Rolling Bearing Fault Diagnostics Based on Improved Data Augmentation and ConvNet
Delanyo Kwame Bensah Kulevome, Hong Wang, Xuegang Wang
Abstract
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are well suited to bearing fault classification due to their ability to learn discriminative spectro-temporal patterns. However, gathering sufficient cases of faulty conditions in real-world engineering scenarios to train an intelligent diagnosis system is challenging. This paper proposes a fault diagnosis method combining several augmentation schemes to alleviate the problem of limited fault data. We begin by identifying relevant parameters that influence the construction of a spectrogram. We leverage the uncertainty principle in processing time-frequency domain signals, making it impossible to simultaneously achieve good time and frequency resolutions. A key determinant of this phenomenon is the window function's choice and length used in implementing the short-time Fourier transform. The Gaussian, Kaiser, and rectangular windows are selected in the experimentation due to their diverse characteristics. The overlap parameter's size also influences the outcome and resolution of the spectrogram. A 50% overlap is used in the original data transformation, and ±25% is used in implementing an effective augmentation policy to which two-stage regular CNN can be applied to achieve improved performance. The best model reaches an accuracy of 99.98% and a cross-domain accuracy of 92.54%. When combined with data augmentation, the proposed model yields cutting-edge results.