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contributor authorDavid Chelidze
contributor authorJoseph P. Cusumano
date accessioned2017-05-09T00:14:49Z
date available2017-05-09T00:14:49Z
date copyrightJanuary, 2004
date issued2004
identifier issn1048-9002
identifier otherJVACEK-28868#2_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/131082
description abstractIn this paper, a previously published damage tracking method is extended to provide failure prognosis, and applied experimentally to an electromechanical system with a failing supply battery. The method is based on a dynamical systems approach to the problem of damage evolution. In this approach, damage processes are viewed as occurring in a hierarchical dynamical system consisting of a “fast,” directly observable subsystem coupled to a “slow,” hidden subsystem describing damage evolution. Damage tracking is achieved using a two-time-scale modeling strategy based on phase space reconstruction. Using the reconstructed phase space of the reference (undamaged) system, short-time predictive models are constructed. Fast-time data from later stages of damage evolution of a given system are collected and used to estimate a tracking function by calculating the short time reference model prediction error. In this paper, the tracking metric based on these estimates is used as an input to a nonlinear recursive filter, the output of which provides continuous refined estimates of the current damage (or, equivalently, health) state. Estimates of remaining useful life (or, equivalently, time to failure) are obtained recursively using the current damage state estimates under the assumption of a particular damage evolution model. The method is experimentally demonstrated using an electromechanical system, in which mechanical vibrations of a cantilever beam are dynamically coupled to electrical oscillations in an electromagnet circuit. Discharge of a battery powering the electromagnet (the “damage” process in this case) is tracked using strain gauge measurements from the beam. The method is shown to accurately estimate both the battery state and the time to failure throughout virtually the entire experiment.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleA Dynamical Systems Approach to Failure Prognosis
typeJournal Paper
journal volume126
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Vibration and Acoustics
identifier doi10.1115/1.1640638
journal fristpage2
journal lastpage8
identifier eissn1528-8927
keywordsDynamic systems
keywordsFailure
keywordsFilters
keywordsBatteries
keywordsErrors
keywordsDynamics (Mechanics)
keywordsAlgorithms
keywordsPhase space
keywordsMeasurement
keywordsElectromagnets
keywordsEquations
keywordsModeling
keywordsPatient diagnosis
keywordsElectric potential AND Scalars
treeJournal of Vibration and Acoustics:;2004:;volume( 126 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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