Simulation-assisted Training of Neural Networks for Condition Monitoring of Electrical Drives: Enhanced Domain Adaptation Methods

Konferenz: IKMT 2022 - 13. GMM/ETG-Fachtagung
14.09.2022 - 15.09.2022 in Linz, Österreich

Tagungsband: GMM-Fb. 103: IKMT 2022

Seiten: 7Sprache: EnglischTyp: PDF

Autoren:
Schmid, Florian; Widmer, Gerhard (Institute for Computational Perception, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria & LIT AI Lab, Linz Institute of Technology (LIT), Linz, Austria)
Masoudian, Shahed; Koutini, Khaled (LIT AI Lab, Linz Institute of Technology (LIT), Linz, Austria)
Marth, Edmund; Zorn, Patrick (Institute for Electrical Drives and Power Electronics, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria)

Inhalt:
Over the past years, Deep Learning (DL) has become a topic of increasing popularity in industrial applications, including automatic fault detection. One major downside of DL is its requirement for a large amount of labeled data to solve a given task. Particularly in industrial fault detection problems, this data acquisition process can be very costly or even infeasible. An appealing alternative is to simulate real-world processes and obtain labeled data by running a simulation. However, a simulation often cannot cover all aspects of the real world, introducing artifacts and imprecision. Domain Adaptation, as a subcategory of Transfer Learning, provides a collection of algorithms that allow identification of discriminative, common signal patterns between simulations and the real world. This paper conducts a thorough investigation on the industrial application of electric motor fault detection using electrical signals. Specifically, the task is to detect errors in a block-commutated 280W motor given monitored phase currents. Given a DL classifier trained on simulated signals, the aim is to adapt it to real-world measurements given only measured signals from the motor running in its nominal (healthy) operating condition. Firstly, we review two techniques of preprocessing electrical signals to achieve a suitable input format for a Deep Neural Network. Secondly, we provide a collection of Domain Adaptation algorithm candidates alongside explanations. Finally, in our experiments, we show that Deep Domain Adaptation is indeed suited for this type of problem and demonstrate its effectiveness.