کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
803181 | 1468264 | 2012 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
Although failure data are usually treated as being continuous, they may have been collected in a discrete manner, or in fact be discrete in nature. Reliability models with bathtub-shaped hazard rate are fundamental to the concepts of burn-in and maintenance, but how well do they incorporate discrete data? We explore discrete versions of the additive Weibull distribution, which has the twin virtues of mathematical tractability and the ability to produce bathtub-shaped hazard rate functions. We derive conditions on the parameters for the hazard rate function to be increasing, decreasing, or bathtub shaped. While discrete versions may have the same shaped hazard rate for the same parameter values, we find that when fitted to data the fitted hazard rate shapes can vary between versions. Our results are illustrated using several real-life data sets, and the implications of using continuous models for discrete data discussed.
► Bathtub-shaped hazard rate is fundamental to burn-in and maintenance.
► Continuous and discrete models can have different aging behavior for the same data.
► Discrete hazard rates behave differently from discretized continuous hazard rates.
Journal: Reliability Engineering & System Safety - Volume 106, October 2012, Pages 37–44