Rotating magnetic field based instantaneous angular speed measurement of low speed rotating machines

Author(s):  
S. Javed Arif ◽  
Imdadullah ◽  
M. S. Jamil Asghar
2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (15) ◽  
pp. 3413-3425 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Moustafa ◽  
O Cousinard ◽  
F Bolaers ◽  
K Sghir ◽  
JP Dron

Author(s):  
Souha Khadraoui ◽  
Fabrice Bolaers ◽  
Olivier Cousinard ◽  
Jean Paul Dron

Author(s):  
Hugo Andre´ ◽  
Didier Re´mond ◽  
Adeline Bourdon

Power transmission faults are one important cause of machine downtime many production activities are working to prevail. Vibration monitoring tools have achieved this role on the assumption that the stationary condition hypothesis is maintained. Several industries, including wind energy production, are however demanding to observe mechanical or electrical rotating components behaviour at variable speeds. Instantaneous angular speed measurement has been recently proven able to detect localized faults in bearings using only an encoder close from the source of the defect. This paper presents the results obtained from a large span experiment on a 2MW wind turbine. The uniqueness of the sensor used to monitor the whole line shafting along with the continuous non stationary conditions are so many difficulties cumulated on this attempt. Two basic signal processing tools are theoretically defined and experimentally applied in an original way on the Instantaneous Angular Speed measurement to efficiently tackle these practical issues.


Measurement ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 107636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihaita Horodinca ◽  
Ionut Ciurdea ◽  
Dragos-Florin Chitariu ◽  
Adriana Munteanu ◽  
Mihai Boca

1986 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 513 ◽  
Author(s):  
WN Hugrass

In rotating magnetic field (RMF) current drive experiments, the RMF is usually generated by means of a two-phase radio frequency (r.f.) system which feeds a pair of orthogonal coils. The magnetic field generated in this manner consists of the desired RMF as well as the (undesired) odd spatial harmonics. The (2j-l)th spatial harmonic field rotates about the axis at an angular speed (-1)-i-lwl(2j-1), where w is the angular frequency of the r.f. current. In order to evaluate the effect of these spatial harmonics on the performance of the RMF current drive experiments, we have developed a simplified theoretical model for the plasma. In this model, the ions are assumed immobile and the motion of the electron fluid in the azimuthal direction is assumed to be a rigid rotation. It has been found using this model that the presence of the spatial harmonics makes the RMF current drive less efficient. It has also been found that the effect of the spatial harmonics can be made negligible by (a) making the width of the coils sufficiently larger than the diameter of the plasma, (b) carefully designing the coil configuration to eliminate the fifth harmonic or (c) using a three-phase system to generate the RMF.


2018 ◽  
Vol 211 ◽  
pp. 18006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjin Braut ◽  
Roberto Žigulić ◽  
Ante Skoblar ◽  
Goranka Štimac Rončević

Rotating machinery encounter throughout their lifetime various problems. Among them, a rotor-stator rubbing problem is one of the most common. This paper proposes a procedure, which applies the instantaneous angular speed (IAS) measurement as a starting step for rotor-stator partial rub detection. There are various approaches regarding counting techniques and processing of signal. In this paper, an application of analog signals from toothed wheel encoder or zebra tape encoder is considered at low to moderate sampling rates. As the rubbing process is nonlinear, this paper is proposing a variational mode decomposition (VMD) as the second step of the detection procedure. The VMD is relatively new method with promising results especially interesting for machinery fault detection. Detection tool is tested on laboratory test rig at two different rotor operating conditions i.e. without rotor-stator rubbing and with light partial rotor-stator rub. Measurements were performed with non-contact eddy current displacement sensors pointed to toothed wheel encoder. Results are presented in the shape of rotor orbits, IAS signals, FFT spectra of IAS signals and VMD spectrograms. Developed fault detection procedure based on IAS measurement and VMD decomposition was successfully tested on laboratory test rig for no rubbing and light rotor to stator partial rub condition.


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