Summary: | Most of the current research on the diagnosis of rolling bearing faults is based on vibration signals. However, the location and number of sensors are often limited in some special cases. Thus, a small number of non-contact microphone sensors are a suboptimal choice, but it will result in some problems, e.g., underdetermined compound fault detection from a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) acoustic signal. Empirical wavelet transform (EWT) is a signal processing algorithm that has a dimension-increasing characteristic, and is beneficial for solving the underdetermined problem with few microphone sensors. However, there remain some critical problems to be solved for EWT, especially the determination of signal mode numbers, high-frequency modulation and boundary detection. To solve these problems, this paper proposes an improved empirical wavelet transform strategy for compound weak bearing fault diagnosis with acoustic signals. First, a novel envelope demodulation-based EWT (DEWT) is developed to overcome the high frequency modulation, based on which a source number estimation method with singular value decomposition (SVD) is then presented for the extraction of the correct boundary from a low SNR acoustic signal. Finally, the new fault diagnosis scheme that utilizes DEWT and SVD is compared with traditional methods, and the advantages of the proposed method in weak bearing compound fault diagnosis with a single-channel, low SNR, variable speed acoustic signal, are verified.
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