scholarly journals Identification of transformer fault based on dissolved gas analysis using hybrid support vector machine-modified evolutionary particle swarm optimisation

PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. e0191366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hazlee Azil Illias ◽  
Wee Zhao Liang
Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (20) ◽  
pp. 4017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haikun Shang ◽  
Junyan Xu ◽  
Zitao Zheng ◽  
Bing Qi ◽  
Liwei Zhang

Power transformers are important equipment in power systems and their reliability directly concerns the safety of power networks. Dissolved gas analysis (DGA) has shown great potential for detecting the incipient fault of oil-filled power transformers. In order to solve the misdiagnosis problems of traditional fault diagnosis approaches, a novel fault diagnosis method based on hypersphere multiclass support vector machine (HMSVM) and Dempster–Shafer (D–S) Evidence Theory (DET) is proposed. Firstly, proper gas dissolved in oil is selected as the fault characteristic of power transformers. Secondly, HMSVM is employed to diagnose transformer fault with selected characteristics. Then, particle swarm optimization (PSO) is utilized for parameter optimization. Finally, DET is introduced to fuse three different fault diagnosis methods together, including HMSVM, hybrid immune algorithm (HIA), and kernel extreme learning machine (KELM). To avoid the high conflict between different evidences, in this paper, a weight coefficient is introduced for the correction of fusion results. Results indicate that the fault diagnosis based on HMSVM has the highest probability to identify transformer faults among three artificial intelligent approaches. In addition, the improved D–S evidence theory (IDET) combines the advantages of each diagnosis method and promotes fault diagnosis accuracy.


2014 ◽  
Vol 573 ◽  
pp. 708-715
Author(s):  
V. Gomathy ◽  
S. Sumathi

To allow utilities to fulfill self-imposed and regulative performance targets the demand for new optimized tools and techniques to Estimate the performance of modern Transformers has increased. The modern power transformers has subjected to different types of faults, which affect the continuity of power supply which in turn causes serious economic losses. To avoid the interruption of power supply, various fault diagnosis approaches are adopted to detect faults in the power transformer and has to eliminate the impacts of the faults at the initial stage. Among the fault diagnosis methods, the hybrid technique of Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) with Support Vector Machine (SVM) learning algorithm is simple conceptually derived and its implementation process is faster with better scaling properties for complex problems with non linearity and load variations but performance factor related to accuracy has a declined value in case of correlations implicit . In order to obtain better fault diagnosis to improve the service of the power transformer, SVM is optimized with Improved PSO technique to achieve high interpretation accuracy for Dissolved Gas Analysis (DGA) of power transformer through the extracting positive features from both the techniques. Primary SVM is applied to establish classification features for faults in the transformer through DGA. The features are applied as input data to Autonomous optimized Technique for faults analysis. The proposed methodology obtains the DGA data set from diagnostic gas in oil of 500 KV main transformers of Pingguo Substation in South China Electric Power Company. The simulations are carried out in MATLAB software with an Intel core 3 processor with speed of 3 GHZ and 4 GB RAM PC. The result obtained by Autonomous optimized Technique (IPSO-SVM) is compared against PSO-SVM to estimate the performance of the classifiers in terms of execution time and quality of classification for precision. The test results indicate that the Autonomous optimization of IPSO-SVM approach has significantly improved the classification accuracy and computational time for power transformer fault classification. Keywords: Transformer Fault Analysis, Improved Particle Swarm Optimization, Hybrid Optimization, Dissolved Gas Analysis, Support Vector Machine


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