conception in the early 1980's. EPRI
has chosen Telog Instruments to commercialize the NALM into a
research tool available to electric utilities. A beta-test program of
the commercial version of the NALM is underway, and units are expected to be available to electric utilities in
1997. For exact availability information, contact: TelogSales@telog.com
Telog Instruments, Inc.
830 Canning Parkway
Victor, NY 14564-8940
(716) 742-3000
Back to Tabl e of Contents
People to Contact
A number of people at a number of organizations are involved in research and development of NALM
techniques.
George W. Hart
Originator and developer of the NALM. Originally at MIT, then at Columbia University, I was briefly at
Hofstra University. Contact information and additional information regarding my research is available on
my home page.
Lawrence Carmichael
Mr. Carmichael is the project supervisor at the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) in charge of the
NALM. (415) 855-7982
Mark Malmendier
11/14/13 Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring
www.georgehart.com/research/nalm.html 5/5
Mr. Malmendier is the product manager of Telog Instruments, Inc. in Rochester, New York. (716) 742-
3000, email: TelogSales@telog.com
Leslie Norford and Steven Leeb
Profs. Norford and Leeb are engaged in research at MIT to explore the possibilities of extending NALM
techniques to transient information in commercial buildings.
Jackie Lemmerhirt and Ralph Abbott
Plexus Research (in Acton, Massachusettes) is involved in coordinating the electric utility community to the
NALM development efforts. Ms. Lemmerhirt (jlemmerhirt@plxs.com) is carrying out a project
comparing NALM output with independent instrumentation in a number of test houses. This should
provide solid data on the accuracy of the NALM. Mr. Abbott is president of Plexus.
Back to Tabl e of Contents
References
A good introductory tutorial survey is the following article. (The above technical overview is excerpted from it.)
Hart, G.W., ``Nonintrusive Appliance Load Monitoring," Proceedings of the IEEE, December 1992,
pp. 1870-1891.
A complete bibliography of published papers concerning nonintrusive load monitoring is also available.

You might also like