Wind power has become an important source of electricity for both production and domestic use. However, because wind turbines often operate in harsh environments, they are prone to cracks, blisters, and corrosion of the blade surface. If these defects cannot be repaired in time, the cracks evolve into larger fractures, which can lead to blade rupture. As such, in this study, we developed a remote non-contact online health monitoring and warning system for wind turbine blades based on acoustic features and artificial neural networks. Collecting a large number of wind turbine blade defect signals was challenging. To address this issue, we designed an acoustic detection method based on a small sample size. We employed the octave to extract defect information, and we used an artificial neural network based on model-agnostic meta-learning (MAML-ANN) for classification. We analyzed the influence of locations and compared the performance of MAML-ANN with that of traditional ANN. The experimental results showed that the accuracy of our method reached 94.1% when each class contained only 50 data; traditional ANN achieved an accuracy of only 85%. With MAML-ANN, the training is fast and the global optimal solution is automatic searched, and it can be expanded to situations with a large sample size.
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