Semi-supervised approach to soft sensor modeling for fault detection in industrial systems with multiple operation modes

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Abstract

In industrial systems, certain process variables that need to be monitored for detecting faults are often difficult or impossible to measure. Soft sensor techniques are widely used to estimate such difficult-to-measure process variables from easy-to-measure ones. Soft sensor modeling requires training datasets including the information of various states such as operation modes, but the fault dataset with the target variable is insufficient as the training dataset. This paper describes a semi-supervised approach to soft sensor modeling to incorporate an incomplete dataset without the target variable in the training dataset. To incorporate the incomplete dataset, we consider the properties of processes at transition points between operation modes in the system. The regression coefficients of the operation modes are estimated under constraint conditions obtained from the information on the mode transitions. In a case study, this constrained soft sensor modeling was used to predict refrigerant leaks in air-conditioning systems with heating and cooling operation modes. The results show that this modeling method is promising for soft sensors in a system with multiple operation modes.

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Takeuchi, S., Nishino, T., Saito, T., & Watanabe, I. (2018). Semi-supervised approach to soft sensor modeling for fault detection in industrial systems with multiple operation modes. In Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing (Vol. 639, pp. 683–693). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64861-3_64

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