Publication | Closed Access
Structured Replacement Policies for Components with Complex Degradation Processes and Dedicated Sensors
165
Citations
55
References
2011
Year
Software MaintenanceEngineeringComputer ArchitectureStructured Replacement PoliciesDeterioration ModelingMaintenance SchedulingComplex Degradation ProcessesCondition MonitoringReliability EngineeringMaintenance PolicyDegradation ProcessSystems EngineeringFailure DetectionHardware ReliabilityStructural Health MonitoringComputer EngineeringReplacement ProcedureComputer ScienceMost Degradation ProcessesSignal ProcessingSensorsPredictive MaintenanceProcess ControlBusinessDedicated SensorsIndustrial InformaticsReal Time
Failure of many engineering systems usually results from a gradual and irreversible accumulation of damage, a degradation process. Most degradation processes can be monitored using sensor technology. The resulting degradation signals are usually correlated with the degradation process. A system is considered to have failed once its degradation signal reaches a prespecified failure threshold. This paper considers a replacement problem for components whose degradation process can be monitored using dedicated sensors. First, we present a stochastic degradation modeling framework that characterizes, in real time, the path of a component's degradation signal. These signals are used to predict the evolution of the component's degradation state. Next, we formulate a single-unit replacement problem as a Markov decision process and utilize the real-time signal observations to determine a replacement policy. We focus on exponentially increasing degradation signals and show that the optimal replacement policy for this class of problems is a monotonically nondecreasing control limit policy. Finally, the model is used to determine an optimal replacement policy by utilizing vibration-based degradation signals from a rotating machinery application.
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