Mining Publication: Early Detection of Insulation Failure in Electric Motors
Original creation date: January 1993
A system capable of monitoring mine electrical power systems and detecting impending component failure could significantly improve power system safety and reduce unscheduled equipment downtime. Such monitoring would require a method of evaluating electrical parameters, calculated from terminal values, for indications of component deterioration. The U.S. Bureau of Mines has targeted electrical failure of squirrel cage induction motors and examined the use of mathematical models to aid in this evaluation. The initial stage of this work is complete, and has produced polynomial networks called adaptive learning networks (ALN's) that can detect and quantify winding insulation leakage simulated on laboratory motors. In this modeling process, empirical data from laboratory motors were used to select the electrical parameters most significant for assessing motor conditions, and mathematical expressions relating these parameters to simulate deterioration were formed. ALN's developed thus far can process readily measured motor terminal information and quantify power and current levels of laboratory-simulated leakage to within 1% and 3% of full load values, respectively, for motors in the 10- to 150-hp size range. The next stage of this research is validation of these ALN's for actual motor failures; this stage is currently underway, using accelerated life testing of laboratory motors.
Authors: GT Homce
Report of Investigations - January 1993
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20023147
Pittsburgh, PA: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, RI 9450, 1993 Jan; :1-26
See Also
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- Condition-Based Maintenance of Electrical Machines
- Detrimental Effects of Capacitance on High-Resistance-Grounded Mine Distribution Systems
- Distinguishing Motor Starts from Short Circuits through Phase-Angle Measurements
- Effect of Three-Winding Transformer Models on the Analysis and Protection of Mine Power Systems
- Motor Monitoring System for a Continuous Miner
- Occupational Electrical Injuries in the United States, 1992-1998, and Recommendations for Safety Research
- Practical Risk Assessment Guidelines for Identifying, Assessing, and Mitigating Stored Energy Hazards in Underground Coal Mines During and After a Mine Emergency
- U.S. Bureau of Mines/NIOSH Mining Electrical Safety Research: A Legacy of Protection Against Shock, Fires, and Explosions
- Understanding and Quantifying Arc Flash Hazards in the Mining Industry
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program