A Fault-Tolerant Backbone Network Architecture Targeting Time-Critical Communication for Avionic WDM LANs

Author(s):  
D. Wang ◽  
A. Kumar ◽  
M. Sivakumar ◽  
J. Y. McNair
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 168781402110670
Author(s):  
Yanxiang Chen ◽  
Zuxing Zhao ◽  
Euiyoul Kim ◽  
Haiyang Liu ◽  
Juan Xu ◽  
...  

As wheels are important components of train operation, diagnosing and predicting wheel faults are essential to ensure the reliability of rail transit. Currently, the existing studies always separately deal with two main types of wheel faults, namely wheel radius difference and wheel flat, even though they are both reflected by wheel radius changes. Moreover, traditional diagnostic methods, such as mechanical methods or a combination of data analysis methods, have limited abilities to efficiently extract data features. Deep learning models have become useful tools to automatically learn features from raw vibration signals. However, research on improving the feature-learning capabilities of models under noise interference to yield higher wheel diagnostic accuracies has not yet been conducted. In this paper, a unified training framework with the same model architecture and loss function is established for two homologous wheel faults. After selecting deep residual networks (ResNets) as the backbone network to build the model, we add the squeeze and excitation (SE) module based on a multichannel attention mechanism to the backbone network to learn the global relationships among feature channels. Then the influence of noise interference features is reduced while the extraction of useful information features is enhanced, leading to the improved feature-learning ability of ResNet. To further obtain effective feature representation using the model, we introduce supervised contrastive loss (SCL) on the basis of ResNet + SE to enlarge the feature distances of different fault classes through a comparison between positive and negative examples under label supervision to obtain a better class differentiation and higher diagnostic accuracy. We also complete a regression task to predict the fault degrees of wheel radius difference and wheel flat without changing the network architecture. The extensive experimental results show that the proposed model has a high accuracy in diagnosing and predicting two types of wheel faults.


Author(s):  
Syed Masud Mahmud

New types of communication networks will be necessary to meet various consumer and regulatory demands as well as satisfy requirements of safety and fuel efficiency. Various functionalities of vehicles will require various types of communication networks and networking protocols. For example, driveby- wire and active safety features will require fault tolerant networks with time-triggered protocols to guarantee deterministic latencies. Multimedia systems will require high-bandwidth networks for video transfer, and body electronics need low-bandwidth networks to keep the cost down. As the size and complexity of the network grows, the ease of integration, maintenance and troubleshooting has become a major challenge. To facilitate integration and troubleshooting of various nodes and networks, it would be desirable that networks of future vehicles should be partitioned, and the partitions should be interconnected by a hierarchical or multi-layer physical network. This book chapter describes a number of ways using which the networks of future vehicles could be designed and implemented in a cost-effective manner. The book chapter also shows how simulation models can be developed to evaluate the performance of various types of in-vehicle network topologies and select the most appropriate topology for given requirements and specifications.


2008 ◽  
Vol E91-B (8) ◽  
pp. 2704-2706 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. TAKEDA ◽  
E. OKI ◽  
I. INOUE ◽  
K. SHIOMOTO ◽  
K. FUJIHARA ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Chakib Nehnouh ◽  
Mohamed Senouci

To provide correct data transmission and to handle the communication requirements, the routing algorithm should find a new path to steer packets from the source to the destination in a faulty network. Many solutions have been proposed to overcome faults in network-on-chips (NoCs). This article introduces a new fault-tolerant routing algorithm, to tolerate permanent and transient faults in NoCs. This solution called DINRA can satisfy simultaneously congestion avoidance and fault tolerance. In this work, a novel approach inspired by Catnap is proposed for NoCs using local and global congestion detection mechanisms with a hierarchical sub-network architecture. The evaluation (on reliability, latency and throughput) shows the effectiveness of this approach to improve the NoC performances compared to state of art. In addition, with the test module and fault register integrated in the basic architecture, the routers are able to detect faults dynamically and re-route packets to fault-free and congestion-free zones.


2012 ◽  
Vol 198-199 ◽  
pp. 391-395
Author(s):  
Bo Xie ◽  
Shi Wen Wang

In order to meet the security requirement of the dispatching data network and the features of its main applications, the principle of IP over SDH and the overall plan of Henan Power dispatching data network (HNDnet) based on IP over SDH is presented, together with the network architecture of the dual-plane backbone network and access network. Kernel design, network protection on communication side and routers access mode of Henan data dispatching network based on the dual-plane power communication network are illustrated in detail and some examples are given. Then a safer dispatching data network is provided.


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