Article
Fault Detection in a Heat Exchanger, Comparative Analysis between Dynamic Principal Component Analysis and Diagnostic Observers
Fecha
2011-03-08Registro en:
Revista Computación y Sistemas; Vol. 14 No. 3
1405-5546
Autor
Tudón Martínez, Juan C.
Morales Menéndez, Rubén
Ramírez Mendoza, Ricardo A.
Garza Castañón, Luis E.
Vargas Martínez, Adriana
Institución
Resumen
Abstract. A comparison between the Dynamic Principal
Component Analysis (DPCA) method and a set of
Diagnostic Observers (DO) under the same experimental
data from a shell and tube industrial heat exchanger is
presented. The comparative analysis shows the detection
properties of both methods when sensors and/or
actuators fail online, including scenarios with multiple
faults. Similar metrics are defined for both methods:
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. DO
showed quicker detection for sensor and actuator faults
with lower false alarm rate. Also, DO can isolate multiple
faults. DPCA required a minor training effort; however, it
can not identify two or more sequential faults.