Fault detection and diagnosis for chemical processes using dynamic global–local preserving projections

Most traditional multivariate statistical monitoring methods require an assumption that the observation values at a certain moment and a past moment are statistically independent. However, in actual chemical and biological processes, the sample at a certain moment is often affected by the previous m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of chemical engineering 2024-05, Vol.102 (5), p.1899-1916
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Youqiang, Yang, Fan, Bai, Jianjun, Zou, Hongbo
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most traditional multivariate statistical monitoring methods require an assumption that the observation values at a certain moment and a past moment are statistically independent. However, in actual chemical and biological processes, the sample at a certain moment is often affected by the previous moment. Therefore, given the problem of more false alarms and poor detection ability based on the traditional principal component analysis, this article proposes a dynamic global–local preserving projections (DGLPP) algorithm. Unlike dynamic local preserving projections (DLPP) and dynamic principal component analysis (DPCA), DGLPP controls the global and local information retained in the dimensionality reduction data by introducing weight coefficients, which makes the algorithm applicable to more types of industrial processes. Moreover, new parameter determination methods are also proposed for improved detection and diagnosis. Through the improved contribution graph method, we can see the influence degree of each variable on the fault, to monitor and isolate the fault. Finally, by verifying the operation of the multivariable process and two practical cases, the results show that compared with DPCA, DLPP, and global local retained projection (GLPP) methods, the performance under this method has been significantly improved.
ISSN:0008-4034
1939-019X
DOI:10.1002/cjce.25164