Abstract


 
 
 As the field of PHM matures, it needs to be aware of the regulations, policies, and standards that will both impose boundaries as well as provide guidance for operations. All three - regulations, policies, and standards - provide information on how to design or operate something, but with different degrees of enforceability. Policies include both public policies as well as organizational policies. Operators may be required to adhere to public policies(say, an environmental policy which provides guidance for the pollution prevention act (the latter is a US law)) whereas organisational often reflect policies that come out of strategic considerations within private organizations (such as maintenance policies). Regulations (such as aeronautics or nuclear energy) typically impose binding rules of engagement and are imposed by regulatory bodies that are responsible for a particular field. Standards, in contrast, are community-consensus guidelines that are meant to provide benefit to the community by describing best practices. Adoption of such guidelines is entirely voluntary but may provide benefits by not having to reinvent the wheel and for finding common ground amongst other adopters. Awareness of both guidelines and barriers will enable practitioners in adopting best practices within the legal constraints. This paper provides an overview of the current regulations, policies, and standards in the field of Prognostics and Health Management.
 
 

Highlights

  • As the field of PHM matures, it needs to be aware of the Regulations, policies, and standards provide information on regulations, policies, and standards that will both impose how to design or operate something, but with different boundaries as well as provide guidance for operations

  • One of the most important PHM-related documents produced by ISO is ISO 13374 and its various parts that lay out guidelines for condition monitoring and especially Part 1 (ISO, 2003), which builds on the pioneering work done by a consortium of OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers led by the US Navy known as OSA-CBM (Open System Architecture for Condition-Based Maintenance, MIMOSA, 2001)

  • Regulations are typically connected with a particular field such as aeronautics where the Federal Aviation Administration acts as a regulatory body and imposes binding rules of engagement

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

As the field of PHM matures, it needs to be aware of the Regulations, policies, and standards provide information on regulations, policies, and standards that will both impose how to design or operate something, but with different boundaries as well as provide guidance for operations. Regulations Enforceability that are meant to provide benefit to the community by describing best practices Adoption of such guidelines is Figure 1. Enforceability vs Focus Area entirely voluntary but may provide benefits by not having to reinvent the wheel and for finding common ground amongst other adopters Awareness of both guidelines and barriers will enable practitioners in adopting best practices within the legal constraints. Standards (and recommended practices in some industries), by contrast, are consensus-based rules or instructions that espouse best practices that in turn may aid manufacturers and operators to adopt principles found to have benefit within the community. They provide a means, but not the only ones, to achieve a desired goal. This paper aims to provide an overview of the regulations, policies, and standards that affect the Prognostics and Health Management discipline

POLICIES
Maintenance Policies
Environmental Policy
Problem Reporting and Maintenance Data Collection Policy
Cybersecurity Policy
Artificial Intelligence Policy
Communications
REGULATIONS
Regulations for Airborne Vehicle Applications
Regulations for Terrestrial Vehicle Applications
Regulations for Nuclear Power Plants
Regulations on Data Collection
STANDARDS
Mobility Applications
A Methodology for Quantifying the Performance of an Engine Monitoring System
Non-mobility applications
Part 1-7
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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