Abstract

Preventive maintenance of electric drive systems with induction motors involves monitoring of their operation for detection of abnormal electrical and mechanical conditions that indicate, or may lead to, a failure of the system. Intensive research effort has been for sometime focused on the motor current signature analysis (MCSA). The MCSA techniques utilize the results of spectral analysis of the stator current. Reliable interpretation of the spectra is difficult, since distortions of the current waveform caused by the abnormalities in the drive system are usually minute. In this paper, an alternate medium for the motor signature analysis, namely the instantaneous power, is proposed. By theoretical analysis, computer simulations, and laboratory experiments, it is shown that the instantaneous power carries more information than the current itself. Utilization of the instantaneous power is thus enhancing the reliability of diagnostics of induction motor drives.

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