TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimal sensor placement for permanent magnet synchronous motor condition monitoring using a digital twin-assisted fault diagnosis approach
AU - Kohtz, Sara
AU - Zhao, Junhan
AU - Renteria, Anabel
AU - Lalwani, Anand
AU - Xu, Yanwen
AU - Zhang, Xiaolong
AU - Haran, Kiruba Sivasubramaniam
AU - Senesky, Debbie
AU - Wang, Pingfeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/2
Y1 - 2024/2
N2 - Efficient health monitoring for identifying and quantifying damages can substantially improve the performance and structural integrity of engineered systems. Specifically, new advances in sensing technologies have pushed the research of large sensor networks to monitor complex mechanical structures. Given the need for health state monitoring, designing an optimal sensor framework with accurate detectability of failure modes has great significance. However, there is often little to no experimental data available for newly proposed mechanical systems; so a digital-twin method would make fault detection feasible for this applications. In this paper, a data-driven reliability-based design optimization (RBDO) approach is employed for sensor placement and fault detection of a permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM), which is a relatively new system for high power engineering applications. This system suffers from inter-turn and inter-phase short-winding faults, which can cause catastrophic failure of the whole structure. For PMSMs, current sensing and magnetic field sensing can be utilized for the detection of faults, but actual sensor placement has not been considered in recent literature. In this study, the first step is to create an FEA model of the PMSM for the simulation of faults, which serves as the digital twin. Next, a data-driven approach is implemented for sensor placement and classification of faults. The proposed method utilizes distance clustering for identification of various failure modes, which is suitable for many applications due to its high accuracy and computational efficiency. In addition, a genetic algorithm is implemented to determine the minimum number and optimal placement of sensors. This framework simultaneously searches for the optimal placement of sensors while training the classifier for detectability of system health states. Ultimately, the proposed methodology shows convergence to a solution with high accuracy for detection of faults, and is demonstrated on the novel system of a PMSM with magnetic field sensors.
AB - Efficient health monitoring for identifying and quantifying damages can substantially improve the performance and structural integrity of engineered systems. Specifically, new advances in sensing technologies have pushed the research of large sensor networks to monitor complex mechanical structures. Given the need for health state monitoring, designing an optimal sensor framework with accurate detectability of failure modes has great significance. However, there is often little to no experimental data available for newly proposed mechanical systems; so a digital-twin method would make fault detection feasible for this applications. In this paper, a data-driven reliability-based design optimization (RBDO) approach is employed for sensor placement and fault detection of a permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM), which is a relatively new system for high power engineering applications. This system suffers from inter-turn and inter-phase short-winding faults, which can cause catastrophic failure of the whole structure. For PMSMs, current sensing and magnetic field sensing can be utilized for the detection of faults, but actual sensor placement has not been considered in recent literature. In this study, the first step is to create an FEA model of the PMSM for the simulation of faults, which serves as the digital twin. Next, a data-driven approach is implemented for sensor placement and classification of faults. The proposed method utilizes distance clustering for identification of various failure modes, which is suitable for many applications due to its high accuracy and computational efficiency. In addition, a genetic algorithm is implemented to determine the minimum number and optimal placement of sensors. This framework simultaneously searches for the optimal placement of sensors while training the classifier for detectability of system health states. Ultimately, the proposed methodology shows convergence to a solution with high accuracy for detection of faults, and is demonstrated on the novel system of a PMSM with magnetic field sensors.
KW - Classification
KW - Fault detection
KW - Genetic algorithm
KW - Hall effect sensor
KW - Optimal sensor placement
KW - Permanent magnet synchronous motor
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ress.2023.109714
DO - 10.1016/j.ress.2023.109714
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85175620241
SN - 0951-8320
VL - 242
JO - Reliability Engineering and System Safety
JF - Reliability Engineering and System Safety
M1 - 109714
ER -