Fault Diagnosis of a Heat Exchanger System Using Unknown Input Observers


Book Description

In this thesis, the fault diagnosis of a heat exchanger system, consisting of two heat exchangers in series, is investigated. The system, modeled by ten first-order nonlinear differential equations, has three unknown disturbances and three output measurements. The goal is to determine the degradation levels in heat exchangers based on the sizes of the residuals generated via unknown input observers. The residuals must be robust against disturbances and sensitive to the degradation. It is proved that this is only achievable when the number of output measurements is greater than that of disturbances. Therefore, either some of the disturbances must be eliminated or more sensors must be installed. With one of the disturbances assumed constant, the degradation in the first heat exchanger can be determined accurately with reasonable precision. The addition of one more sensor results in a more precise diagnosis of the first heat exchanger. The degradation in the second heat exchanger can be determined when a second sensor is added, but the diagnosis is crude and only eighty percent accurate at best.




Bond Graphs for Modelling, Control and Fault Diagnosis of Engineering Systems


Book Description

This book presents theory and latest application work in Bond Graph methodology with a focus on: • Hybrid dynamical system models, • Model-based fault diagnosis, model-based fault tolerant control, fault prognosis • and also addresses • Open thermodynamic systems with compressible fluid flow, • Distributed parameter models of mechanical subsystems. In addition, the book covers various applications of current interest ranging from motorised wheelchairs, in-vivo surgery robots, walking machines to wind-turbines.The up-to-date presentation has been made possible by experts who are active members of the worldwide bond graph modelling community. This book is the completely revised 2nd edition of the 2011 Springer compilation text titled Bond Graph Modelling of Engineering Systems – Theory, Applications and Software Support. It extends the presentation of theory and applications of graph methodology by new developments and latest research results. Like the first edition, this book addresses readers in academia as well as practitioners in industry and invites experts in related fields to consider the potential and the state-of-the-art of bond graph modelling.




Fault Detection, Supervision and Safety for Technical Processes 1991


Book Description

These Proceedings provide a general overview as well as detailed information on the developing field of reliability and safety of technical processes in automatically controlled processes. The plenary papers present the state-of-the-art and an overview in the areas of aircraft and nuclear power stations, because these safety-critical system domains possess the most highly developed fault management and supervision schemes. Additional plenary papers covered the recent developments in analytical redundancy. In total there are 95 papers presented in these Proceedings.







Fault Detection, Supervision, and Safety for Technical Proceses


Book Description

Paperback. Fault detection, supervision and safety are an essential part of modern control engineering. In this publication, over two hundred experts from various fields and application areas present their latest results on reliability, availability and safety of technical processes, covering both theoretical and practical problems. Applications in all phases are covered, from design, start-up, operation, maintenance through to repair. Relevant methods and tools for monitoring, diagnosis and detection are discussed as well as the increasingly important topics of failure data collection and analysis, human factors and man-machine interfaces. This volume lays strong emphasis on applications and aims to promote further research and industrial co-operation.




Fault Detection and Diagnosis in a Heat Exchanger Using Dynamic Principal Component Analysis and Diagnostic Observers


Book Description

Quick detection and correct isolation of soft faults in a control system allow to improve the product quality, particularly in chemical processes, for example: an industrial heat exchanger. According to Venkatasubramanian, the fault methods can be classified as: model-based methods and historical data-based methods. In this thesis, two Fault Detection and Isolation (FDI) systems are designed and validated in the same process, i.e. in a shell and tube industrial heat exchanger. One of them is based on the Dynamic Principal Component Analysis (DPCA) method and the another one on a set of diagnostic observers. The former method requires historical data of the process, whereas, the diagnostic observers use quantitative models. Before testing both methods, they are trained in the same normal operating point. Four kinds of faults are introduced under the same process conditions in order to compare the performance of both diagnostic methods. All these fault cases are considered as soft faults in sensors or actuators; the faults are implemented with abrupt or gradual behavior. Similar metrics are defined in both FDI methods in order to analyze the desirable characteristics of any fault diagnostic system: robustness, quick detection, isolability capacity, explanation facility, false alarm rates and multiple faults identifiability. Experimental results show the principal advantages and disadvantages of both methods and allows to present a comparative table with the achieved performance of each method. This work allows to design and development both methods in parallel. The Recursive Least Squares (RLS) method is used to identify the process through a Random Binary Signal (RBS) test. The reliable model of each fault allows to design a set of diagnostic observers. On the other hand, a statistical analysis based on historical data is designed to know the operating status. The DPCA method projects the data into two new spaces in order to detect any abnormal event using a smaller number of process variables. In this manner, two methods, based on different approaches, are tested under the same experimental data. This work shows that a set of diagnostic observers can detect a soft fault in a sensor or actuator at shorter time than the DPCA method. The diagnostic observers present a lower false alarm rate than the DPCA method, when soft faults in actuators are implemented. Furthermore, diagnostic observers can identify multiple faults, whereas the DPCA method can not associate correctly the errors to the occurred faults. However, the training and testing stages of the diagnostic observers require greater computational resources than the stages of the DPCA method.







Electronics, Communications and Networks V


Book Description

This book comprises peer-reviewed contributions presented at the 5th International Conference on Electronics, Communications and Networks (CECNet 2015), held in Shanghai, China, 12-15 December, 2015. It includes new multi-disciplinary topics spanning a unique depth and breadth of cutting-edge research areas in Electronic Engineering, Communications and Networks, and Computer Technology. More generally, it is of interest to academics, students and professionals involved in Consumer Electronics Technology, Communication Engineering and Technology, Wireless Communication Systems and Technology, and Computer Engineering and Technology.




27th European Symposium on Computer Aided Process Engineering


Book Description

27th European Symposium on Computer Aided Process Engineering, Volume 40 contains the papers presented at the 27th European Society of Computer-Aided Process Engineering (ESCAPE) event held in Barcelona, October 1-5, 2017. It is a valuable resource for chemical engineers, chemical process engineers, researchers in industry and academia, students, and consultants for chemical industries. - Presents findings and discussions from the 27th European Society of Computer-Aided Process Engineering (ESCAPE) event