Abstract

Considered as the heart of electrical power transmission and distribution networks, power transformers are essential part of the electricity transmission grid. Among the condition monitoring and fault diagnosis tools for these machines, dissolved gas analysis (DGA) has proven its effectiveness in their early detection and classification of faults. Up to date, many methods have been proposed in the literature for the interpretation of DGA data, classified into traditional and intelligent methods. This paper proposes a two-steps hybrid method, which uses the strengths of both methods. The approach uses the evolutionary k-means clustering algorithm based on the genetic algorithm for subset formation and subset analysis by human expertise. In the diagnostic procedure, to determine the condition of a sample, the subset to which it belongs is first identified and then the corresponding diagnostic sub-model is applied. The proposed method has been implemented with 595 DGA data, tested on 254 DGA data and validated on the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) TC10 database. Their performances were evaluated and compared with existing traditional, intelligent and hybrid methods. From the results obtained with the IEC TC10 database, the newly proposed approach depicts the best overall diagnosis accuracies. Indeed, the best performance is achieved with the proposed method compared to other models in the literature, with diagnostic accuracy of 98.29% compared to 88.89% of the Gouda triangle method, to 88.03% of the Hyosun Corporation gas ratio method or to 86.32% of the three ratios technique.

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