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Condition monitoring of engineering plants has increased in importance as engineering processes have become increasingly automated. However, electrical machinery usually receives attention only at infrequent intervals when the plant or the electricity generator is shut down. The economics of industry have been changing, placing ever more emphasis on the importance of reliable operation of the plants. Electronics and software in instrumentation, computers, and digital signal processors have improved our ability to analyse machinery online. Condition monitoring is now being applied to a range of systems from fault-tolerant drives of a few hundred watts to machinery of a few hundred MW in major plants.
This book covers a large range of machines and their condition monitoring. This 3rd edition builds on the 2nd edition through a major revision, update of chapters and a comprehensive list of references & standards. Permanent magnet, switched reluctance and other types of machines are now covered, as well as variable speed drive machines and off-line techniques.
Contents cover an introduction to condition monitoring; rotating electrical machines; electrical machine construction, operation and failure modes; reliability of machines and typical failure rates; signal processing and instrumentation requirements; on-line temperature monitoring; on-line chemical monitoring; on-line vibration monitoring; on-line current, flux and power monitoring; on-line partial discharge (PD) electrical monitoring; on-line variable speed drive machine monitoring; off-line monitoring; condition-based maintenance and asset management; application of artificial intelligence techniques to CM; and safety, training and qualification.
Show moreCondition monitoring of engineering plants has increased in importance as engineering processes have become increasingly automated. However, electrical machinery usually receives attention only at infrequent intervals when the plant or the electricity generator is shut down. The economics of industry have been changing, placing ever more emphasis on the importance of reliable operation of the plants. Electronics and software in instrumentation, computers, and digital signal processors have improved our ability to analyse machinery online. Condition monitoring is now being applied to a range of systems from fault-tolerant drives of a few hundred watts to machinery of a few hundred MW in major plants.
This book covers a large range of machines and their condition monitoring. This 3rd edition builds on the 2nd edition through a major revision, update of chapters and a comprehensive list of references & standards. Permanent magnet, switched reluctance and other types of machines are now covered, as well as variable speed drive machines and off-line techniques.
Contents cover an introduction to condition monitoring; rotating electrical machines; electrical machine construction, operation and failure modes; reliability of machines and typical failure rates; signal processing and instrumentation requirements; on-line temperature monitoring; on-line chemical monitoring; on-line vibration monitoring; on-line current, flux and power monitoring; on-line partial discharge (PD) electrical monitoring; on-line variable speed drive machine monitoring; off-line monitoring; condition-based maintenance and asset management; application of artificial intelligence techniques to CM; and safety, training and qualification.
Show morePeter Tavner is an Emeritus Professor at Durham University, UK. He
has held a number of senior research and technical positions in the
electrical supply and manufacturing industries, including two of
the UK's large electrical machine manufacturers. He was Professor
of New & Renewable Energy at Durham University for 8 years,
President of the European Academy of Wind Energy from 2010-2012,
and winner of the Institution Premium of the IEE in 1988.
Li Ran is a professor at Warwick University, UK and Chongqing
University, China. After his PhD he participated in the
commissioning of Gezhouba-Shanghai HVDC System. Between 1992 and
1999, he was a postdoctoral research fellow with the Universities
of Aberdeen, Nottingham and Heriot-Watt. He became a chair at
Durham University in 2010 and joined the University of Warwick in
2012. He was a deputy director for the State Key Laboratory in
Power Transmission Equipment and System Security, China.
Christopher Crabtree is an associate professor in wind energy
systems in the Department of Engineering at Durham University, UK.
Christopher's research focuses on operation and maintenance aspects
of wind energy, onshore and offshore, with the aim of improving
reliability, raising availability and cost reduction. His areas of
focus are development of condition monitoring techniques, power
conversion system reliability, performance analysis of wind energy
systems, and high-frequency thermal monitoring for power
electronics.
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