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Article

Induction Motors Condition Monitoring System with Fault Diagnosis Using a Hybrid Approach

Department of Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology No.43, Keelung Rd., Sec.4, Da’an Dist, Taipei 10607, Taiwan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2019, 12(8), 1471; https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081471
Submission received: 17 March 2019 / Revised: 1 April 2019 / Accepted: 9 April 2019 / Published: 18 April 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Condition Monitoring and Diagnosis of Electrical Machines)

Abstract

:
This study develops a condition monitoring system, which includes operating condition monitoring (OCM) and fault diagnosis analysis (FDA). The OCM uses a vibration detection approach based on the ISO 10816-1 and NEMA MG-1 international standards, and the FDA uses a vibration-electrical hybrid approach based on various indices. The system can acquire real-time vibration and electrical signals. Once an abnormal vibration has been detected by using OCM, the FDA is applied to classify the type of faults. Laboratory results indicate that the OCM can successfully diagnose induction motors healthy condition, and FDA can classify the various damages stator fault, rotor fault, bearing fault and eccentric fault. The FDA with the hybrid approach is more reliable than the traditional approach using electrical detection alone. The proposed condition monitoring system can provide simple and clear maintenance information to improve the reliability of motor operations.

1. Introduction

Taking a large power plant in Taiwan as an example, each of its large thermal generator sets relies on an auxiliary system with numerous high-voltage motors for operation. The elements of the auxiliary system for the generator sets—which includes fans, coal pulverizers, gearboxes, fluid couplings, and conveyor belts—are all driven by high-voltage motors, and these motors often require operation under specialized conditions. Any breakdown in the auxiliary system not only affects the power quality and reliability of the entire power system, but it can also result in enormous economic losses. Thus, the importance of condition monitoring and fault diagnosis of induction motors in auxiliary systems cannot be underestimated.
Various damage types were found, such as interturn short-circuit [1], broken rotor bar [2], bearing inner ring failure, bearing outer ring failure, ball failure, cage failure [3], and eccentricity [4]. As for fault diagnosis of an induction motor, the literature has also indicated that approximately 30% of motor breakdowns are related to stators, 10% to rotors, 40% to bearings, and 20% to other components [5].
A great deal of research proposes how to classify the damage types, such as stator breakdowns, and have employed various approaches [6,7,8,9,10,11,12], including magnetic pendulous oscillation, motor current signature analysis, instantaneous active and reactive power signature analyses, and total harmonic voltage. Studies on rotor breakdowns [13,14,15,16] have used mathematical morphology and wavelet analysis. Bearing breakdowns have been investigated using the root-multiple signal classification method and neural networks [17,18]. As for breakdowns in other components, recent studies focused on the relatively more common eccentricity problems, which were examined in References [19,20,21,22].
Recently, a motor diagnosis manner was generally used in industries, which is called time-based maintenance (TBM) [23]. The TBM is maintenance performed on equipment based on calendar schedules. This means that the schedules will be important for routine maintenance. However, the TBM may result in over maintenance to prevent considerable waste of manpower and resources.
In industry 4.0, thriving developments in the sensor, communication, and information processing industries have gradually made the real-time online monitoring of motors a real possibility. The latest trend in motor maintenance is thus condition-based maintenance (CBM), which is effective in accident prevention. CBM also allows motors to remain reliable throughout their service time [23]. Thus, it is critically important to develop a condition monitoring system with fault diagnosis using a vibration–electrical hybrid approach system for induction motors based on CBM.

2. Hardware Architecture

2.1. Overall Structure

Most condition monitoring systems (CMS) worldwide that are currently used for monitoring important motors have a hierarchical structure. Figure 1 depicts such a system, the front end of which consists of small, inexpensive, reliable, fast, and simply constructed data acquisition/transmission devices, embedded in crucial equipment on site, and the back end of which is a monitoring system. Relay stations may be installed between the front and back ends due to distance or data transmission considerations. Relay stations must have high expandability and flexibility to allow effective and timely presentation of motor conditions to on-site operators at the front end and long-term recording of operating data at the back end. Additionally, the system should be able to perform trend analyses based on longitudinal data stored in its database. The study develops condition monitoring with fault diagnosis embedded system in the front end.
In Figure 2, a simple embedded system is proposed for condition monitoring and fault diagnosis of induction motors. The front end embedded system prototype size is 240 × 170 × 30 mm. The system assesses the current condition of a motor through vibration detection. When an abnormality is detected, electrical detection is used in conjunction with vibration detection to determine the possible type of fault. This system adopts a triaxial accelerometer to measure the vibration of the motor, non-contact capture of voltage, and current signals using Hall sensors. The acquired analog signals are passed through a signal processing circuit and transmitted to an analog-to-digital converter, which converts them into digital signals and passes them on to a microprocessor for processing. Subsequently, fast-screening fault diagnosis and fast-screening condition monitoring are employed, and the results are displayed on the touchscreen in simple and intuitive graphics. If intranet is available on site, the original signal data can be transmitted to the server-side system, which will make the system operations even more comprehensive by conducting rigorous analyses. If intranet is not available, the original data can be transported using a secure digital (SD) card to a computer for further analysis. As a means of data transportation, the SD card and intranet are not mutually exclusive; the choice between the two depends solely on the availability of on-site intranet.

2.2. Sensor Modules

The voltage and current sensors are used in this study were all Hall devices because of their high safety and convenience. A triaxial accelerometer is used to measure accelerations along the three axes, and its sensor is an integrated electronics piezoelectric (IEPE) circuit. Such sensors have sensitive built-in charge or voltage amplifiers because the current generated by the accelerometer is extremely weak, and that signal interference can easily occur in the sensors without such amplifiers. The IEPE transducer integrates these sensitive circuits and brings them close to the sensors to ensure greater noise immunity and easier packaging. The detailed sensor specifications are as listed in Table 1.

3. Software Process

3.1. Overall Structure

Figure 3 illustrates the process of the proposed hybrid approach. The CMS operations are divided into two major parts: Operating condition monitoring (OCM) and fault diagnosis analysis (FDA). When electrical and vibration signals have been acquired by the embedded system, the OCM module determines the current condition of the motor using vibration indices and international standards. When an abnormality is detected in the motor’s operations, the system can classify the type of detected fault through vibration and electrical indices and simultaneously informs maintenance personnel of the components requiring attention. The system can reduce maintenance costs or advise maintenance personnel of the possible type of fault, thereby shortening the time needed for troubleshooting.

3.2. OCM Module

OCM relies on existing international standards as the basis for its judgments. The international standards used are primarily the ISO 10816-1 [24], which regards velocity control (Table 2), and the NEMA MG-1 [25], which regards displacement control (Table 3).
Concerning the electrical detection method, although established international standards are available for the indices, comparable standards for the operations of motors are currently lacking. Hence, if the information currently at hand is to be used for the assessment of motor operating conditions, algorithms must be employed to perform the necessary calculations. However, this is an extremely time-consuming undertaking for microprocessors. For this reason, a fast-screening condition monitoring method is introduced instead. The method uses international standards on vibrations to assess the condition of motors. According to the motor’s accelerations along the three axes, first-order integration is performed to obtain the velocity values to be compared with ISO 10816-1; subsequently, second-order integration is performed to obtain the displacement values to be compared with NEMA MG-1. Figure 4 describes the fast-screening process in more detail. Because ISO 10816-1 divides motor operations into four steps whereas NEMA MG-1 only has two steps, the method makes a logic judgment on the velocity and displacement comparison results and chooses the more serious ones for display in the system. The displayed results can be categorized into four levels: normal, caution, warning, and danger.

3.3. FDA Module

A two-stage hybrid approach for fault diagnosis analysis of induction motors is shown in Figure 5. The first stage of FDA uses vibration detection for preliminary classification of the faults. Numerous studies have been consulted to establish the indices for signal analysis, from which a small number of key signal indices for vibration acceleration are chosen for use [26].
The second stage of FDA involves using electrical detection to develop a more rigorous classification system of fault types on the basis of the electrical indices. The suitability of an electrical index to the detection of a fault type can be determined by observing the effect of each electrical index on the corresponding fault model.
  • Current unbalance rate (CUR): IEC 60034-1 [27] and IEEE Std. 141 [28] are used as a reference for the definition of CUR, which is similar to voltage imbalance rate; that is, it is the ratio of the three-phase current’s maximum deviation value to its mean value. When the motor is operating at its rated output, it should avoid exceeding 10% of the recommended value, as indicated in the following equations:
    | I a v g | = | I a | + | I b | + | I c | 3
    C U R ( % ) = max ( | | | I a | | I a v g | | , | | I b | | I a v g | | , | | I c | | I a v g | | | ) | I a v g | × 100 % ,
  • Current unbalance factor (CUF): IEC 60034-1 is used as a reference for CUF. Continuous operation of over 5% should be avoided:
    [ I 0 I 1 I 2 ] = 1 3 [ 1 1 1 1 a a 2 1 a 2 a ] [ I a I b I c ] , a = 1 120 ° ,
    C U F ( % ) = | I 2 | | I 1 | × 100 % .
  • Voltage total harmonic distortion (VTHD): IEEE Std. 519 [29] was used as a reference for VTHD, which is expressed as a percentage and defined as the square root of the sum of harmonic voltages divided by the fundamental frequency voltage, as shown in Equation (4). It is one of the means of assessing the total harmonic voltage’s effect on the system.
    T H D V = h = 2 V h 2 V 1 × 100 % .
  • Each voltage harmonic distortion (EVHD): IEEE Std. 519 is used as a reference for EVHD, which is defined as the percentage of the fundamental frequency voltage that is individual harmonic voltage, as shown in Equation (6). It is one of the means of assessing an individual harmonic voltage’s effect on the system.
    V H D ( % ) = V h V 1 × 100 % .
  • Current total harmonic distortion (CTHD): IEEE Std. 519 is used as a reference for CTHD, which is expressed as a percentage and defined as the square root of the sum of harmonic currents divided by the fundamental frequency voltage, as shown in Equation (7). CTHD is used to assess the total harmonic current’s effect on the system.
    T H D I ( % ) = h = 2 I h 2 I 1 × 100 % .
  • Each current harmonic distortion (ECHD): IEEE Std. 519 is used as a reference for ECHD. Defined in the same vein as EVHD, ECHD refers to the rate of an individual harmonic current’s voltage to the fundamental frequency voltage. Expressed in percentage, this index serves as a means of assessing an individual harmonic current’s effect on the system.
    I H D ( % ) = I h I 1 × 100 % .
The suitability coefficient for an electrical index can be obtained by taking the mean of 50 data points of an index in the fault model, and calculating its difference from that of a healthy motor, followed by dividing the difference by the product of the difference (∆) between the maximum and minimum values in the 50 data points of the same index in the fault model and that of a healthy motor.
Fault diagnosis in induction motors can be divided into two stages. The first is a preliminary classification of fault type through vibration detection, and the second is a further classification of fault type through electrical detection. The following is a description of the fast-screening fault diagnosis of the two stages.
In the first stage, the motor’s acceleration signals along the three axes are acquired to calculate the statistical indices and peak values and to determine the corresponding thresholds. As the values for motors with stator and rotor faults are statistically closer to those for healthy motors, they are considered as belonging to the same fault group (Group 1). Bearing and misalignment faults are considered to belong to the same fault group (Group 2) because the index values for such motors are significantly higher than those for healthy motors. In summary, peak values can be used to roughly divide fault types into two groups.
The second stage is to acquire the motor’s signals for the three-phase voltages and currents for determination of the electrical indices. According to the aforementioned suitability assessment, current unbalance rate (CUR), current unbalance factor (CUF), voltage total harmonic distortion (VTHD), each voltage harmonic distortion (EVHD), current total harmonic distortion (CTHD), and each current harmonic distortion (ECHD) are classified as either current imbalance electrical indices or harmonic distortion electrical indices for fast-screening fault diagnosis. If the result of the first stage is Group 1, then the screening rules for the second stage are as follows: If the electrical indices in both current imbalance and harmonic distortion are all lower than the international standard threshold, the motor is identified as healthy; if any electrical index in current imbalance exceeds the international standard threshold, it is identified as a stator fault; and if any electrical index in harmonic distortion exceeds the international standard threshold, it is identified as a rotor fault. As the fast-screening fault diagnosis is only based on a logic judgment of whether a value exceeds the threshold or not, it is unable to distinguish whether a fault occurs in the stator or rotor when electrical indices in both current imbalance and harmonic distortion exceed the threshold.

4. Experimental Results and Analysis

4.1. OCM Results and Analysis

The rules are established based on two sets of international standards: ISO 10816-1 and NEMA MG-1. When the displacement is judged to be “Normal” according to NEMA MG-1, the velocity would be used to assess the level of operating condition as per IOS 10816-1; conversely, when the displacement is judged to be “Danger” as per NEMA MG-1, the operating condition would be rated as “Danger”. The comprehensive results are shown in (Table 4).
The feasibility assessment of the motor condition monitoring system requires longitudinal data. However, such data are lacking because the proposed system had not yet begun on-site testing. Hence, the feasibility of the proposed system is assessed using a vibration exciter in the laboratory to generate varying vibrations, the velocities, and displacements of which, after integral operations, is fast-screened to determine the operating conditions.

4.2. FDA Results and Analysis

To obtain standard sample data for the proposed fault diagnosis, this study used induction motors with identical specifications (220 V, 7 A, 60 Hz, 2 HP, and four poles) to create four common fault models, and then used a healthy model for contrast. The experimental scale-down fault models are described as follows:
  • Stator fault: This fault occurs when the insulation layer of the stator coils is damaged by friction, aging, overheating, humidity, or corona. In the present study, a mild inter-coil short circuit is simulated by two coils short circuit after part of their insulation layer had been lightly scraped off (Figure 6a).
  • Rotor fault: If a motor is overloaded or restarted often, stress or heat buildup can cause the breakage of a rotor bar. This study consulted the literature and drilled a hole 7 mm in diameter and 30 mm in depth into the rotor bar (Figure 6b).
  • Bearing fault: The bearing outer ring is prone to damage when the motor is overloaded, overheated, or intruded by foreign objects. In this study, electric heating is applied to melt a hole in the bearing outer ring under the premise that the bearing and other components were not to be affected. The hole was 1 mm in diameter and depth (Figure 6c).
  • Misalignment fault: When the motor is with load, the coupling can cause misalignment at both ends due to human, environmental, or operational reasons, which in turn induces problems such as noise and heating. Because of safety considerations, the present study uses a healthy motor but displaced the coupling and load 0.5 mm upward (Figure 6d).
To verify the effectiveness of the proposed system, the aforementioned stator interturn short circuit, rotor bar breaking, bearing outer ring damage, and misalignment fault models and a healthy motor were employed for measurement. The sampling rate was 10 kHz, and 50 data entries were taken for each motor, amounting to 250 data points in total. The data were used to compare the diagnostic results when electrical detection alone was employed and the proposed hybrid approach of combining vibration detection and electrical detection was used. From the results of Table 5, it is shown that the five experimental models can be effectively distinguished using the hybrid approach.
Table 6 presents the testing results of the samples, suggesting that electrical detection alone and the proposed hybrid approach are both able to accurately identify the healthy motor and the stator, rotor, and bearing faults; however, for misalignment faults, electrical detection identified 20.76% as misalignment faults and misidentified 37.85% as stator faults. By contrast, the proposed hybrid approach was able to accurately identify misalignment faults. For each individual model, the hybrid approach was superior to electrical detection in fault diagnosis. For example, the hybrid approach was able to identify 56.21% of stator faults whereas electrical detection was only able to identify 37.85%.

5. Conclusions

The present study successfully develops a condition-based system which can monitor various types of motor faults by using the proposed vibration-electrical hybrid approach. The system uses vibration detection for operating condition monitoring in accordance with rules drawn from the ISO 10816-1 and NEMA MG-1 standards. Laboratory test results indicate that the system can correctly monitor the operating conditions of a motor as per the rules. For fault diagnosis analysis, the system uses vibration detection and electrical detection for fault classification. The results of laboratory tests show that the classification accuracy of the proposed hybrid system is superior to that of the electrical approach to fault type identification. Additionally, the system is able to issue simple and clear instructions, which is a substantial improvement on existing systems and highly convenient for on-site personnel.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, H.-C.C. and C.-C.K.; methodology, H.-C.C. and C.-C.K.; software, Y.-M.J. and Y.-M.H.; validation, Y.-M.J. and Y.-M.H.; data curation, H.-C.C.; writing—original draft preparation, Y.-M.J.

Funding

MOST-105-2221-E-011-081-MY3.

Acknowledgments

This paper supports the research funding of the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan under Grant MOST-105-2221-E-011-081-MY3 is gratefully acknowledged.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Overall system diagram.
Figure 1. Overall system diagram.
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Figure 2. Front-end embedded system block diagram.
Figure 2. Front-end embedded system block diagram.
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Figure 3. Overall hybrid approach flow chart.
Figure 3. Overall hybrid approach flow chart.
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Figure 4. OCM module flow chart.
Figure 4. OCM module flow chart.
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Figure 5. FDA module two-stage hybrid approach flow chart.
Figure 5. FDA module two-stage hybrid approach flow chart.
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Figure 6. Four experimental models: (a) Stator fault, (b) rotor fault, (c) bearing fault, (d) misalignment fault.
Figure 6. Four experimental models: (a) Stator fault, (b) rotor fault, (c) bearing fault, (d) misalignment fault.
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Table 1. Specifications of sensors.
Table 1. Specifications of sensors.
Sensors ModelTypeMeasuring RangeFrequency Bandwidth
Voltage SensorCHV 50P/6000~±800 V0~20 kHz
Current SensorHTR 50-SB0~±100 A0~10 kHz
3-Axis AccelerometerAD100T±50 g0.3~12 kHz
ADCADS855616 Bits630 kSPS (Parallel)
Table 2. Thresholds by Std. ISO 10816-1.
Table 2. Thresholds by Std. ISO 10816-1.
Velocity (mm/s)ThresholdClass I ≤ 15 kW
<1.12 Good
1.12ISO threshold-(1)
1.12~2.8 Satisfactory
2.8ISO threshold-(2)
2.8~7.1 Unsatisfactory
7.1ISO threshold-(3)
>7.1 Unacceptable
Table 3. Thresholds by Std. NEMA MG-1.
Table 3. Thresholds by Std. NEMA MG-1.
Synchronous Speed (rpm)Thresholds
(Maximum Relative Shaft Displacement, Peak-peak)
1801–36000.0028 in (70 μm)
≤18000.0035 in (90 μm)
Table 4. Operating condition monitoring rules.
Table 4. Operating condition monitoring rules.
ISO 10816-1GoodAcceptableUnsatisfactoryUnacceptable
NEMA MG-1
NormalNormalCautionWarningDanger
DangerDangerDangerDangerDanger
Table 5. FDA results classification accuracy (%).
Table 5. FDA results classification accuracy (%).
Fault TypeHSRBM
Diagnosis
H1000000
S0100004 *1
0 *2
R0010000
B0001000
M000096 *1
100 *2
H: Health, S: Stator, R: Rotor, B: Bearing, M: Misalignment; *1: Electrical approach; *2: Hybrid approach.
Table 6. FDA results classification accuracy (%).
Table 6. FDA results classification accuracy (%).
Fault TypeHSRBM
Diagnosis
H99.99 *10.01 *10.61 *10.01 *10.01 *1
99.91 *20.01 *20.01 *20 *20 *2
S0 *137.85 *116.05 *119.61 *137.85 *1
0.01 *256.21 *238.99 *20.01 *20.01 *2
R0 *119.83 *151.4 *127.13 *120.45 *1
0.01 *243.77 *260.99 *20.01 *20 *2
B0 *121.54 *124.02 *141.3 *120.93 *1
0.04 *20 *20 *299.97 *20.01 *2
M0 *120.76 *17.92 *111.94 *120.76 *1
0 *20 *20 *20.01 *299.98 *2
H: Health, S: Stator, R: Rotor, B: Bearing, M: Misalignment; *1: Electrical approach; *2: Hybrid approach.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Chang, H.-C.; Jheng, Y.-M.; Kuo, C.-C.; Hsueh, Y.-M. Induction Motors Condition Monitoring System with Fault Diagnosis Using a Hybrid Approach. Energies 2019, 12, 1471. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081471

AMA Style

Chang H-C, Jheng Y-M, Kuo C-C, Hsueh Y-M. Induction Motors Condition Monitoring System with Fault Diagnosis Using a Hybrid Approach. Energies. 2019; 12(8):1471. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081471

Chicago/Turabian Style

Chang, Hong-Chan, Yu-Ming Jheng, Cheng-Chien Kuo, and Yu-Min Hsueh. 2019. "Induction Motors Condition Monitoring System with Fault Diagnosis Using a Hybrid Approach" Energies 12, no. 8: 1471. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12081471

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