Abstract

The transformer is one of the most important electrical machines in electrical systems. Its proper operation is fundamental for the distribution and transmission of electrical energy. During its service life, it is under continuous electrical and mechanical stresses that can produce diverse types of damage. Among them, short-circuited turns (SCTs) in the windings are one of the main causes of the transformer fault; therefore, their detection in an early stage can help to increase the transformer life and reduce the maintenance costs. In this regard, this paper proposes a signal processing-based methodology to detect early SCTs (i.e., damage of low severity) through the analysis of vibroacoustic signals in steady state under different load conditions, i.e., no load, linear load, nonlinear load, and both linear and nonlinear loads, where the transformer is adapted to emulate different conditions, i.e., healthy (0 SCTs) and with damage of low severity (1 and 2 SCTs). In the signal processing stage, the contrast index is analyzed as a fault indicator, where the Unser and Tamura definitions are tested. For the automatic classification of the obtained indices, an artificial neural network is used. It showed better results than the ones provided by a support vector machine. Results demonstrate that the contrast estimation is suitable as a fault indicator for all the load conditions since 89.78% of accuracy is obtained if the Unser definition is used.

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