Abstract

Deep learning-based incipient fault diagnostic techniques have achieved surprisingly well in wind turbines. Due to component failures, wind turbines must undergo active maintenance, substantially influencing revenue and power generation. Unfortunately, there are consistently uneven data distributions between samples with faults and those without faults, resulting in incorrect fault classification. Wind turbine fault classification has a significant data imbalance problem, compromising learning attention for majority and minority classes. Machine learning methodologies based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN), over-sampling, and under-sampling techniques for generating synthetic data have been widely employed to address the imbalance data problem. However, the traditional synthetic minority oversampling technique (SMOTE) accomplishes oversampling using linear interpolation between close minority class samples, which could be confusing, subpar, and indistinguishable from the majority class. This study suggests combining over and under-sampling using adaptive SMOTE and edited nearest neighbors (ASMOTE-ENN) that incorporate over-sampling with adaptive SMOTE and under-sampling with ENN to improve the quality of the generated samples. With this resampling technique, noise in an imbalanced dataset is reduced on three levels by using an adaptive nearest neighbor selection algorithm to find the nearest neighbors that are visible. Then use SMOTE to create samples that precisely fall into the minority class, and later use the ENN technique to eliminate instances that contribute to noise afterwards. Resampling data created by combining over- and under-sampling approaches to match the data distribution over all classes is the foundation of the suggested method’s efficacy. A hybrid ensemble method is used for effective classification, including boosting, bagging, and stacking techniques. The original unbalanced and balanced data using the ASMOTE-ENN algorithm were classified using the proposed hybrid ensemble method. The classification results show that the proposed strategy is more accurate than a few imbalanced fault diagnosis techniques.

Full Text
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