Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7195882 | Reliability Engineering & System Safety | 2014 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Inspection is always an important preventive maintenance (PM) activity and can have different depths and cover all or part of plant systems. This paper introduces a two-level inspection policy model for a single component plant system based on a three-stage failure process. Such a failure process divides the systemâ²s life into three stages: good, minor defective and severe defective stages. The first level of inspection, the minor inspection, can only identify the minor defective stage with a certain probability, but can always reveal the severe defective stage. The major inspection can however identify both defective stages perfectly. Once the system is found to be in the minor defective stage, a shortened inspection interval is adopted. If however the system is found to be in the severe defective stage, we may delay the maintenance action if the time to the next planned PM window is less than a threshold level, but otherwise, replace immediately. This corresponds to the well adopted maintenance policy in practice such as periodic inspections with planned PMs. A numerical example is presented to demonstrate the proposed model by comparing with other models.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Authors
Wenbin Wang, Fei Zhao, Rui Peng,