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Reliability Engineering. Richard C. Fries, PE, CRE Corporate Manager, Reliability Engineering Baxter Healthcare Round Lake, Illinois. Definition of Reliability. The probability, at a desired confidence level, that a device will perform a specified function, without failure,
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Reliability Engineering Richard C. Fries, PE, CRE Corporate Manager, Reliability Engineering Baxter Healthcare Round Lake, Illinois
Definition of Reliability The probability, at a desired confidence level, that a device will perform a specified function, without failure, under stated conditions, for a specified period of time
Customer’s Definition of Reliability A reliable product: One that does what the customer wants, when the customer wants to do it
Reliability Basics Reliability cannot be tested into a product It must be designed and manufactured into it Testing only indicates how much reliability is in the product
Purpose of the Reliability Group Determine the weaknesses in a design AND correct them before the device goes to the field
Areas Covered by Reliability • Electrical • Mechanical • Software • System
Set the Reliability Goal • Based on similar equipment • Used as the basis for a reliability budget • Listed as Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) in hours or cycles • MTBF = the time at which 63% of the units in the field will have failed • Minimum goal is ten years with a 98% reliability
Parts Count Prediction • Uses MIL-HDBK-217 • Indicates whether the design approximates the reliability goal • Indicates those areas of the design with high failure rates
Chemical Compatibility • Test plastics with typically used chemical agents (alcohol, anesthetic agents, cleaning agents) • Cleaning agents are the worst
Component Testing • Cycle/life testing of individual components • Comparison of multiple vendors of components • Determine applicability for the intended use
Philosophy of Testing • Test to have the units pass • Test with the addition of stresses to check the margins of functionality
Types of Tests • Time terminated, failed parts replaced • Time terminated, no replacement • Failure terminated, failed parts replaced • Failure terminated, no replacement • Test until first failure • Test until all samples fail
Determining Sample Size • Uses Chi-Square table • SS = Chi-square Value(MTBF goal)/2 • Chi-square value includes confidence level and degrees of freedom = 2f+2 • Component testing – 90% confidence level • Life testing – 95% confidence level
Sample Calculation • Want to test valves to be used for 2,000,000 cycles per year with a 10% failure rate after 10 years • Reliability = e(-t/MTBF) • MTBF = -t/ln Reliability = -20,000,000/ln 0.90 = 389,914,514 cycles
Sample Calculation • MTBF = 389,914,514 cycles Number of Samples Number of Cyles 10 89,777,817 50 17,955,563 100 8,977,782
Calculating Sample MTBF MTBF = (# of samples)(length of test) # of failures
Calculating MTBF Where No Failures Occur • A sample MTBF cannot be calculated • A lower one-sided confidence limit is calculated and the MTBF stated to be greater than that number One-sided limit = 2(#units)(test time) Chi square value for the confidence limit and 2 degrees of freedom
Sample Calculation for a No Failure Test • 10 valves are tested for 10,000 cycles with no failures. Calculate using a 90% confidence level. One-sided limit = 2(10)(10,000) 4.605 = 43,431 cycles MTBF > 43,431 cycles
HALT • Acronym for Highly Accelerated Life Testing • Used to find the weak links in the design and fabrication process • Usually performed during the design phase
HALT Testing • Possible stresses that can be applied: • random vibration • rapid temperature transitions • voltage margining • frequency margining • The product is stressed far beyond its specifications • The test can be set up to find the destruct limits
Goal of HALT Testing • Overstress the product • Quickly induce failures • By applying the stresses in a controlled, stepped fashion, while continuing monitoring for failures, the testing results in the exposure of the weakest points in the design • This test, if successful, will expose weak points in the design
Environmental Testing • Operating temperature/humidity • Storage temperature/humidity • EMC • Surges/transients • Brown-outs • Electrocautery • Cell phones • ESD • Altitude
Environmental Testing • Autoclave • Shock • Vibration • Shipping • Tip testing • Threshold testing
Customer Misuse • Excess weight on tabletop • Fluid spillage • Cross connection of wires • Pulling unit by non-pulling parts • Wrong order of pressing keys • “Knowing” how to operate the unit without reading the manual
Making a Design Foolproof The biggest mistake engineers make when trying to make a design completely foolproof is underestimating the ingenuity of complete fools
Failure Analysis • Failure: device does not operate according to its specification • Determine root cause of the failure • Suggest methods to address the failure
Life Testing • Operate the device in its typical environment and application • Use appropriate on/off cycles • Can be used to verify the reliability goal or a specific period of time, such as the warranty period
Tracking Reliability Growth in the Field • Collect manufacturing data on how many units were manufactured by month • Collect field failure data, by month • Develop a reliability growth chart