Title :
Representing complex systems within discrete event simulation for reliability assessment
Author :
Warrington, Les ; Jones, Jeffery A.
Author_Institution :
Warwick Univ., Coventry, UK
Abstract :
During design of a high-fidelity discrete event simulation (DES) of aircraft reliability and maintenance under realistic operational scenario, modelling of complex system functionality and control of the associated state-space explosion, was a major concern. Hierarchical system decomposition limited this explosion but correct and efficient analysis of the aircraft systems remained a concern. This paper reviews Markov, Petri net, fault tree, event tree and RBD (reliability block diagram), illustrating their respective computer implementations. Computing requirements of each are compared. Pathand cut-sets, derived from fault tree, event tree or RBD, were identified to be most efficient computer representations but with the disadvantage that only ´static´ systems could be modelled. A static system is one in which order of component failure or other conditional system property, does not determine functionality. The alternate is a ´dynamic´ system. However, it is also noted that ´dynamic´ system functionality is always a conditional sub-set of an equivalent ´static´ path-set. The paper proposes a method that integrates DES with path-sets to allow ´dynamic´ system modelling. For large systems, path-set representation rapidly becomes more efficient in storage requirements, even when sparse matrix techniques are used with the alternatives.
Keywords :
Markov processes; Petri nets; aircraft maintenance; discrete event simulation; fault trees; reliability; safety; Markov processes; Petri net; aircraft maintenance; aircraft reliability; aircraft systems; complex system functionality; event tree; fault tree; high-fidelity discrete event simulation; operational scenario; reliability block diagram; safety modelling; state-space explosion control; Aerospace control; Aircraft; Control system synthesis; Discrete event simulation; Explosions; Fault diagnosis; Fault trees; Hierarchical systems; Maintenance; Sparse matrices;
Conference_Titel :
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 2003. Annual
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7717-6
DOI :
10.1109/RAMS.2003.1182037