System availability and optimum spare units

System availability and optimum spare units

416 World Abstracts on Microelectronics and Reliability chip protection of CMOS/SOS IC gate oxides. For these gate oxides, the dielectric strength o...

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416

World Abstracts on Microelectronics and Reliability

chip protection of CMOS/SOS IC gate oxides. For these gate oxides, the dielectric strength of ~ 800 A thick silicon dioxide on SOS was ~ 7 x 106volts/era for I00 nanosecond pulses.

Effects of electrostatic discharge on linear bipolar integrated circuits. R. L. MINEAR and G. A. Dot)soN. 15th 4. Proc. 3. C I R C U I T

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Decision making in reliability, V. S. SRINIVASAN and K. V. RAMACHANDRA. IEEE Trans. Reliab, R-26, (4) 261 (October 1977). Distribution-free methods are evolved for 4 models of evaluating time-to-failure. Two decision procedures for choosing the better of two equipments are given in models I and II. Decision procedures for whether two equipments have the same availability or reliability are given in models llI and IV; in these models, it is assumed that the mission time is a r.v. in the interval (0, To). The method of model I is superior to existing tests like the Wilcoxon-Rank-Sum test and Mann-Whitney test in a particular case. Model II is based on the time taken to return to the initial state by a Markov chain and is optimum for large sample sizes. In model III, even though the distributions of time to failure and time to repair-completion are negative exponential, the method is general, distribution-free and optimal. Hence the type I error is constant even if the distributions of time to failure and repair-completion differ from the assumed distributions. Model IV is also distribution-flee and optimum.

Time dependent unavailability analysis of nuclear safety systems. W. E. VESELY and F. F. GOLDBERG. IEEE Trans. Reliah. R-26, (4) 257 (October 1977). A method is presented to predict the time-dependent system unavailability, which includes consideration of the detailed effects of different periodic testing schemes. The FRANTIC computer code is described; it has been developed to study applications of the approach.

Queuing models for estimating aircraft fleet availability. V. V. S. SARMA, K. RAMCnAND and A. K. RAO. IEEE Trans. Reliab. R-26, (4) 253 (October 1977). The availability of a small fleet of aircraft in a flying-base, repair-depot combination is modeled and studied. First, a deterministic flow model relates parameters of interest and represents the state-of-the art in the planning of such systems. Second, a cyclic queue model shows the effect of the principal uncertainties in operation and repair and shows the consequent decrease in the availability of aircraft at the flyingbase. Several options such as increasing fleet size, investments in additional repair facilities, or building reliability and maintainability into the individual aircraft during its life-cycle are open for increasing the availability. A lifecycle cost criterion brings out some of these features. NumericM results confirm Rose's prediction that there exists a minimal cost combination of end products and repairdepot capability to achieve a prescribed operational availability.

Reliability growth apportionment. J. K, BYERS and D. J. GALL[. IEEE Trans. Reliab. R-26, (4) 242 (October 1977). A method is presented for apportioning reliability growth to the subsystems that make up a system in order to achieve the required reliability at least cost. Reliability growth apportionment is handled as an s-expected cost minimization problem subject to the constraint of meeting a system reliability requirement. The problem is formulated in terms of Duane's reliability growth model, and is solved using geometric programming. The method can be useful in the early stages of system design to determine subsystem reliability growth that will

Reliab. Phys. IEEE (1977) Nevada. p. 138. Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can easily damage bipolar integrated circuits. "Second breakdown" of N P N transistor emitter-base junctions is a common failure mode. No external emitter connection is needed for this to occur. ESD current paths, physics of ESD failure, and design concepts for improved FSD resistance are discussed.

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allow a system reliability requirement to be met, and in the latter stages of system design when reliability has fallen short of the required goal and improvements are necessary.

Cost model for testing program based on nonhomogeneous poisson failure model JoH~ DONELSON m. IEEE Trans. Reliab. R-26, (3) 189 (August 1977). A model for the s-expected cost of a development testing program is presented in this paper. The total cost function consists of two terms, The first term is proportional to the duration of the testing program; the second term is a loss function that assesses additional costs for failure to meet reliability goals during the testing program. The reliability growth model assumes that failures during the program occur according to a nonhomogeneous Poisson process having a power-law rate. An example shows how the duration of the test program can be chosen to minimize s-expected total cost.

System availability and optimum spare units. MASAFUMI SASKI, SHIGERU KABURAKI and SH1GERU YANAGI. IEEE Trans. Reliab. R-26, (3) 182 (August 1977). The steady-state availability of a repairable system with cold standbys and nonzero replacement time is maximized under constraints of total cost and total weight. Likewise the cost can be minimized under constraints of steady-state availability and total weight. A new, more efficient algorithm is used for the constrained optimization. The problem is formulated as a nonlinear integer programming problem. Since the objective functions are monotone, it is easy to obtain optimal solutions. These new algorithms are natural extensions of the Lawler Bell algorithm. Availability is adjusted by the number of spares allowed. Other measures of system goodness are considered, viz. failure rate, weight, price, mean repair time, mean repair cost, mean replacement time, and mean replacement cost of a unit.

Optimal replacement rate of devices with lognormal failure distributions. S. S. CHENG. IEEE Trans. Reliab. R-26, (3) 174 (August 1977). The time dependence of the replacement rate of devices with lognormal failure distributions is studied. The relationship between the peak replacement rate and er, the standard deviation in the corresponding s-normal distribution, is obtained. The study assumes that each device represents a renewal process and the system of devices represents a superimposed renewal process. The peak replacement rate becomes very large for both extreme values of (~. The corresponding replacement rate eventually approaches the conventional asymptotic rate only after many MTTFs (Mean Time To Failure), possibly long after the system becomes obsolete. Ways to cope with this situation are suggested. However, the replacement rate curve becomes almost critically damped with a minimumpeak-factor ~ 1.03 at tr ~ 0.63. The study also reveals that asymptotically the lognormal devices with > << 1 would require fewer replacements than the exponential devices with the same MTTF. The difference is equal to one-half of the population in service. For large a, more replacements are required. The results of this paper apply to a variety of reliability studies and maintenance and inventory strategies for communication systems that employ lognormal devices such as a semiconductor laser, LED, avalanche photo diode,