Adaptive testing policy for multi-state systems with application to the degrading final elements in safety-instrumented systems

Aibo Zhang, Shengnan Wu*, Dongming Fan, Min Xie, Baoping Cai, Yiliu Liu*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

    19 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The performance of many engineering systems in their lifetimes can be modeled as multiple states to facilitate operational decision-making. Based on the information that the system is at a certain state, maintenance is conducted to keep the system performing satisfactorily and prevent failures. Periodical tests are mainly used for the systems whose conditions cannot be automatically detected by condition monitoring, but the timing and necessity of such tests that are based on earlier standards and procedures may not be optimal. This paper thus presents an adaptive testing policy for multi-state systems by scheduling the upcoming tests based on the observed state in the current test. Analytical formulas based on the multi-phase Markov process are developed to evaluate the health of the time-dependent system. Algorithms are derived for estimating the average system performance and the expected number of tests in a certain service period. Then, the policy is implemented on the degrading final elements in safety-instrumented systems where structural redundancies are used. Case studies with verification by Monte Carlo simulation illustrate the benefits of the proposed testing policy in reducing the number of tests without sacrificing system performance.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number108360
    JournalReliability Engineering and System Safety
    Volume221
    Online published29 Jan 2022
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2022

    Funding

    The work described in this paper was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2019YFE0105100), Research Grant Council of Hong Kong under a theme-based project (T32-101/15-R) and a GRF (CityU 11203519), National Natural Science Foundation of China (71971181, 51809277),  Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China (No. 2462019BJRC006, NO. 2462021YXZZ001), and Guangdong Technology International Cooperation Project (2020A0505100024) and China Scholarship Council, and the IKTPLUSS program of Research Council of Norway (No. 309628).

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