4,325 research outputs found

    AI and OR in management of operations: history and trends

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    The last decade has seen a considerable growth in the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) for operations management with the aim of finding solutions to problems that are increasing in complexity and scale. This paper begins by setting the context for the survey through a historical perspective of OR and AI. An extensive survey of applications of AI techniques for operations management, covering a total of over 1200 papers published from 1995 to 2004 is then presented. The survey utilizes Elsevier's ScienceDirect database as a source. Hence, the survey may not cover all the relevant journals but includes a sufficiently wide range of publications to make it representative of the research in the field. The papers are categorized into four areas of operations management: (a) design, (b) scheduling, (c) process planning and control and (d) quality, maintenance and fault diagnosis. Each of the four areas is categorized in terms of the AI techniques used: genetic algorithms, case-based reasoning, knowledge-based systems, fuzzy logic and hybrid techniques. The trends over the last decade are identified, discussed with respect to expected trends and directions for future work suggested

    A Review on Expert System Applications in Power Plants

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    The control and monitoring of power generation plants is being complicated day by day, with the increase size and capacity of equipments involved in power generation process. This calls for the presence of experienced and well trained operators for decision making and management of various plant related activities. Scarcity of well trained and experienced plant operators is one of the major problems faced by modern power industry. Application of artificial intelligence techniques, especially expert systems whose main characteristics is to simulate expert plant operator’s actions is one of the actively researched areas in the field of plant automation. This paper presents an overview of various expert system applications in power generation plants. It points out technological advancement of expert system technology and its integration with various types of modern techniques such as fuzzy, neural network, machine vision and data acquisition systems. Expert system can significantly reduce the work load on plant operators and experts, and act as an expert for plant fault diagnosis and maintenance. Various other applications include data processing, alarm reduction, schedule optimisation, operator training and evaluation. The review point out that integration of modern techniques such as neural network, fuzzy, machine vision, data base, simulators etc. with conventional rule based methodologies have added greater dimensions to problem solving capabilities of an expert system.DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijece.v4i1.502

    Hydroelectric power plant management relying on neural networks and expert system integration

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    The use of Neural Networks (NN) is a novel approach that can help in taking decisions when integrated in a more general system, in particular with expert systems. In this paper, an architecture for the management of hydroelectric power plants is introduced. This relies on monitoring a large number of signals, representing the technical parameters of the real plant. The general architecture is composed of an Expert System and two NN modules: Acoustic Prediction (NNAP) and Predictive Maintenance (NNPM). The NNAP is based on Kohonen Learning Vector Quantization (LVQ) Networks in order to distinguish the sounds emitted by electricity-generating machine groups. The NNPM uses an ART-MAP to identify different situations from the plant state variables, in order to prevent future malfunctions. In addition, a special process to generate a complete training set has been designed for the ART-MAP module. This process has been developed to deal with the absence of data about abnormal plant situations, and is based on neural nets trained with the backpropagation algorithm.Publicad

    Application of Artificial Intelligence in Detection and Mitigation of Human Factor Errors in Nuclear Power Plants: A Review

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    Human factors and ergonomics have played an essential role in increasing the safety and performance of operators in the nuclear energy industry. In this critical review, we examine how artificial intelligence (AI) technologies can be leveraged to mitigate human errors, thereby improving the safety and performance of operators in nuclear power plants (NPPs). First, we discuss the various causes of human errors in NPPs. Next, we examine the ways in which AI has been introduced to and incorporated into different types of operator support systems to mitigate these human errors. We specifically examine (1) operator support systems, including decision support systems, (2) sensor fault detection systems, (3) operation validation systems, (4) operator monitoring systems, (5) autonomous control systems, (6) predictive maintenance systems, (7) automated text analysis systems, and (8) safety assessment systems. Finally, we provide some of the shortcomings of the existing AI technologies and discuss the challenges still ahead for their further adoption and implementation to provide future research directions

    Exhaustive Search-based Model for Hybrid Sensor Network

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    A new model for a cluster of hybrid sensors network with multi sub-clusters is proposed. The model is in particular relevant to the early warning system in a large scale monitoring system in, for example, a nuclear power plant. It mainly addresses to a safety critical system which requires real-time processes with high accuracy. The mathematical model is based on the extended conventional search algorithm with certain interactions among the nearest neighborhood of sensors. It is argued that the model could realize a highly accurate decision support system with less number of parameters. A case of one dimensional interaction function is discussed, and a simple algorithm for the model is also given.Comment: 6 pages, Proceeding of the International Conference on Intelligent & Advanced Systems 2012 pp. 557-56

    Artificial intelligence for the support of regulator decision making

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    Nuclear plant diagnostics using neural networks with dynamic input selection

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    The work presented in this dissertation explores the design and development of a large scale nuclear power plant (NPP) fault diagnostic system based on artificial neural networks (ANNs). The viability of detecting a large number of transients in a NPP using ANNs is demonstrated. A new adviser design is subsequently presented where the diagnostic task is divided into component parts, and each part is solved by an individual ANN. This new design allows the expansion of the diagnostic capabilities of an existing adviser by modifying the existing ANNs and adding new ANNs to the adviser;This dissertation also presents an architecture optimization scheme called the dynamic input selection (DIS) scheme. DIS analyzes the training data for any problem and ranks the available input variables in order of their importance to the input-output relationship. Training is initiated with the most important input and one hidden node. As the network training progresses, input and hidden nodes are added as required until the networks have learned the problem. Any hidden or input nodes that were added during training but are unnecessary for subsequent recall are now removed from the network. The DIS scheme can be applied to any ANN learning paradigm;The DIS scheme is used to train the ANNs that form the NPP fault diagnostic adviser. DIS completely eliminates any guesswork related to architecture selection, thus decreasing the time taken to train each ANN. Each ANN uses only a small subset of the available input variables that is required to solve its particular task. This reduction in the dimensionality of the problem leads to a drastic reduction in training time;Data used in this work was collected during the simulation of transients on the operator training simulator at Duane Arnold Energy Center, a boiling water reactor nuclear power plant. An adviser was developed to detect and classify 30 distinct transients based on the simulation of 47 scenarios at different severities. This adviser was then expanded to detect and classify a total of 36 transients based on the simulation of 58 transient scenarios. The noise tolerant characteristics of the adviser are demonstrated

    Self-tuning routine alarm analysis of vibration signals in steam turbine generators

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    This paper presents a self-tuning framework for knowledge-based diagnosis of routine alarms in steam turbine generators. The techniques provide a novel basis for initialising and updating time series feature extraction parameters used in the automated decision support of vibration events due to operational transients. The data-driven nature of the algorithms allows for machine specific characteristics of individual turbines to be learned and reasoned about. The paper provides a case study illustrating the routine alarm paradigm and the applicability of systems using such techniques

    Robust on-line diagnosis tool for the early accident detection in nuclear power plants

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    © 2019 Any loss of coolant accident mitigation strategy is necessarily bound by the promptness of the break detection as well as the accuracy of its diagnosis. The availability of on-line monitoring tools is then crucial for enhancing safety of nuclear facilities. The requirements of robustness and short latency implied by the necessity for fast and effective actions are undermined by the challenges associated with break prediction during transients. This study presents a novel approach to tackle the challenges associated with the on-line diagnostics of loss of coolant accidents and the limitations of the current state of the art. Based on the combination of a set of artificial neural network architectures through the use of Bayesian statistics, it allows to robustly absorb different sources of uncertainty without requiring their explicit characterization in input. It provides the quantification of the output confidence bounds but also enhances of the model response accuracy. The implemented methodology allows to relax the need for model selection as well as to limit the demand for user-defined analysis parameters. A numerical case-study entailing a 220 MWe heavy-water reactor is analysed in order to test the efficiency of the developed computational tool
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