Journal of Systems Engineering and Electronics ›› 2013, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (3): 500-.doi: 10.1109/JSEE.2013.00058

• CONTROL THEORY AND APPLICATION • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Fault detection and diagnosis for data incomplete industrial systems with new Bayesian network approach

Zhengdao Zhang∗, Jinlin Zhu, and Feng Pan   

  1. Key Laboratory of Advanced Process Control for Light Industry (Ministry of Education), Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, China
  • Online:2013-06-25 Published:2010-01-03

Abstract:

For the fault detection and diagnosis problem in largescale industrial systems, there are two important issues: the missing data samples and the non-Gaussian property of the data. However, most of the existing data-driven methods cannot be able to handle both of them. Thus, a new Bayesian network classifier based fault detection and diagnosis method is proposed. At first, a non-imputation method is presented to handle the data incomplete samples, with the property of the proposed Bayesian network classifier, and the missing values can be marginalized in an elegant manner. Furthermore, the Gaussian mixture model is used to approximate the non-Gaussian data with a linear combinationof finite Gaussian mixtures, so that the Bayesian network can process the non-Gaussian data in an effective way. Therefore, the entire fault detection and diagnosis method can deal with the high-dimensional incomplete process samples in an efficient and robust way. The diagnosis results are expressed in the manner of probability with the reliability scores. The proposed approach is evaluated with a benchmark problem called the Tennessee Eastman process. The simulation results show the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed method in fault detection and diagnosis for large-scale systems with missing measurements.