Weiwei Guo , Jialiang Zhu , Xinyi Yu , Mingwei Jia , Yi Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In chemical processes with distributed outputs, characteristics of products are influenced by their distributions and significantly correlated with process variables. It is crucial for an accurate distribution characteristic prediction to adequately describe variable relationships and their temporal variations. For this purpose, a temporal graph convolutional network (TGCN) soft sensor is developed to describe the distribution of outputs. First, the variable relationships are represented in a topology subgraph based on prior knowledge. Then, the graph is supplemented based on variable screening results with the maximal information coefficient (MIC) as standard. Finally, the graph convolutional mechanism is used to model variable relationships, the gated recurrent unit to capture temporal dependencies, and GNNexplainer to provide a comprehensive explanation for the prediction. Results suggest that prediction accuracy and explainability is improved by the proposed TGCN soft sensor on the basis of prior knowledge, and verified in the case of molecular weight distribution (MWD) modeling.
期刊介绍:
Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems publishes original research papers, short communications, reviews, tutorials and Original Software Publications reporting on development of novel statistical, mathematical, or computer techniques in Chemistry and related disciplines.
Chemometrics is the chemical discipline that uses mathematical and statistical methods to design or select optimal procedures and experiments, and to provide maximum chemical information by analysing chemical data.
The journal deals with the following topics:
1) Development of new statistical, mathematical and chemometrical methods for Chemistry and related fields (Environmental Chemistry, Biochemistry, Toxicology, System Biology, -Omics, etc.)
2) Novel applications of chemometrics to all branches of Chemistry and related fields (typical domains of interest are: process data analysis, experimental design, data mining, signal processing, supervised modelling, decision making, robust statistics, mixture analysis, multivariate calibration etc.) Routine applications of established chemometrical techniques will not be considered.
3) Development of new software that provides novel tools or truly advances the use of chemometrical methods.
4) Well characterized data sets to test performance for the new methods and software.
The journal complies with International Committee of Medical Journal Editors'' Uniform requirements for manuscripts.