• DocumentCode
    62097
  • Title

    Distributed Prognostics Based on Structural Model Decomposition

  • Author

    Daigle, Matthew J. ; Bregon, Anibal ; Roychoudhury, I.

  • Author_Institution
    NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
  • Volume
    63
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Jun-14
  • Firstpage
    495
  • Lastpage
    510
  • Abstract
    Within systems health management, prognostics focuses on predicting the remaining useful life of a system. In the model-based prognostics paradigm, physics-based models are constructed that describe the operation of a system, and how it fails. Such approaches consist of an estimation phase, in which the health state of the system is first identified, and a prediction phase, in which the health state is projected forward in time to determine the end of life. Centralized solutions to these problems are often computationally expensive, do not scale well as the size of the system grows, and introduce a single point of failure. In this paper, we propose a novel distributed model-based prognostics scheme that formally describes how to decompose both the estimation and prediction problems into computationally-independent local subproblems whose solutions may be easily composed into a global solution. The decomposition of the prognostics problem is achieved through structural decomposition of the underlying models. The decomposition algorithm creates from the global system model a set of local submodels suitable for prognostics. Computationally independent local estimation and prediction problems are formed based on these local submodels, resulting in a scalable distributed prognostics approach that allows the local subproblems to be solved in parallel, thus offering increases in computational efficiency. Using a centrifugal pump as a case study, we perform a number of simulation-based experiments to demonstrate the distributed approach, compare the performance with a centralized approach, and establish its scalability.
  • Keywords
    pumps; reliability theory; centrifugal pump; computational efficiency improvement; computationally independent local estimation problems; computationally independent local prediction problems; computationally-independent local subproblems; distributed model-based prognostics scheme; estimation phase; global solution; global system model; local submodels; physics-based models; prediction phase; remaining useful life prediction; scalable distributed prognostics approach; structural model decomposition; system health management; system size; Computational modeling; Computer architecture; Estimation; Impellers; Mathematical model; Predictive models; Pumps; Model-based prognostics; distributed prognostics; structural model decomposition;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Reliability, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9529
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TR.2014.2313791
  • Filename
    6782677