Gas Turbine Fault Detection and Diagnosis Using Nonlinear Feature Extraction Methods

Author(s):  
Joydeb Mukherjee ◽  
Venkataramana B. Kini ◽  
Sunil Menon ◽  
Lalitha Eswara

Accurate gas turbine fault detection and diagnosis (FDD) is essential to improving airline safety as well as in reducing airline costs associated with delays and cancellations. In this paper, we present FDD methods based on feature extraction methods using nonlinear principal component analysis (NLPCA) and curvilinear component analysis (CCA). The underlying principle of both methods is to find the most representative feature space corresponding to gas turbine normal and faulty operations. During operation, new sensor data is located in this feature space and then it is determined whether a particular fault is indicated. NLPCA is an extension of linear PCA methods to the nonlinear domain; therefore, it is intrinsically better suited to nonlinear domains such as the gas turbine engine. The CCA method is another approach to clustering having superior properties for determining cluster manifolds automatically compared to the popular selforganizing map (SOM) method of clustering. The developed methods are tested with snapshot data collected at takeoff, both normal and faulty, from a turbofan gas turbine propulsion engine and the results are presented.

Author(s):  
Amilcar Rincon-Charris ◽  
Joseba Quevedo-Casin

Multiple fault detection and diagnosis is a challenging problem because the number of candidates grows exponentially in the number of faults. In addition, multiple faults in dynamic systems may be hard to detect, because they can mask or compensate each other’s effects. This paper presents the study of the detection and diagnosis of multiple faults in a SR-30 Gas Turbine using nonlinear principal component analysis as the detection method and structured residuals as the diagnosis method. The study includes developing a mathematical model, software simulation with Matlab Simulink and implementation of algorithms for detection and diagnosis of multiple faults in the system using nonlinear principal component analysis and structured residuals. A real SR-30 gas turbine was used for our studies. The equipment is at the moment installed in the Inter American University of Puerto Rico, Bayamon Campus, and Department of Mechanical Engineering.


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