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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.cityu.edu.hk/handle/2031/8437
Title: Optimal burn-in policy for highly reliable products using inverse Gaussian degradation process
Authors: Zhang, Mimi (張密密)
Ye, Zhisheng
Xie, Min
Department: Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management
Issue Date: Nov-2013
Award: Won the Best Paper Award in the 8th World Congress on Engineering Asset Management (WCEAM 2013) & 3rd International Conference on Utility Management & Safety (ICUMAS 2013), Hong Kong, 30 October to 1 November 2013. P.W. Tse et al. (eds.), Engineering Asset Management - Systems, Professional Practices and Certification, Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-09507-3_86
Supervisor: Prof. Xie, Min
Description: The award winning work was published: Zhang, M., Ye, Z., & Xie, M. (2015).Optimal burn-in policy for highly reliable products using inverse Gaussian degradation process. In P. W. T. Tse, J. Mathew, K. Wong, R. Lam & C .N. Ko (Eds.), Engineering asset management - Systems, professional practices and certification: Proceedings of the 8th World Congress on Engineering Asset Management (WCEAM 2013) & the 3rd International Conference on Utility Management & Safety (ICUMAS) (pp. 1003-1011). Springer International Publishing. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-09507-3_86
Type: Conference paper/presentation
Abstract: Burn-in test is a manufacturing process implemented to identify and eliminate units with infant mortality before they are shipped to the customers. The traditional burn-in test over a short period of time to collect event data is rather inefficient. This decision problem can be solved if there is a suitable quality characteristic (QC) whose degradation over time can be related to the lifetime of the product. Optimal burn-in policies have been discussed in the literature assuming that the underlying degradation path follows a Wiener process or gamma process. However, the degradation paths of many products may be more appropriately modeled by an inverse Gaussian process that exhibits a monotone increasing pattern. Here, motivated by the numerous merits of the inverse Gaussian process, we first propose a mixed inverse Gaussian process to describe the degradation path of the product. Next, we present a decision rule for classifying a unit as typical or weak. A cost model is used to determine the optimal burn-in duration and the "scrap" cutoff level, and a simulation study is carried out to illustrate the proposed procedure.
Appears in Collections:Student Works With External Awards 

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