Adaptive Morphological Feature Extraction and Support Vector Regressive Classification for Bearing Fault Diagnosis

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Abstract

Numerous studies on fault diagnosis have been conducted in recent years because the timely and correct detection of machine fault effectively minimizes the damage resulting in the unexpected breakdown of machineries. The mathematical morphological analysis has been performed to denoise raw signal. However, the improper choice of the length of the structure element (SE) will substantially influence the effectiveness of fault feature extraction. Moreover, the classification of fault type is a significant step in intelligent fault diagnosis, and many techniques have already been developed, such as support vector machine (SVM). This study proposes an intelligent fault diagnosis strategy that combines the extraction of morphological feature and support vector regression (SVR) classifier. The vibration signal is first processed using various scales of morphological analysis, where the length of SE is determined adaptively. Thereafter, nine statistical features are extracted from the processed signal. Lastly, an SVR classifier is used to identify the health condition of the machinery. The effectiveness of the proposed scheme is validated using the data set from a bearing test rig. Results show the high accuracy of the proposed method despite the influence of noise.

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Shuai, J., Shen, C., & Zhu, Z. (2017). Adaptive Morphological Feature Extraction and Support Vector Regressive Classification for Bearing Fault Diagnosis. International Journal of Rotating Machinery, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/2384184

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