Monitoring of fuel oil process of marine diesel engine
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2017-08-12Egilea
Boullosa Falces, David
Larrabe Barrena, Juan Luis
Menéndez, Jaime
Applied Thermal Engineering 127 : 517-526 (2017)
Laburpena
Hotelling’s T2 control chart is very efficient for detecting sudden changes in a process; however, it loses
sensitivity to detect small and progressive changes and its performance decreases when the number of
variables monitored at the same time is high. Because of this, conventional methods for variable reduction
such as PCA were used, but they have difficulties in detecting the variability of the process when the
correlation between variables is poor.
We propose a Method for detection of Small and Sudden Deviations in the process (SSDM), applicable
when the correlation between variables is low; which is typical in marine propulsion processes.
First, fuel oil process variables of a marine diesel engine running, poorly correlated between them, were
reduced through the analysis of correlations.
Afterwards, the selected variables were monitored through Hotelling’s T2 control charts and sudden,
out-of-range changes were detected. The variable that generated the deviation in the process was identified
and the predictive variables were monitored through Cusum charts; the origin of small and progressive
changes in the process below the alarm threshold set by the manufacturer was identified.
The proposed method (SSDM), based on the combination of (Hotelling’s T2 + Cusum), can be implemented
in any type of process in marine propulsion in a satisfactory and economical way, helping in
the identification of the origin of any type of deviation (small and sudden) in the process early enough
to implement the right predictive actions.