Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 1485: Low-Complexity Monitoring of DC Motor Speed Sensor Additive Faults Using a Discrete Kalman Filter Observer

Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 1485: Low-Complexity Monitoring of DC Motor Speed Sensor Additive Faults Using a Discrete Kalman Filter Observer

Energies doi: 10.3390/en19061485

Authors:
Rossy Uscamaita-Quispetupa
Erwin J. Sacoto-Cabrera
Roger Jesus Coaquira-Castillo
L. Walter Utrilla Mego
Julio Cesar Herrera-Levano
Yesenia Concha-Ramos
Edison Moreno-Cardenas

This article presents an online additive fault-detection system for the speed sensor of a 200 W shunt-type direct current (DC) motor, integrated into a power module controlled by an Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT). The system is designed to trigger an alarm signal when an additive fault occurs by comparing the Kalman Filter (KF) residual against a predefined detection threshold. Three specific fault types in the speed sensor were analyzed: offset, disconnection, and sinusoidal noise. Experimental results demonstrate effective fault detection across a speed range of 80 to 690 rpm under no-load conditions. However, when a constant torque of 0.5 Nm is applied, both the detection threshold and the subset of reliably identifiable faults must be adjusted. The main contribution of this study is the development of a customized real-time fault detection framework and the characterization of residual variations caused by unmodeled load disturbances in actual hardware. This approach improves the monitoring and fault-diagnosis capabilities of sensor systems in DC motors by quantifying the stochastic behavior of residuals under different operating constraints.

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