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Risk-Based Reliability Analysis and Generic Principles for Risk Reduction (Hardcover)
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Risk-Based Reliability Analysis and Generic Principles for Risk Reduction (Hardcover)
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For a long time, conventional reliability analyses have been
oriented towards selecting the more reliable system and preoccupied
with maximising the reliability of engineering systems. On the
basis of counterexamples however, we demonstrate that selecting the
more reliable system does not necessarily mean selecting the system
with the smaller losses from failures! As a result, reliability
analyses should necessarily be risk-based, linked with the losses
from failures.
Accordingly, a theoretical framework and models are presented which
form the foundations of the reliability analysis and reliability
allocation linked with the losses from failures.
An underlying theme in the book is the basic principle for a
risk-based design: the larger the cost of failure associated with a
component, the larger its minimum necessary reliability level. Even
identical components should be designed to different reliability
levels if their failures are associated with different losses.
According to a classical definition, the risk of failure is a
product of the probability of failure and the cost given failure.
This risk measure however cannot describe the risk of losses
exceeding a maximum acceptable limit. Traditionally the losses from
failures have been 'accounted for' by the average production
availability (the ratio of the actual production capacity and the
maximum production capacity). As demonstrated in the book by using
a simple counterexample, two systems with the same production
availability can be characterised by very different losses from
failures.
As an alternative, a new aggregated risk measure based on the
cumulative distribution of the potential losses has been
introducedand the theoretical framework for risk analysis based on
the concept potential losses has also been developed. This new risk
measure incorporates the uncertainty associated with the exposure
to losses and the uncertainty in the consequences given the
exposure. For repairable systems with complex topology, the
distribution of the potential losses can be revealed by simulating
the behaviour of systems during their life-cycle. For this purpose,
fast discrete event-driven simulators are presented capable of
tracking the potential losses for systems with complex topology,
composed of a large number of components. The simulators are based
on new, very efficient algorithms for system reliability analysis
of systems comprising thousands of components.
An important theme in the book are the generic principles and
techniques for reducing technical risk. These have been classified
into three major categories: preventive (reducing the likelihood of
failure), protective (reducing the consequences from failure) and
dual (reducing both, the likelihood and the consequences from
failure). Many of these principles (for example: avoiding
clustering of events, deliberately introducing weak links, reducing
sensitivity, introducing changes with opposite sign, etc.) are
discussed in the reliability literature for the first time.
Significant space has been allocated to component reliability. In
the last chapter of the book, several applications are discussed of
a powerful equation which constitutes the core of a new theory of
locally initiated component failure by flaws whose number is a
random variable.
This book has been written with the intention to fill two big gaps
in the reliability and riskliterature: the risk-based reliability
analysis as a powerful alternative to the traditional reliability
analysis and the generic principles for reducing technical risk. I
hope that the principles, models and algorithms presented in the
book will help to fill these gaps and make the book useful to
reliability and risk-analysts, researchers, consultants, students
and practising engineers.
- Offers a shift in the existing paradigm for conducting
reliability analyses.
- Covers risk-based reliability analysis and generic principles for
reducing risk.
- Provides a new measure of risk based on the distribution of the
potential losses from failure as well as the basic principles for
risk-based design.
- Incorporates fast algorithms for system reliability analysis and
discrete-event simulators.
- Includes the probability of failure of a structure with complex
shape expressed with a simple equation.
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