A brief review on offshore wind turbine fault detection and recent development in condition monitoring based maintenance system
Version 2 2024-06-04, 14:45Version 2 2024-06-04, 14:45
Version 1 2016-01-27, 12:48Version 1 2016-01-27, 12:48
conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 14:45authored byMJ Kabir, Aman Maung Than Oo, M Rabbani
Offshore wind turbine requires more systematized operation and maintenance strategies to ensure systems are harmless, profitable and cost-effective. Condition monitoring and fault diagnostic systems ominously plays an important role in offshore wind turbine in order to cut down maintenance and operational costs. Condition monitoring techniques which describing complex faults and failure mode types and their generated traceable signs to provide cost-effective condition monitoring and predictive maintenance and their diagnostic schemes. Continuously monitor the condition of critical parts are the most efficient way to improve reliability of wind turbine. Implementation of Condition Based Maintenance (CBM) strategy provides right time maintenance decisions and Predictive Health Monitoring (PHM) data to overcome breakdown and machine downtime. Fault detection and CBM implementation is challenging for off shore wind farm due to the complexity of remote sensing, components health and predictive assessment, data collection, data analysis, data handling, state recognition, and advisory decision. The rapid expansion of wind farms, advanced technological development and harsh installation sites needs a successful CM approach. This paper aims to review brief status of recent development of CM techniques and focusing with major faults takes place in gear box and bearing, rotor and blade, pitch, yaw and tower system and generator and control system.
History
Pagination
1-7
Location
Wollongong, New South Wales
Start date
2015-09-27
End date
2015-09-30
ISBN-13
9781479987252
Language
eng
Publication classification
E Conference publication, E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2015, IEEE
Title of proceedings
AUPEC 2015 : Challenges for Future Grids
Event
Australian Universities Power Engineering. Conference (25th : 2015 : Wollongong, New South Wales)