Abstract

The rapid advancement of machine-learning techniques has played a significant role in the evolution of engine health management technology. In the last decade, deep-learning methods have received a great deal of attention in many application domains, including object recognition and computer vision. Recently, there has been a rapid rise in the use of convolutional neural networks for rotating machinery diagnostics inspired by their powerful feature learning and classification capability. However, the application in the field of gas turbine diagnostics is still limited. This paper presents a gas turbine fault detection and isolation method using modular convolutional neural networks preceded by a physics-driven performance-trend-monitoring system. The trend-monitoring system was employed to capture performance changes due to degradation, establish a new baseline when it is needed, and generatefault signatures. The fault detection and isolation system was trained to step-by-step detect and classify gas path faults to the component level using fault signatures obtained from the physics part. The performance of the method proposed was evaluated based on different fault scenarios for a three-shaft turbofan engine, under significant measurement noise to ensure model robustness. Two comparative assessments were also carried out: with a single convolutional-neural-network-architecture-based fault classification method and with a deep long short-term memory-assisted fault detection and isolation method. The results obtained revealed the performance of the proposed method to detect and isolate multiple gas path faults with over 96% accuracy. Moreover, sharing diagnostic tasks with modular architectures is seen as relevant to significantly enhance diagnostic accuracy.

Highlights

  • Effective maintenance of flight critical components including gas turbine engines plays a significant role in the aircraft industry

  • Considerable reports have been presented on its application for system and rotating machinery health management [24,50] including gas turbine prognostics [51,52,53]

  • An adaptive performance-model-assisted deep-convolutional-neural-network method was presented for three-shaft turbofan engine fault diagnostics

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Summary

Introduction

Effective maintenance of flight critical components including gas turbine engines plays a significant role in the aircraft industry. It is crucial to perform regular and effective maintenance through the support of advanced powerplant health management (PHM) technologies. Condition-based maintenance is the key advancement in the field, where maintenance actions are taken based on actual evidence about the existing health status of the engine under operation. Potential damages on the gas path components due to fouling, erosion, corrosion, and an increase in tip clearance can be detected and isolated before they become severe enough. This requires relevant and significantly sufficient measurement information based on sensors installed on the engine gas path for control and monitoring purposes

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