scholarly journals Special Issue “Advances in Machine Learning and Deep Learning Based Machine Fault Diagnosis and Prognosis”

Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 532
Author(s):  
Mohand Djeziri ◽  
Marc Bendahan

Fault diagnosis and failure prognosis aim to reduce downtime of the systems and to optimise their performance by replacing preventive and corrective maintenance strategies with predictive or conditional ones [...]

Author(s):  
Kesheng Wang ◽  
Zhenyou Zhang ◽  
Yi Wang

This chapter proposes a Self-Organizing Map (SOM) method for fault diagnosis and prognosis of manufacturing systems, machines, components, and processes. The aim of this work is to optimize the condition monitoring of the health of the system. With this method, manufacturing faults can be classified, and the degradations can be predicted very effectively and clearly. A good maintenance scheduling can then be created, and the number of corrective maintenance actions can be reduced. The results of the experiment show that the SOM method can be used to classify the fault and predict the degradation of machines, components, and processes effectively, clearly, and easily.


Author(s):  
Haochen Liu ◽  
Yifan Zhao ◽  
Anna Zaporowska ◽  
Zakwan Skaf

AbstractAccurate fault diagnosis and prognosis can significantly reduce maintenance costs, increase the safety and availability of engineering systems that have become increasingly complex. It has been observed that very limited researches have been reported on fault diagnosis where multi-component degradation are presented. This is essentially a challenging Complex Systems problem where features multiple components interacting simultaneously and nonlinearly with each other and its environment on multiple levels. Even the degradation of a single component can lead to a misidentification of the fault severity level. This paper introduces a new test rig to simulate the multi-component degradation of the aircraft fuel system. A machine learning-based data analytical approach based on the classification of clustering features from both time and frequency domains is proposed. The scope of this framework is the identification of the location and severity of not only the system fault but also the multi-component degradation. The results illustrate that (a) the fault can be detected with accuracy > 99%; (b) the severity of fault can be identified with an accuracy of almost 100%; (c) the degradation level can be successfully identified with the R-square value > 0.9.


2019 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 1-2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruqiang Yan ◽  
Xuefeng Chen ◽  
Peng Wang ◽  
Darian M. Onchis

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guangxing Niu ◽  
Shije Tang ◽  
Zhichao Liu ◽  
Guangquan Zhao ◽  
Bin Zhang

Fault diagnosis and prognosis (FDP) plays more and more important role in industries FDP aims to estimate current fault condition and then predict the remaining useful life (RUL). Based on the estimation of health state and RUL, essential decisions on maintenance, control, and planning can be conducted optimally in terms of economy, efficiency, and availability. With the increase of system complexity, it becomes more and more difficult to model the fault dynamics, especially for multiple interacting fault modes and for fault modes that are affected by many internal and external factors. With the development of machine learning and big data, deep learning algorithms become important tools in FDP due to their excellent performance in data processing, information extraction, and automatic modeling. In the past a few years, deep learning algorithms demonstrate outstanding performance in feature extraction and learning fault dynamics. As emerging techniques, their powerful learning capabilities attract more and more attentions and have been extended to various applications. This work presents a novel diagnosis and prognosis methodology which combined deep belief networks (DBNs) and Bayesian estimation. In the proposed work, the DBNs are trained offline using available historical data. The fault dynamic model is then represented by the trained DBNs and modeling uncertainty is described by noise. The integration of DBNs with particle filtering is then developed to provide an estimation of the current fault state and predict the remaining useful life, which is very suitable and efficient for most nonlinear fault models. Experimental studies of lithium-ion batteries are presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed solution.


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