Book Image

Dynamic System Reliability

By : Liudong Xing, Gregory Levitin, Chaonan Wang
Book Image

Dynamic System Reliability

By: Liudong Xing, Gregory Levitin, Chaonan Wang

Overview of this book

This book focuses on hot issues of dynamic system reliability, systematically introducing the reliability modeling and analysis methods for systems with imperfect fault coverage, systems with function dependence, systems subject to deterministic or probabilistic common-cause failures, systems subject to deterministic or probabilistic competing failures, and dynamic standby sparing systems. It presents recent developments of such extensions involving reliability modeling theory, reliability evaluation methods, and features numerous case studies based on real-world examples. The presented dynamic reliability theory can enable a more accurate representation of actual complex system behavior, thus more effectively guiding the reliable design of real-world critical systems. The book begins by describing the evolution from the traditional static reliability theory to the dynamic system reliability theory and provides a detailed investigation of dynamic and dependent behaviors in subsequent chapters. Although written for those with a background in basic probability theory and stochastic processes, the book includes a chapter reviewing the fundamentals that readers need to know in order to understand the contents of other chapters that cover advanced topics in reliability theory and case studies.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Nomenclature
2
1 Introduction
12
Index
13
End User License Agreement

5.7 Summary

This chapter discusses methods for reliability analysis of systems subject to the FDEP behavior. The logic OR replacement method is only applicable to systems with perfect fault coverage, but generates overestimated system unreliability results for systems with imperfect fault coverage. The algorithm presented in [21] works perfectly for IPC systems subject to noncascading FDEPs, but generates overestimated system unreliability results in the case of the occurrence of cascading FDEPs in the system. The combinatorial algorithm described in Section 5.2 can handle various complicated cases including cascading FDEPs, combined trigger events, shared dependent events, and dual‐role events. The algorithm, which practices the divide and conquer principle based on the total probability law, is computationally efficient. The reduced reliability problems generated are simplified and independent problems without FDEP, which can be solved in parallel given available computing...