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A Fault Diagnosis Model for Rotating Machinery Using VWC and MSFLA-SVM Based on Vibration Signal Analysis

Authors :
Lei You
Wenjie Fan
Zongwen Li
Ying Liang
Miao Fang
Jin Wang
Source :
Shock and Vibration, Vol 2019 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Fault diagnosis of rotating machinery mainly includes fault feature extraction and fault classification. Vibration signal from the operation of machinery usually could help diagnosing the operational state of equipment. Different types of fault usually have different vibrational features, which are actually the basis of fault diagnosis. This paper proposes a novel fault diagnosis model, which extracts features by combining vibration severity, dyadic wavelet energy time-spectrum, and coefficient power spectrum of the maximum wavelet energy level (VWC) at the feature extraction stage. At the stage of fault classification, we design a support vector machine (SVM) based on the modified shuffled frog-leaping algorithm (MSFLA) for the accurate classifying machinery fault method. Specifically, we use the MSFLA method to optimize SVM parameters. MSFLA can avoid getting trapped into local optimum, speeding up convergence, and improving classification accuracy. Finally, we evaluate our model on real rotating machinery platform, which has four different states, i.e., normal state, eccentric axle fault (EAF), bearing pedestal fault (BPF), and sealing ring wear fault (SRWF). As demonstrated by the results, the VWC method is efficient in extracting vibration signal features of rotating machinery. Based on the extracted features, we further compare our classification method with other three fault classification methods, i.e., backpropagation neural network (BPNN), artificial chemical reaction optimization algorithm (ACROA-SVM), and SFLA-SVM. The experiment results show that MSFLA-SVM achieves a much higher fault classification rate than BPNN, ACROA-SVM, and SFLA-SVM.

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics
QC1-999

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10709622 and 18759203
Volume :
2019
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Shock and Vibration
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4f225498ab7946ebad1d508ef31f8558
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/1908485