4.0 Article

A Combined Short Time Fourier Transform and Image Classification Transformer Model for Rolling Element Bearings Fault Diagnosis in Electric Motors

Journal

MACHINE LEARNING AND KNOWLEDGE EXTRACTION
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages 228-242

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/make3010011

Keywords

bearing fault; convolutional neural network; electric motors; short time fourier transform; image classification transformer; fault diagnosis

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This paper proposes a new method for diagnosing the health of rolling element bearings in rotating electric machines, using STFT and ICT for processing and classifying vibration images, achieving higher accuracy and requiring less computational resources compared to the CNN approach.
The most frequent faults in rotating electrical machines occur in their rolling element bearings. Thus, an effective health diagnosis mechanism of rolling element bearings is necessary from operational and economical points of view. Recently, convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have been proposed for bearing fault detection and identification. However, two major drawbacks of these models are (a) their lack of ability to capture global information about the input vector and to derive knowledge about the statistical properties of the latter and (b) the high demand for computational resources. In this paper, short time Fourier transform (STFT) is proposed as a pre-processing step to acquire time-frequency representation vibration images from raw data in variable healthy or faulty conditions. To diagnose and classify the vibration images, the image classification transformer (ICT), inspired from the transformers used for natural language processing, has been suitably adapted to work as an image classifier trained in a supervised manner and is also proposed as an alternative method to CNNs. Simulation results on a famous and well-established rolling element bearing fault detection benchmark show the effectiveness of the proposed method, which achieved 98.3% accuracy (on the test dataset) while requiring substantially fewer computational resources to be trained compared to the CNN approach.

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