6,245 research outputs found
Intelligent Methods for Characterization of Electrical Power Quality Signals using Higher Order Statistical Features
This paper considers a few important techniques classification for to identify several power quality disturbances. For this purpose, a process
based in HOS has been realized to extract features that help in classification. In this stage the geometrical pattern established via higher-order
statistical measurements is obtained, and this pattern is function of the amplitudes and frequencies of the power quality disturbances associated to the
50-Hz power-line. Once the features are managed will be segmented to form training and test sets and them will be applied in the statistical methods
used to perform automatic classification of PQ disturbances. The best technique of those compared is selected according to correlation and mistake
rates
Wavelet and Neural Structure: A New Tool for Diagnostic of Power System Disturbances
The Fourier transform can be used for analysis of nonstationary signals, but the Fourier spectrum does not provide any time-domain information about the signal. When the time localization of the spectral components is needed, a wavelet transform giving the time-frequency representation of the signal must be used. In this paper, using wavelet analysis and neural systems as a new tool for the analysis of power system disturbances, disturbances are automatically detected, compacted, and classified. An example showing the potential of these techniques for diagnosis of actual power system disturbances is presented
Smart Classifiers and Bayesian Inference for Evaluating River Sensitivity to Natural and Human Disturbances: A Data Science Approach
Excessive rates of channel adjustment and riverine sediment export represent societal challenges; impacts include: degraded water quality and ecological integrity, erosion hazards to infrastructure, and compromised public safety. The nonlinear nature of sediment erosion and deposition within a watershed and the variable patterns in riverine sediment export over a defined timeframe of interest are governed by many interrelated factors, including geology, climate and hydrology, vegetation, and land use. Human disturbances to the landscape and river networks have further altered these patterns of water and sediment routing.
An enhanced understanding of river sediment sources and dynamics is important for stakeholders, and will become more critical under a nonstationary climate, as sediment yields are expected to increase in regions of the world that will experience increased frequency, persistence, and intensity of storm events. Practical tools are needed to predict sediment erosion, transport and deposition and to characterize sediment sources within a reasonable measure of uncertainty. Water resource scientists and engineers use multidimensional data sets of varying types and quality to answer management-related questions, and the temporal and spatial resolution of these data are growing exponentially with the advent of automated samplers and in situ sensors (i.e., âbig dataâ). Data-driven statistics and classifiers have great utility for representing system complexity and can often be more readily implemented in an adaptive management context than process-based models. Parametric statistics are often of limited efficacy when applied to data of varying quality, mixed types (continuous, ordinal, nominal), censored or sparse data, or when model residuals do not conform to Gaussian distributions. Data-driven machine-learning algorithms and Bayesian statistics have advantages over Frequentist approaches for data reduction and visualization; they allow for non-normal distribution of residuals and greater robustness to outliers.
This research applied machine-learning classifiers and Bayesian statistical techniques to multidimensional data sets to characterize sediment source and flux at basin, catchment, and reach scales. These data-driven tools enabled better understanding of: (1) basin-scale spatial variability in concentration-discharge patterns of instream suspended sediment and nutrients; (2) catchment-scale sourcing of suspended sediments; and (3) reach-scale sediment process domains. The developed tools have broad management application and provide insights into landscape drivers of channel dynamics and riverine solute and sediment export
A Review of Classification Problems and Algorithms in Renewable Energy Applications
Classification problems and their corresponding solving approaches constitute one of the
fields of machine learning. The application of classification schemes in Renewable Energy (RE) has
gained significant attention in the last few years, contributing to the deployment, management and
optimization of RE systems. The main objective of this paper is to review the most important
classification algorithms applied to RE problems, including both classical and novel algorithms.
The paper also provides a comprehensive literature review and discussion on different classification
techniques in specific RE problems, including wind speed/power prediction, fault diagnosis in
RE systems, power quality disturbance classification and other applications in alternative RE systems.
In this way, the paper describes classification techniques and metrics applied to RE problems,
thus being useful both for researchers dealing with this kind of problem and for practitioners
of the field
Automatic classification of power quality disturbances using optimal feature selection based algorithm
The development of renewable energy sources and power electronic converters in conventional power systems leads to Power Quality (PQ) disturbances. This research aims at automatic detection and classification of single and multiple PQ disturbances using a novel optimal feature selection based on Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN). DWT is used for the extraction of useful features, which are used to distinguish among different PQ disturbances by an ANN classifier. The performance of the classifier solely depends on the feature vector used for the training. Therefore, this research is required for the constructive feature selection based classification system. In this study, an Artificial Bee Colony based Probabilistic Neural Network (ABCPNN) algorithm has been proposed for optimal feature selection. The most common types of single PQ disturbances include sag, swell, interruption, harmonics, oscillatory and impulsive transients, flicker, notch and spikes. Moreover, multiple disturbances consisting of combination of two disturbances are also considered. The DWT with multi-resolution analysis has been applied to decompose the PQ disturbance waveforms into detail and approximation coefficients at level eight using Daubechies wavelet family. Various types of statistical parameters of all the detail and approximation coefficients have been analysed for feature extraction, out of which the optimal features have been selected using ABC algorithm. The performance of the proposed algorithm has been analysed with different architectures of ANN such as multilayer perceptron and radial basis function neural network. The PNN has been found to be the most suitable classifier. The proposed algorithm is tested for both PQ disturbances obtained from the parametric equations and typical power distribution system models using MATLAB/Simulink and PSCAD/EMTDC. The PQ disturbances with uniformly distributed noise ranging from 20 to 50 dB have also been analysed. The experimental results show that the proposed ABC-PNN based approach is capable of efficiently eliminating unnecessary features to improve the accuracy and performance of the classifier
Machine Learning Aided Methods for Resilient Industrial Wireless Sensor Network
Le Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) possono essere definite come unâ infrastruttura
composta da sensori/dispositivi in grado di calcolare comunicare e
effettuare sensing sul ambiente che gli circonda processando e analizzando i
dati in modo da reagire a eventi e fenomeni che possono occorrere durante
la comunicazione. Questo motiva un enorme effort nella ricerca, standardizzazione
e investimento industriale in questo campo, nellâultimo decennio.
Lâuso delle WSN nellâambiente industriale Ăš soggetto a diverse problematiche,
dovuto allâostilitĂ dellâambiente, come rumore, shadwoing, multi-percorso e
interferenze.
Nel nostro progetto, proponiamo un meccanismo basato sulle condizioni
di propagazione del canale e algoritmi di machine learning che ci permettono
di classificare lo stato del canale (LOS o NLOS) e migliorare qualitĂ , sicurezza
e in particolar modo lâaffidabilitĂ del sistema radio link da noi esaminato in
differenti ambienti
Comprehensive Review on Detection and Classification of Power Quality Disturbances in Utility Grid With Renewable Energy Penetration
The global concern with power quality is increasing due to the penetration of renewable energy (RE) sources to cater the energy demands and meet de-carbonization targets. Power quality (PQ) disturbances are found to be more predominant with RE penetration due to the variable outputs and interfacing converters. There is a need to recognize and mitigate PQ disturbances to supply clean power to the consumer. This article presents a critical review of techniques used for detection and classification PQ disturbances in the utility grid with renewable energy penetration. The broad perspective of this review paper is to provide various concepts utilized for extraction of the features to detect and classify the PQ disturbances even in the noisy environment. More than 220 research publications have been critically reviewed, classified and listed for quick reference of the engineers, scientists and academicians working in the power quality area
The Challenge of Machine Learning in Space Weather Nowcasting and Forecasting
The numerous recent breakthroughs in machine learning (ML) make imperative to
carefully ponder how the scientific community can benefit from a technology
that, although not necessarily new, is today living its golden age. This Grand
Challenge review paper is focused on the present and future role of machine
learning in space weather. The purpose is twofold. On one hand, we will discuss
previous works that use ML for space weather forecasting, focusing in
particular on the few areas that have seen most activity: the forecasting of
geomagnetic indices, of relativistic electrons at geosynchronous orbits, of
solar flares occurrence, of coronal mass ejection propagation time, and of
solar wind speed. On the other hand, this paper serves as a gentle introduction
to the field of machine learning tailored to the space weather community and as
a pointer to a number of open challenges that we believe the community should
undertake in the next decade. The recurring themes throughout the review are
the need to shift our forecasting paradigm to a probabilistic approach focused
on the reliable assessment of uncertainties, and the combination of
physics-based and machine learning approaches, known as gray-box.Comment: under revie
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