The application of chemometrics methods to continuous monitoring and diagnostics of sintering process faults for improving iron‐ore sinter quality is considered in the article. The sintering process is among complex multivariate processes.
A number of agglomeration process faults have often similar symptoms, resulting in late fault detection by an operator and as a consequence, wrong process control decisions. To support the efficient operative decision making, it is proposed to use the process fault monitoring and diagnostics system.
The proposed system uses a two‐level neural network (NN) diagnostic model. The high‐level neural network is used to localize the process faults whereas their reasons are determined by the low‐level neural networks. To reduce essentially the time of HL‐NN training and retraining, the task dimension is preliminarily reduced with the principal component analysis method so that the scores obtained from initial data are fed into high‐level neural network inputs. The use of principal component analysis allowed detection of sintering process faults with T2 and Q statistics. Only upon detecting the fault, a NN diagnostic model starts working to determine the fault reason. The system algorithm provides for special measures to prevent the NN from possible “loss” of the identified fault due to operator's inactivity.
To increase the diagnosis depth for controlling fault symptoms that are evident on the sinter cake surface, optical digital cameras are installed and images from them are processed with proposed algorithms on the basis of fuzzy clusterization to take into account uncertainties in the initial information.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.