Kristoffer K. McKee
Curtin University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Kristoffer K. McKee.
Expert Systems With Applications | 2015
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Melinda Hodkiewicz; Ian Howard
Octave band analysis and PCA used on RMS velocity to obtain key indicators.Mahalanobis distance is used to set thresholds since data is normally distributed.Pump health separated into no cavitation, incipient, and fully formed condition.Method works on a range of types and sizes of centrifugal pumps. Cavitation is one of the main problems reducing the longevity of centrifugal pumps in industry today. If the pump operation is unable to maintain operating conditions around the best efficiency point, it can be subject to conditions that may lead to vaporisation or flashing in the pipes upstream of the pump. The implosion of these vapour bubbles in the impeller or volute causes damaging effects to the pump. A new method of vibration cavitation detection is proposed in this paper, based on adaptive octave band analysis, principal component analysis and statistical metrics. Full scale industrial pump efficiency testing data was used to determine the initial cavitation parameters for the analysis. The method was then tested using vibration measured from a number of industry pumps used in the water industry. Results were compared to knowledge known about the state of the pump, and the classification of the pump according to ISO 10816.
world congress on engineering | 2014
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Muhammad Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Ian Howard
Centrifugal pumps are a widely used machine found in industries such as water, sewerage, oil, and gas. As a result, it is vital that these pumps are monitored, diagnosed, maintained, or replaced prior to the pump failing to reduce downtime, material, and labour costs. Most companies employ a run-to-fail method or a time-based maintenance strategy to service their pumps, instead of condition based maintenance or a predictive maintenance strategy. This paper reviews the state of art in diagnostics and prognostics pertaining to centrifugal pumps. Attention is given to detailing the methods of application, detection of fault modes and results used by researchers in the main areas of diagnostics and prognostics.
world congress on engineering | 2015
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Melinda Hodkiewicz; Ian Howard
Cavitation is one of the major problems associated with the operation of centrifugal pumps. Cavitation occurs when vapor bubbles that are formed due to a drop in pressure in the pipes upstream of the centrifugal pump implode under the added pressure within the volute of the pump. These implosions wear away the impeller, and sometimes the volute itself, which if left unchecked, would render the pump inoperable. Much research has been done in the detection of cavitation through: indicators in certain audible frequencies, drop in the net positive suction head (NPSHa), visual inspection using a transparent casing and a stroboscopic light, paint erosion inside the volute, and on the impeller, changes in pressure within the flow or volute, and vibration within certain frequency ranges. Vibration detection is deemed as one of the more difficult methods due to other structural and environmental factors that may influence which frequencies may be present during the onset of cavitation. Vibration measurement, however, is most easily measured and deployable in an automated condition monitoring scenario. It is proposed that an increasing trend in a set of statistical parameters, rather than a firm threshold of a single parameter, would provide a robust indication for the onset of cavitation. Trends in these statistical parameters were obtained from data collected on a pump forced to cavitate under several different operating conditions. A single cavitation indicator is outlined utilizing these statistical parameters that can quantify the level of cavitation in a centrifugal pump.
world congress on engineering | 2015
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Melinda Hodkiewicz; Ian Howard
Cavitation is a major problem facing centrifugal pumps in industry today. Unable to constantly maintain operating conditions around the best efficiency point, centrifugal pumps are subject to conditions that may lead to vaporisation or flashing in the pipes upstream of the pump. The implosion of these vapour bubbles in the impeller or volute causes damaging effects to the pump. A new method of cavitation detection is proposed in this paper based on spectral methods. Data used to determine parameters were obtained under ideal conditions, while the method was tested using industry acquired data. Results were compared to knowledge known about the state of the pump, and the classification of the pump according to ISO 10816.
ICOMS Asset Management Conference Proceedings | 2011
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Muhammad Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Ian Howard
Proceedings: the 7th Australasian Congress on Applied Mechanics (ACAM 7), 9-12 December 2012, the University of Adelaide, North Terrace Campus / National Committee on Applied Mechanics of Engineers Australia | 2012
Kristoffer K. McKee; Gareth L. Forbes; Muhammad Ilyas Mazhar; Rodney Entwistle; Ian Howard; T. Mapeza
Ocean Engineering | 2016
Ahmed M. Reda; Ali Mothana Saleh Al-Yafei; Ian Howard; Gareth L. Forbes; Kristoffer K. McKee
International Journal of Pressure Vessels and Piping | 2018
Ahmed Reda; Ibrahim A. Sultan; Ian Howard; Gareth L. Forbes; Kristoffer K. McKee
Applied Ocean Research | 2016
Ahmed M. Reda; Gareth L. Forbes; Faisal Al-Mahmoud; Ian Howard; Kristoffer K. McKee; Ibrahim A. Sultan
Proceedings of the 43rd International Congress on Noise Control Engineering | 2014
Ahmed M. Reda; Gareth L. Forbes; Kristoffer K. McKee; Ian Howard