posted on 2010-11-12, 15:26authored byMandeep Khella, Tony Martin, John T. Pearson, Roger Dixon
This paper presents the first of two case studies conducted in 2009, to evaluate a concept for specifying and designing a
Health Management System (HMS). This first case study made use of a representative Unmanned Aerial Vehicle fuel system.
Conflicting information requirements relating to the health of the fuel system were defined for a given stakeholder (Fuel System
Maintenance Engineer). Following a Failure Modes and Effects Analysis of the fuel system, the concept was applied under two
scenarios (with and without additional sensors), to specify associated HMS designs. These two designs were then compared to consider
how well each design addressed the conflicting requirements. In addition, attributes such as weight, cost and power were also
associated to the underlying HMS sensors. The attribute values were aggregated to the requirements level and demonstrated a new
approach to designing and evaluating alternative HMS designs. The case study demonstrated that although this was a simple
evaluation, the underlying concept has shown considerable
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
KHELLA, M....et al., 2010. Systems approach for health management design: A simple fuel system case study. IN: 5th International Conference on System of Systems Engineering (SoSE), Loughborough, 22-24 June, pp. 1 - 6