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A Feature Importance Analysis for Soft-Sensing-Based Predictions in a Chemical Sulphonation Process

Abstract

In this paper we present the results of a feature importance analysis of a chemical sulphonation process. The task consists of predicting the neutralization number (NT), which is a metric that characterizes the product quality of active detergents. The prediction is based on a dataset of environmental measurements, sampled from an industrial chemical process. We used a soft-sensing approach, that is, predicting a variable of interest based on other process variables, instead of directly sensing the variable of interest. Reasons for doing so range from expensive sensory hardware to harsh environments, e.g., inside a chemical reactor. The aim of this study was to explore and detect which variables are the most relevant for predicting product quality, and to what degree of precision. We trained regression models based on linear regression, regression tree and random forest. A random forest model was used to rank the predictor variables by importance. Then, we trained the models in a forward-selection style by adding one feature at a time, starting with the most important one. Our results show that it is sufficient to use the top 3 important variables, out of the 8 variables, to achieve satisfactory prediction results. On the other hand, Random Forest obtained the best result when trained with all variables.

Category

Academic chapter

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Enrique Alejandro Garcia Ceja
  • Åsmund Pedersen Hugo
  • Brice Morin
  • Per Olav Hansen
  • Espen Martinsen
  • An Ngoc Lam
  • Øystein Haugen

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Digital / Sustainable Communication Technologies
  • Østfold University College
  • Diverse norske bedrifter og organisasjoner

Year

2020

Publisher

IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers)

Book

Proceedings of 2020 IEEE Conference on Industrial Cyberphysical Systems (ICPS)

ISBN

9781728163895

Page(s)

62 - 66

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository