Improved High-Order Cumulant TDE Parameter Accumulation Algorithm for Locating UHF Signals of Pulsed Electromagnetic Source

Ultra-high frequency (UHF) signal detection is one of the most effective methods for spatial orientation and partial discharge fault diagnosis. However, when the background noise, especially Gaussian white noise and narrow-band interference, is very high, or the detection region is remote, location...

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Published inElectronics (Basel) Vol. 11; no. 23; p. 4034
Main Authors Zhu, Li, Zhang, Yue, Hu, Xiaofeng, Dong, Yu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.12.2022
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ISSN2079-9292
2079-9292
DOI10.3390/electronics11234034

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Summary:Ultra-high frequency (UHF) signal detection is one of the most effective methods for spatial orientation and partial discharge fault diagnosis. However, when the background noise, especially Gaussian white noise and narrow-band interference, is very high, or the detection region is remote, location accuracy may decrease. To improve this, a location system based on the improved higher-order cumulant time delay estimation (TDE) method combined with energy accumulation is proposed. In the system, the UHF waves are received by a four-antenna array. Improved fourth-order cumulants with a smoothed coherence transform (SCOT) window are used in the TDE, by which Gaussian white noise and narrow-band interference can be efficiently suppressed. The energy accumulation algorithm is applied to the cross-correlation results, by which the accuracy of TDE can be enhanced. The applicability of the proposed localization algorithm is evaluated by simulation and experiment. The simulation results show that the improved fourth-order cumulant TDE-parameter accumulation algorithm is superior in accuracy to traditional location methods. In the experimental measurements, two partial discharge measurement points located in a complex electromagnetic environment are tested. The results illustrate that the proposed method can effectively suppress Gaussian white and narrow-band noise, and the location results can satisfy accuracy requirements when the measurement point is within 70 m.
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ISSN:2079-9292
2079-9292
DOI:10.3390/electronics11234034