A common scenario in engineering is that of a system which operates throughout
several sequential and distinct periods of time, during which the modes and
consequences of failure differ from one another. This type of operation is known as a
phased mission, and for the mission to be a success the system must successfully
operate throughout all of the phases. Examples include a rocket launch and an
aeroplane flight. Component or sub-system failures may occur at any time during the
mission, yet not affect the system performance until the phase in which their
condition is critical. This may mean that the transition from one phase to the next is a
critical event that leads to phase and mission failure, with the root cause being a
component failure in a previous phase. A series of phased missions with no
maintenance may be considered as a Maintenance Free Operating Period (MFOP).
This paper describes the use of a Petri net to model the reliability of the MFOP and
phased missions scenario. The model uses a form of Monte-Carlo simulation to
obtain its results, and due to the modelling power of Petri Nets, can consider
complexities such as multi-mission periods, component failure rate
interdependencies, and mission abandonment. The model operates three different
types of Petri Net which interact to provide the overall system reliability modelling.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering
Citation
CHEW, S.P., DUNNETT, S.J. and ANDREWS, J.D., 2007. Phased mission modelling of systems with maintenance free operating periods using simulated Petri-nets. IN: Proceedings of the 17th AR2TS, 17th Advances in Risk and Reliability Technology Symposium, Loughborough, UK, April, pp. 219-230.