Abstract

The degradation rates of many engineering systems are always positive in practical applications. In some cases, the degradation process is approximately linear, such as train wheel wear degradation and an increase in the operating current of laser devices. In this paper we introduce a degradation modeling and reliability estimation method based on the Wiener process with a transmuted-truncated normal distribution (TTND). The TTND is employed to characterize unit-to-unit variability due to its flexibility in capturing symmetry and the asymmetrical behavior of the drift variable of the Wiener process. A Wiener process with TTND is applied to model the degradation processes of the deteriorating systems in two cases. In the first case, we assume that the degradation process is unaffected by measurement uncertainties, whereas in the second case, the measurement uncertainties are considered. The exact and explicit expressions of PDFs and the reliability functions are derived based on the concept of first hitting time. The Gibbs sampling technique and the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm are employed to obtain the Bayesian estimates of the model’s parameters. The efficiency and the feasibility of the presented approach are demonstrated through numerical examples, with Monte Carlo simulation and a practical application with laser degradation data. Furthermore, deviance information criteria (DIC) are used to compare the proposed model and some existing models. The result indicated that the proposed approach provided better reliability estimation results.

Highlights

  • Most components and systems degrade over time and fail when the degradation level reaches or exceeds the critical level, called a threshold

  • This paper presents a method of degradation data analysis based on the Wiener transmuted truncated normal degradation model, simultaneously considering the temporal uncertainties, measurement error and the unit-to-unit variability in the population

  • The transmuted truncated normal distribution is used to present the distribution of the drift variable due to its flexibility in capturing symmetrical and asymmetrical distributions, unlike the normal distribution, which has been widely used in the previous literature

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Summary

Introduction

Most components and systems degrade over time and fail when the degradation level reaches or exceeds the critical level, called a threshold. Most of the existing research on lifetime estimations based on the Wiener process generally has supposed that the random effect of the degradation model follows a normal distribution, meaning that the unit-to-unit variability for a given number of systems is described as a normal distribution. We aimed to develop a Wiener-process-based degradation model framework for reliability analysis In this approach, the temporal uncertainty, measurement error and unit-to-unit heterogeneity of the degradation model are simultaneously considered.

Reliability Estimation Based on the Proposed Degradation Model
Case 1
Case 2
D2 σe2
Simulation Study
Application to Laser Degradation Data
Conclusions
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