Abstract

The planetary gearbox transmission system in wind turbines has complex structures and generally operates under non-stationary conditions. Thus its measured responses are of high complexity and nonlinearity, which brings a great challenge in the development of reliable condition monitoring techniques for the planetary gearbox transmission system. As a prevalent and effective tool for analyzing the non-stationary vibration signal with strong nonlinearity, the Vold–Kalman filtration technique has excellent capabilities of tracking the targeted harmonic components of vibrations, which can significantly benefit planetary gearbox fault diagnostics. However, the tracking accuracy is heavily enslaved to the selection of the rational bandwidth for the Vold–Kalman filter. An inappropriate bandwidth could impair the characteristics of the targeted harmonic responses, and as a consequence, the monitoring process becomes no longer reliable. To address this issue, a novel bandwidth selection methodology for the Vold–Kalman filter is developed in this paper. Through comprehensively depicting the targeted harmonic response using features in multiple domains, the rational bandwidth can be selected for Vold–Kalman filtering, and then, a reliable monitoring process can be ensured. Additionally, a tacho-less speed estimation procedure is utilized in this paper to acquire the instantaneous rotational speed from the vibration signal directly. With the rational bandwidth and the estimated rotational speed, the desired harmonic components of vibrations can be adaptively extracted and tracked through the Vold–Kalman filter with high accuracy, and at the same time, the irrelevant or unwanted components are excluded completely. The effectiveness and superiority of the proposed adaptive Vold–Kalman filtration for wind turbine planetary gearbox diagnostics are demonstrated and validated experimentally.

Full Text
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