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Power transformers usually confront various mechanical and electromagnetic stresses during an operation that may lead to defects in their windings. The short circuit in the windings is one of those severe defects. Early detection of short-circuits is necessary as extra heating in the shorted location can lead to progressive damage in windings insulation. Frequency response analysis (FRA) is a well-known method to diagnose short-circuits in transformers. Despite the accuracy of FRA, the interpretation of the obtained frequency response traces (FRTs) is still an intricate task. Due to the unknown impact of faults on FRTs, extracting efficient features from such traces is necessary for the interpretation of transformer's frequency response. In this article, an isometric feature mapping (Isomap) is used as a nonlinear dimensionality reduction technique to locate interturn faults in transformer windings due to its capability of capturing the nonlinear phenomena in FRT of power transformers. It is revealed that, after constructing the isometric mapping for a transformer, there is no need for any expertise to detect fault location even in nondirect (high impedance) short-circuits. In other words, it can be the first step for the automated interpretation of FRA of power transformers.
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Arash Moradzadeh
University of Tabriz
Kazem Pourhossein
Islamic Azad University of Tabriz
Behnam Mohammadi‐Ivatloo
University of Tabriz
IEEE Transactions on Industrial Informatics
University of Windsor
University of Tabriz
Duy Tan University
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Moradzadeh et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a00007fe4618ba4162d9bed — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tii.2020.3016966
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