WAVELET ANALYSIS FOR STATOR FAULT DETECTION IN INDUCTION MACHINES

Author(s):  
SANTIAGO J. GIACCONE ◽  
GUILLERMO R. BOSSIO ◽  
GUILLERMO O. GARCÍA ◽  
JORGE A. SOLSONA

The main objective of the proposed analysis is the detection of inter-turn short circuits in the stator windings of an induction machine. The analysis of the space vector current modulus of an induction motor is presented in this paper. This analysis is based on Daubechies 8 wavelet with seven decomposition levels. The 5th decomposition-level detail signal for a 4 kHz sampling frequency is chosen as a fault indicator, based on simulation results that show different behaviors of the energy contained in the detail signals independent of the percentage of load and fault levels. Experimental results that validate the proposed strategy are also presented. These results also show that the strategy is in addition immune to load variations as well as to feeding voltage unbalances.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
İlker Şahin ◽  
Ozan Keysan

<p>In this paper, a novel and non-invasive stator inter-turn short circuit (ITSC) online detection method is presented for an induction machine (IM), driven by a two-level voltage source inverter (2L-VSI) via finite control set model predictive control (FCS-MPC). The main idea of the proposed method is to utilize the controller itself as an observer: under the presence of a fault, the distribution of inverter switching states significantly deviates from the original balanced case. Therefore, by inspecting the inverter switching vectors, which are the outcomes of the FCS-MPC routine's online optimization procedure, a stator fault can be detected efficiently. It is observed that both the zero-vector allocation over the complex plane and the allocation among the active vectors are influenced by the presence of a stator short-circuit fault. The proposed fault detection strategy introduces little to no extra burden for processor and memory. Experimental results verify the proposed method, and inter-turn short circuits of two and three turns are confidently detected and located for a 500 W, two-pole IM.</p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
S. M. Allam ◽  
A. M. Azmy ◽  
M. A. El-Khazendar

 This paper presents a generalized model, by which the dynamic and steady-state behaviour of the Brushless Doubly-Fed Induction Machine (BDFIM) can be precisely predicted. The investigated doubly-fed machine has two sets of three-phase stator windings with different pole numbers. The rotor is a squirrel-cage type with a simple modification in order to support the two air-gap rotating fields that are produced by the stator windings and have different pole numbers. The machine model is derived in the qdo-axis variables. The qdoaxes are attached to rotor and hence, it rotates at the rotor speed (


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
İlker Şahin ◽  
Ozan Keysan

<p>In this paper, a novel and non-invasive stator inter-turn short circuit (ITSC) online detection method is presented for an induction machine (IM), driven by a two-level voltage source inverter (2L-VSI) via finite control set model predictive control (FCS-MPC). The main idea of the proposed method is to utilize the controller itself as an observer: under the presence of a fault, the distribution of inverter switching states significantly deviates from the original balanced case. Therefore, by inspecting the inverter switching vectors, which are the outcomes of the FCS-MPC routine's online optimization procedure, a stator fault can be detected efficiently. It is observed that both the zero-vector allocation over the complex plane and the allocation among the active vectors are influenced by the presence of a stator short-circuit fault. The proposed fault detection strategy introduces little to no extra burden for processor and memory. Experimental results verify the proposed method, and inter-turn short circuits of two and three turns are confidently detected and located for a 500 W, two-pole IM.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 1220-1231
Author(s):  
Elhabib Lotfi ◽  
Mustapha Elharoussi ◽  
Elhassane Abdelmounim

This paper presents a VHDL design and an FPGA implementation of a direct torque controller (DTC) used to order induction machines (IM). The use of FPGA at high sampling frequency reduces the torque ripple while maintaining the classical DTC control structure. We have adopted a modular approach, by dividing the global entity into a set of elementary blocks designed and implemented separately. The performances of this command are to reduce the torque ripple to 0.01 Nm and the flux ripple to 0.01 wb with a circuit implementing DTC control of 3,256 LEs of complexity and 64 latency clock cycles. To evaluate the performance of our FPGA circuit implementing DTC controller, we have performed a co-simulation platform based on MATLAB/Simulink and Modelsim programs. MATLAB/Simulink was used to simulate the dynamics of the induction machine associated with its inverter and the proposed DTC control strategy was executed under the modelsim software using the VHDL fixed point. We have operated our circuit FPGA in the loop in a speed variation platform of induction machine and we have obtained the following performances: A zero overrun, response time at speeds of 300 ms and a zero static error as required in the specifications. 


2018 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 01007
Author(s):  
Grzegorz Skarpetowski

A control algorithm for converter-fed induction machines, which allows the operation of the drive along of mechanical characteristic similar to the characteristic of series-excited direct current machine especially suitable for adhesion traction drives, is presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdelhak Mekahlia ◽  
Eric Semail ◽  
Franck Scuiller ◽  
Hussein Zahr

For three-phase induction machines supplied by sinusoidal current, it is usual to model the n-bar squirrel-cage by an equivalent two-phase circuit. For a multiphase induction machine which can be supplied with different harmonics of current, the reduced-order model of the rotor must be more carefully chosen in order to predict the pulsations of torque. The proposed analysis allows to avoid a wrong design with non-sinusoidal magnetomotive forces. An analytical approach is proposed and confirmed by Finite-Element modelling at first for a three-phase induction machine and secondly for a five-phase induction machine.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Tang ◽  
Jie Chen ◽  
Kan Dong ◽  
Yongheng Yang ◽  
Haichen Lv ◽  
...  

The modeling of stator and rotor faults is the basis of the development of online monitoring techniques. To obtain reliable stator and rotor fault models, this paper focuses on dynamic modeling of the stator and rotor faults in real-time, which adopts a multiple-coupled-circuit method by using a winding function approach for inductance calculation. Firstly, the model of the induction machine with a healthy cage is introduced, where a rotor mesh that consists of a few rotor loops and an end ring loop is considered. Then, the stator inter-turn fault model is presented by adding an extra branch with short circuit resistance on the fault part of a stator phase winding. The broken rotor bar fault is then detailed by merging and removing the broken-bar-related loops. Finally, the discrete models under healthy and faulty conditions are developed by using the Tustin transformation for digital implementation. Moreover, the stator and rotor mutual inductances are derived as a function of the rotor position according to the turn and winding functions distribution. Simulations and experiments are performed on a 2.2-kW/380-V/50-Hz three-phase and four-pole induction motor to show the performance of the stator and rotor faults, where the saturation effect is considered in simulations by exploiting the measurements of a no load test. The simulation results are in close agreement with the experimental results. Furthermore, magnitudes of the characteristic frequencies of 2f1 in torque and (1 ± 2s)f1 in current are analyzed to evaluate the stator and rotor fault severity. Both indicate that the stator fault severity is related to the short circuit resistance. Further, the number of shorted turns and the number of continuous broken bars determines the rotor fault severity.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 3398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruben Puche-Panadero ◽  
Javier Martinez-Roman ◽  
Angel Sapena-Bano ◽  
Jordi Burriel-Valencia ◽  
Martin Riera-Guasp

Motor current signature analysis (MCSA) is a fault diagnosis method for induction machines (IMs) that has attracted wide industrial interest in recent years. It is based on the detection of the characteristic fault signatures that arise in the current spectrum of a faulty induction machine. Unfortunately, the MCSA method in its basic formulation can only be applied in steady state functioning. Nevertheless, every day increases the importance of inductions machines in applications such as wind generation, electric vehicles, or automated processes in which the machine works most of time under transient conditions. For these cases, new diagnostic methodologies have been proposed, based on the use of advanced time-frequency transforms—as, for example, the continuous wavelet transform, the Wigner Ville distribution, or the analytic function based on the Hilbert transform—which enables to track the fault components evolution along time. All these transforms have high computational costs and, furthermore, generate as results complex spectrograms, which require to be interpreted for qualified technical staff. This paper introduces a new methodology for the diagnosis of faults of IM working in transient conditions, which, unlike the methods developed up to today, analyzes the current signal in the slip-instantaneous frequency plane (s-IF), instead of the time-frequency (t-f) plane. It is shown that, in the s-IF plane, the fault components follow patterns that that are simple and unique for each type of fault, and thus does not depend on the way in which load and speed vary during the transient functioning; this characteristic makes the diagnostic task easier and more reliable. This work introduces a general scheme for the IMs diagnostic under transient conditions, through the analysis of the stator current in the s-IF plane. Another contribution of this paper is the introduction of the specific s-IF patterns associated with three different types of faults (rotor asymmetry fault, mixed eccentricity fault, and single-point bearing defects) that are theoretically justified and experimentally tested. As the calculation of the IF of the fault component is a key issue of the proposed diagnostic method, this paper also includes a comparative analysis of three different mathematical tools for calculating the IF, which are compared not only theoretically but also experimentally, comparing their performance when are applied to the tested diagnostic signals.


2011 ◽  
Vol 367 ◽  
pp. 89-96
Author(s):  
U. Zangina ◽  
H.N. Yahaya ◽  
M. Aminu ◽  
Z.O. Niyi

Direct Torque Control (DTC) has emerged over the last two decades as a suitable alternative to the well-known Field Oriented Control (FOC) or vector control technique for electric drives mainly due to its simple control scheme, low computational time and reduced parameter sensitivity. In this paper, speed control of an induction machine based on DTC strategy has been developed and a comprehensive study is presented. The performance of the control method has been demonstrated by simulations using the Matlab/Simulink software package. Several numerical simulations have been carried out in steady state and transient operations.


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