Optimal topology for distributed fault detection of large-scale systems

Journal Article (2015)
Author(s)

Francesca Boem (Imperial College London)

Riccardo M.G. Ferrari (Danieli Automation SpA.)

Thomas Parisini (University of Trieste, Imperial College London)

Marios M. Polycarpou (University of Cyprus)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ifacol.2015.09.505 Final published version
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Publication Year
2015
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
21
Volume number
28
Pages (from-to)
60-65
Event
9th IFAC Symposium on Fault Detection, Supervision and Safety for Technical Processes (2015-09-02 - 2015-09-04), paris, France
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116

Abstract

The paper deals with the problem of defining the optimal topology for a distributed fault detection architecture for non-linear large-scale systems. A stochastic modelbased framework for diagnosis is formulated. The system structural graph is decomposed into subsystems and each subsystem is monitored by one local diagnoser. It is shown that overlapping of subsystems allows to improve the detectability properties of the monitoring architecture. Based on this theoretical result, an optimal decomposition design method is proposed, able to define the minimum number of detection units needed to guarantee the detectability of certain faults while minimizing the communication costs subject to some computation cost constraints. An algorithmic procedure is presented to solve the proposed optimal decomposition problem. Preliminary simulation results show the potential of the proposed approach.