Title: Reliability Engineering
1Reliability Engineering
- Richard C. Fries, PE, CRE
- Corporate Manager, Reliability Engineering
- Baxter Healthcare
- Round Lake, Illinois
2Definition 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
3Customers Definition of Reliability
- A reliable product
- One that does what the customer wants,
- when the customer wants to do it
4Reliability 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
5Purpose of the Reliability Group
- Determine the weaknesses in a design
- AND correct them
- before the device goes to the field
6Areas Covered by Reliability
- Electrical
- Mechanical
- Software
- System
7Electrical Reliability
8Mechanical Reliability
9Theoretical Software Reliability
10Practical Software Reliability
11System Reliability
12Set 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
13Parts Count Prediction
- Uses MIL-HDBK-217
- Indicates whether the design approximates the
reliability goal - Indicates those areas of the design with high
failure rates
14Chemical Compatibility
- Test plastics with typically used chemical agents
(alcohol, anesthetic agents, cleaning agents) - Cleaning agents are the worst
15Force Puller
16Component Testing
- Cycle/life testing of individual components
- Comparison of multiple vendors of components
- Determine applicability for the intended use
17Philosophy of Testing
- Test to have the units pass
- Test with the addition of stresses to check the
margins of functionality
18Types 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
19Determining 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
20Sample 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
21Sample Calculation
- MTBF 389,914,514 cycles
- Number of Samples Number of Cyles
- 10 89,777,817
- 50 17,955,563
- 100 8,977,782
22Component Test Setup
23Component Test Setup
24Component Test Setup
25Calculating Sample MTBF
- MTBF ( of samples)(length of test)
- of failures
26Calculating 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
27Sample 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
28HALT
- Acronym for Highly Accelerated Life Testing
- Used to find the weak links in the design and
fabrication process - Usually performed during the design phase
29HALT 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
30HALT Chamber
31Goal 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
32Environmental Testing
- Operating temperature/humidity
- Storage temperature/humidity
- EMC
- Surges/transients
- Brown-outs
- Electrocautery
- Cell phones
- ESD
- Altitude
33Environmental Testing
- Autoclave
- Shock
- Vibration
- Shipping
- Tip testing
- Threshold testing
34Temperature Chamber
35Walk-In Temperature Chamber
36Autoclave Testing
37Customer 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
38Making a Design Foolproof
- The biggest mistake engineers make
- when trying to make a design
- completely foolproof
- is underestimating the ingenuity
- of complete fools
39Failure Analysis
- Failure device does not operate according to
its specification - Determine root cause of the failure
- Suggest methods to address the failure
40Prototype Front Panel
41Plastic Structure
42Plastic Structure
43Autoclave Testing
44 Manifold Port
45Prototype Port
46Life 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
47Tracking 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
48Reliability Growth Example
49Reliability Growth Example
50Reliability Growth Example
51The Reliability Group
- You make it,
- Well break it