Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5000276 Control Engineering Practice 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Alarm overloading refers to the most noticeable phenomenon in existing alarm systems: there are far too many alarms to be promptly handled by industrial plant operators. A large number of occurred alarms are nuisance alarms that are not associated with any actual abnormalities and are extremely detrimental to important roles of industrial alarm systems. This paper presents long-term industrial applications of three techniques on detecting and removing nuisance alarms to a thermal power generation unit. By deploying these techniques, the severity of alarm overloading phenomenon has been significantly alleviated. The average number of alarm occurrences per day has been reduced from 18,280 to 359 in the year of 2015, so that about 98% alarm occurrences have been removed without affecting true alarms.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Aerospace Engineering
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