4.6 Article

Health State Monitoring of Bladed Machinery with Crack Growth Detection in BFG Power Plant Using an Active Frequency Shift Spectral Correction Method

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma10080925

Keywords

structural health monitoring; crack detection; power plant; blast furnace gas; centrifugal compressor; bladed machinery; spectral correction

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [51605403]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province, China [2016J01261]
  3. Guangdong Natural Science Foundation, China [2015A030310010]
  4. Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) comprehensive and standardized trial and new model application of intelligent manufacturing [[2016] 07744]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [20720160078]
  6. Joint Innovation of Industrial Technology in Fujian Province (Serial development of CNC tools precision and high efficiency processing titanium alloy, Fujian Province Development and Reform Commission Investment) [[2016] 482]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Power generation using waste-gas is an effective and green way to reduce the emission of the harmful blast furnace gas (BFG) in pig-iron producing industry. Condition monitoring of mechanical structures in the BFG power plant is of vital importance to guarantee their safety and efficient operations. In this paper, we describe the detection of crack growth of bladed machinery in the BFG power plant via vibration measurement combined with an enhanced spectral correction technique. This technique enables high-precision identification of amplitude, frequency, and phase information (the harmonic information) belonging to deterministic harmonic components within the vibration signals. Rather than deriving all harmonic information using neighboring spectral bins in the fast Fourier transform spectrum, this proposed active frequency shift spectral correction method makes use of some interpolated Fourier spectral bins and has a better noise-resisting capacity. We demonstrate that the identified harmonic information via the proposed method is of suppressed numerical error when the same level of noises is presented in the vibration signal, even in comparison with a Hanning-window-based correction method. With the proposed method, we investigated vibration signals collected from a centrifugal compressor. Spectral information of harmonic tones, related to the fundamental working frequency of the centrifugal compressor, is corrected. The extracted spectral information indicates the ongoing development of an impeller blade crack that occurred in the centrifugal compressor. This method proves to be a promising alternative to identify blade cracks at early stages.

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