Abstract

Shock test is a pivotal stage for designing and manufacturing space instruments. As the essential components in shock test systems to measure shock signals accurately, high-g accelerometers are usually exposed to hazardous shock environment and could be subjected to various damages. Owing to that these damages to the accelerometers could result in erroneous measurements which would further lead to shock test failures, accurately diagnosing the fault type of each high-g accelerometer can be vital to ensure the reliability of the shock test experiments. Additionally, in practice, an accelerometer in one malfunction form usually outputs mutable signal waveforms, so that it is difficult to empirically judge the fault type of the accelerometer based on the erroneous readings. Moreover, traditional hardware diagnosis approaches require disassembling the sensor’s package shell and manually observing the damage of the elements inner the sensor, which are less-efficient and uneconomical. Aiming at these problems, several data-driven approaches are incorporated to diagnose the fault types of high-g accelerometers in this work. Firstly, several high-g accelerometers with most frequent types of damage are collected, and a shock signal dataset is gathered by conducting shock tests on these faulty accelerometers. Then, the obtained dataset is used to train several base classifiers to identify the fault types in a supervised fashion. Lastly, a hybrid ensemble learning model is established by integrating these base classifiers with both heterogeneous and homogeneous models. Experimental results show that these data-driven methods can accurately identify the fault types of high-g accelerometers from their mutable erroneous readings.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call