Basic Maintenance Strategy of Engineering Assets) : Echanical Ngineering Epartment Diponegoro University
Basic Maintenance Strategy of Engineering Assets) : Echanical Ngineering Epartment Diponegoro University
Basic Maintenance Strategy of Engineering Assets) : Echanical Ngineering Epartment Diponegoro University
1
Introduction to Condition Monitoring and Fault Diagnosis
ISO definition:
A field of technical activity in which selected physical
parameters, associated with machinery operation, are
observed for the purpose of determining machinery integrity.
BS: 3811:1984
The continuous or periodic measurement and interpretation
of data to indicate the condition of an item to determine the
need for maintenance.
“Machinery Failure”
In context with the larger plant maintenance picture,
most machinery is required to operate within a close
set of limits
Operating speed (not variable)
Load condition
Product quality standards
“Machinery Failure”
The main reason for employing a Machine Condition Monitoring
and Fault Diagnosis program is to find accurate, quantitative
information on the present condition of the machinery.
“Machinery Failure”
“Machinery Failure”
Other considerations which may dictate the machine
performance:
Economic the obsolescence-run to failure, premature
replacement
Safety minimizing risk of failure: train, airplane, ship,
automobile, etc.
“Machinery Failure”
Causes of failures:
“Types of Failure”
“The goals”
“Frequency of Failure”
“Wear In Failure”
Typically high frequency of failures early in the expected
life of a machine due to:
Design errors
Manufacturing defects
Assembly mistakes
Installation problems
“Random Failure”
Fatigue
Wear mechanisms
Corrosion
Obsolescence
“Frequency of Failure”
7
1 2 3 4 5 Mission plans
20
Maintenance cost ($/HP/Year)
15
10
0
RTF PM PdM PCM
Run to Preventive Predictive Proactive Condition
Failure Maintenance Maintenance Monitoring
Classification of machine
- Critical to production… ?
- High cost of replacement…?
- Long lead time fro replacement…?
Manufacturers recommendations
Failure data (history), MTTF, MTBF, failure modes
Redundancy
Safety (plant personnel, community, environment)
Parts cost/availability
Costs (personnel, administrative, equipment)
Running costs
MTBF
(downtime uptime)
Number of failures
The MTBF is typically part of a model that assumes the failed system is immediately
repaired (zero elapsed time), as a part of a renewal process.
This is in contrast to the mean time to failure (MTTF), which measures average time
between failure with the modeling assumption that the failed system is not repaired.
If equipment is redundant
Low cost spares available
Interruptible process, stockpiled product
Safe failure modes
Long MTTF/MTBF
Low cost secondary damage
Quick repair or replacement (low cost of interruption to
production)
“Potential Advantages”
Increased machine availability and reliability
Improved operating efficiency
Improved risk management (less down time)
Reduced maintenance costs (better planning)
Reduced spare parts inventories
Improved safety
Improved knowledge of machine condition (safe overloading
of machine possible)
Extended operational life of machine
Improved customer relations (less planned /unplanned
downtime)
elimination of chronic failures (root cause analysis and
redesign)
Diponegoro University 31 Mechanical Engineering Dept.
Machine Condition Monitoring and Fault Diagnosis
“Potential Disadvantages”
“Philosophy”
Get useful information on the condition of equipment
to the people who need it.
Operators, maintenance, managers, etc.
These groups need different information at different time
This means:
Collect useful data
Change data into information in a form required by and
useful to others
Timely reporting
“Philosophy”
“Tasks”
Detection
• Data gathering
• Comparison to standards
• Comparison to limits set in-plant for specific equipment
• Trending over time
Diagnosis
• Recognizing the type of fault developing (different fault
types may be more or less serious and require different
action)
• Severity of fault
“Tasks”
Prognosis
• Expected time to failure
• Trending
• Forecasting
• Maintenance planning/timing
Post Mortem
• Root cause failure analysis
• Research, laboratory / field tests
• Modeling of system and analysis
“Tasks”
Prescription (activity dictated by information collected)
• May be applied at any stage
• Alter operating conditions
• Alter monitoring strategy (frequency, type)
• Redesign process or equipment
“Strategies”
“Strategies”
No Monitoring
Inexpensive, non-critical equipment
In stock equipment (or readily accessible)
Low load equipment
Low failure rate known
Failure modes well understood
“Strategies”
Periodic Monitoring
Non-critical equipment
Failure modes known
Historically dependable equipment
Trending and severity levels checks only
Problems trigger more rigorous investigations
“Strategies”
Continuous Monitoring
“What to Measure”
“Framework”
General method
Model-based Data-driven
“Framework”
Online fault diagnosis system
Refined diagnosis
Time Monitoring
Sensor outputs Data-driven
waveform, FFT Feature information
vectors Identify Yes
Digital signal Yes
faults/failures
processing Feature Fault classification
Machines vectors and (t ) Feature patterns for faults More info
No
Decision:
statistic Decision fusion could use: needed? Good?
System information Fuzzy, NN, SVM, etc.
identification No
Mathematic
model Physical parameters Request
Model-based estimation
Physic of maintenace
Sensor fusion Feature fusion
failure; System
dynamic
parameters Feature extraction