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Reliability Engineering

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The probability, at a desired confidence level, that a device ... voltage margining. frequency margining. The product is stressed far beyond its specifications ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reliability Engineering


1
Reliability Engineering
  • Richard C. Fries, PE, CRE
  • Corporate Manager, Reliability Engineering
  • Baxter Healthcare
  • Round Lake, Illinois

2
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

3
Customers Definition of Reliability
  • A reliable product
  • One that does what the customer wants,
  • when the customer wants to do it

4
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

5
Purpose of the Reliability Group
  • Determine the weaknesses in a design
  • AND correct them
  • before the device goes to the field

6
Areas Covered by Reliability
  • Electrical
  • Mechanical
  • Software
  • System

7
Electrical Reliability
8
Mechanical Reliability
9
Theoretical Software Reliability
10
Practical Software Reliability
11
System Reliability
12
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

13
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

14
Chemical Compatibility
  • Test plastics with typically used chemical agents
    (alcohol, anesthetic agents, cleaning agents)
  • Cleaning agents are the worst

15
Force Puller
16
Component Testing
  • Cycle/life testing of individual components
  • Comparison of multiple vendors of components
  • Determine applicability for the intended use

17
Philosophy of Testing
  • Test to have the units pass
  • Test with the addition of stresses to check the
    margins of functionality

18
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

19
Determining Sample Size
  • Uses Chi-Square table
  • SS Chi-square Value(MTBF goal)/2
  • Chi-square value includes confidence level and
    degrees of freedom 2f2
  • Component testing 90 confidence level
  • Life testing 95 confidence level

20
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

21
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

22
Component Test Setup
23
Component Test Setup
24
Component Test Setup
25
Calculating Sample MTBF
  • MTBF ( of samples)(length of test)
  • of failures

26
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

27
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 gt 43,431 cycles

28
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

29
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

30
HALT Chamber
31
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

32
Environmental Testing
  • Operating temperature/humidity
  • Storage temperature/humidity
  • EMC
  • Surges/transients
  • Brown-outs
  • Electrocautery
  • Cell phones
  • ESD
  • Altitude

33
Environmental Testing
  • Autoclave
  • Shock
  • Vibration
  • Shipping
  • Tip testing
  • Threshold testing

34
Temperature Chamber
35
Walk-In Temperature Chamber
36
Autoclave Testing
37
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

38
Making a Design Foolproof
  • The biggest mistake engineers make
  • when trying to make a design
  • completely foolproof
  • is underestimating the ingenuity
  • of complete fools

39
Failure Analysis
  • Failure device does not operate according to
    its specification
  • Determine root cause of the failure
  • Suggest methods to address the failure

40
Prototype Front Panel
41
Plastic Structure
42
Plastic Structure
43
Autoclave Testing
44
Manifold Port
45
Prototype Port
46
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

47
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

48
Reliability Growth Example
49
Reliability Growth Example
50
Reliability Growth Example
51
The Reliability Group
  • You make it,
  • Well break it
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