Power transformer equivalent circuit identification by artificial neural network using frequency response analysis

Author(s):  
G.M.V. Zambrano ◽  
A.C. Ferreira ◽  
L.P. Caloba
Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 3227
Author(s):  
Mehran Tahir ◽  
Stefan Tenbohlen

Frequency response analysis (FRA) is a well-known method to assess the mechanical integrity of the active parts of the power transformer. The measurement procedures of FRA are standardized as described in the IEEE and IEC standards. However, the interpretation of FRA results is far from reaching an accepted and definitive methodology as there is no reliable code available in the standard. As a contribution to this necessity, this paper presents an intelligent fault detection and classification algorithm using FRA results. The algorithm is based on a multilayer, feedforward, backpropagation artificial neural network (ANN). First, the adaptive frequency division algorithm is developed and various numerical indicators are used to quantify the differences between FRA traces and obtain feature sets for ANN. Finally, the classification model of ANN is developed to detect and classify different transformer conditions, i.e., healthy windings, healthy windings with saturated core, mechanical deformations, electrical faults, and reproducibility issues due to different test conditions. The database used in this study consists of FRA measurements from 80 power transformers of different designs, ratings, and different manufacturers. The results obtained give evidence of the effectiveness of the proposed classification model for power transformer fault diagnosis using FRA.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (14) ◽  
pp. 4242
Author(s):  
Fausto Valencia ◽  
Hugo Arcos ◽  
Franklin Quilumba

The purpose of this research is the evaluation of artificial neural network models in the prediction of stresses in a 400 MVA power transformer winding conductor caused by the circulation of fault currents. The models were compared considering the training, validation, and test data errors’ behavior. Different combinations of hyperparameters were analyzed based on the variation of architectures, optimizers, and activation functions. The data for the process was created from finite element simulations performed in the FEMM software. The design of the Artificial Neural Network was performed using the Keras framework. As a result, a model with one hidden layer was the best suited architecture for the problem at hand, with the optimizer Adam and the activation function ReLU. The final Artificial Neural Network model predictions were compared with the Finite Element Method results, showing good agreement but with a much shorter solution time.


Author(s):  
Guo-Ming Ma ◽  
Yunpeng Liu ◽  
Yabo Li ◽  
Xiaozhou Fan ◽  
Ce Xu ◽  
...  

The sweep frequency response analysis is extensively used technique for detect hidden fault and condition monitoring of power transformer. The operation is administered by supply a coffee voltage signal of varying frequencies to the transformer windings and measuring both the input and output signals. These two signals give the specified response of the ratio is named the transfer function of the transformer from which both the magnitude and phase are often obtained. Frequency response is change as measured by SFRA techniques may indicate a phase transition inside the transformer, then causes of fault identified and investigation is required for root cause analysis.


Author(s):  
Igor Aizenberg ◽  
Antonio Luchetta ◽  
Stefano Manetti ◽  
Maria Cristina Piccirilli

Abstract A procedure for the identification of lumped models of distributed parameter electromagnetic systems is presented in this paper. A Frequency Response Analysis (FRA) of the device to be modeled is performed, executing repeated measurements or intensive simulations. The method can be used to extract the values of the components. The fundamental brick of this architecture is a multi-valued neuron (MVN), used in a multilayer neural network (MLMVN); the neuron is modified in order to use arbitrary complex-valued inputs, which represent the frequency response of the device. It is shown that this modification requires just a slight change in the MLMVN learning algorithm. The method is tested over three completely different examples to clearly explain its generality.


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