scholarly journals Optimal replacement policy under cumulative damage model and strength degradation with applications

Author(s):  
Phalguni Nanda ◽  
Prajamitra Bhuyan ◽  
Anup Dewanji

AbstractIn many real-life scenarios, system failure depends on dynamic stress-strength interference, where strength degrades and stress accumulates concurrently over time. In this paper, we consider the problem of finding an optimal replacement strategy that balances the cost of replacement with the cost of failure and results in the minimum expected cost per unit time under cumulative damage model with strength degradation. In the most general setting, we propose to find optimal choices of three thresholds on operation time, number of arriving shocks and amount of cumulative damage such that replacement of the system due to failure or reaching any of the three thresholds, whichever occurs first, results in the minimum expected cost per unit time. The existing recommendations are applicable only under the assumption of Exponential damage distribution including Poisson arrival of shocks and/or with fixed strength. As theoretical evaluation of the expected cost per unit time turns out to be very complicated, a simulation-based algorithm is proposed to evaluate the expected cost rate and find the optimal replacement strategy. The proposed method is easy to implement having wider domain of application including non-Poisson arrival of shocks and non-Exponential damage distributions. For illustration, the proposed method is applied to real case studies on mailbox and cell-phone battery experiments.

Author(s):  
ALFONSUS JULANTO ENDHARTA ◽  
WON YOUNG YUN

A comparison study in basic preventive replacement (PR) policies based on a cumulative damage model is done. Three well-known PR policies (time-based, shock number-based, cumulative damage-based policies) are considered and the expected cost rate is used as the objective function to determine the optimal policy. Each policy requires certain information in the cumulative damage model. We evaluate the expected values of information by numerical examples and investigate the effect of model parameters and cost terms on the optimal expected cost rate. A damage-based replacement policy with periodic inspection is also proposed and compared with the three PR policies by numerical examples.


2020 ◽  
pp. 105678952096486
Author(s):  
Changjie Jiang ◽  
Xintian Liu ◽  
Minghui Zhang ◽  
Xu Wang ◽  
Yansong Wang

In order to determine the effect of different loads on fatigue damage, a strength degradation model is proposed according to the law of residual strength degradation of metal materials. The model is verified with the strength degradation test data, and the results show that the model can describe the strength degradation process of general metal materials well. Combined with the strength degradation model, an improved equivalent damage model for different loading sequences is proposed. On this basis, a nonlinear fatigue cumulative damage model based on strength degradation is derived. The cumulative damage model is applied to the estimation of fatigue residual life under two-, three-, and four-stage loads to investigate the effects of different loading sequence on fatigue damage under various loading conditions. Combining with experimental data, it is verified that the cumulative damage model can accurately estimate the fatigue life under two-, three-, and four-stage loads.


Author(s):  
Takashi Satow ◽  
Toshio Nakagawa

This paper proposes a replacement policy for a cumulative damage model where a unit suffers damage caused by both shocks and inspections, and fails when the total damage has exceeded a failure level. To detect such failure, a unit is inspected at periodic times kT(k = 1, 2, …), and is replaced by a new one at detection of failure or at time nT, whichever occurs first. The expected cost rate is derived, when shocks occur at a non-homogeneous Poisson process, and an optimal number n* which minimizes it is discussed. Numerical examples are finally given.


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