Fault Detection of High-Speed Train Wheelset Bearing Based on Impulse-Envelope Manifold

A novel fault detection method employing the impulse-envelope manifold is proposed in this paper which is based on the combination of convolution sparse representation (CSR) and Hilbert transform manifold learning. The impulses with different sparse characteristics are extracted by the CSR with diff...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhe Zhuang, Jianming Ding, Andy C. Tan, Ying Shi, Jianhui Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017-01-01
Series:Shock and Vibration
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2104720
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Summary:A novel fault detection method employing the impulse-envelope manifold is proposed in this paper which is based on the combination of convolution sparse representation (CSR) and Hilbert transform manifold learning. The impulses with different sparse characteristics are extracted by the CSR with different penalty parameters. The impulse-envelope space is constructed through Hilbert transform on the extracted impulses. The manifold based on impulse-envelope space (impulse-envelope manifold) is executed to learn the low-dimensionality intrinsic envelope of vibration signals for fault detection. The analyzed results based on simulations, experimental tests, and practical applications show that (1) the impulse-envelope manifold with both isometric mapping (Isomap) and locally linear coordination (LLC) can be successfully used to extract the intrinsic envelope of the impulses where local tangent space analysis (LTSA) fails to perform and (2) the impulse-envelope manifold with Isomap outperforms those with LLC in terms of strengthening envelopes and the number of extracted harmonics. The proposed impulse-envelope manifold with Isomap is superior in extracting the intrinsic envelope, strengthening the amplitude of intrinsic envelope spectra, and enlarging the harmonic number of fault-characteristic frequency. The proposed technique is highly suitable for extracting intrinsic envelopes for bearing fault detection.
ISSN:1070-9622
1875-9203