Non-Contact Bearing Fault Diagnostics: Experimental Investigation of Microphones Position and Distance
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2026
Citazione:
Non-Contact Bearing Fault Diagnostics: Experimental Investigation of Microphones Position and Distance / Voltolini, E., Toscani, A., Armelloni, E., Cocconcelli, M., Fendillo, L., Manconi, E.. - In: APPLIED SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3417. - 16:8(2026), pp. 1-19. [10.3390/app16083670]
Abstract:
Featured Application The proposed microphone-based diagnostic approach is suitable for non-contact condition monitoring of rolling bearings in industrial environments where the installation of contact sensors is impractical or unsafe. Potential applications include industrial machinery and retrofit monitoring of existing assets, where optimal microphone placement combined with HFRT-envelope-based analysis enables fault detection at a distance.Abstract Monitoring the condition of rolling bearings is critical for industrial reliability, yet traditional contact-based accelerometers can be impractical in confined or hazardous environments. This study investigates the use of microphones as a non-invasive diagnostic alternative, focusing on the impact of sensor distance and spatial placement on fault detection sensitivity across various rotational speeds and load conditions. Using an accelerometer mounted directly on the bearing as a benchmark, acoustic data were acquired on a test bench under different speed and load conditions. The experimental setup evaluated three distinct microphone positions and five distances relative to the source to assess spatial influence. Analysis was conducted comparing scalar indicators, such as Root Mean Square (RMS), kurtosis and Crest Factor (CF) values, with advanced diagnostic techniques, specifically the High-Frequency Resonance Technique (HFRT) for envelope spectrum extraction. Results indicate that while the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) predictably decreases with distance, diagnostic performance is significantly compromised by acoustic shielding effects caused by bearing housing. Moreover, while simple statistical factors (RMS, kurtosis, CF) show limited reliability across varying distances and noise floors, HFRT-based envelope analysis yields robust fault identification even at the maximum sensor distance. The study concludes that optimal microphone placement is essential for reliable remote monitoring. Particularly, these findings suggest that a preliminary spatial characterization of the acoustic field can significantly enhance the effectiveness of non-contact diagnostic systems in industrial applications.
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Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
condition monitoring; rolling bearing; non-contact diagnostic; envelope analysis; microphone; accelerometer; digital acquisition system
Elenco autori:
Voltolini, E.; Toscani, A.; Armelloni, E.; Cocconcelli, M.; Fendillo, L.; Manconi, E.
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