Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance
The material in this book was first presented as a one-semester course in Relia­ bility Theory and Preventive Maintenance for M.Sc. students of the Industrial Engineering Department of Ben Gurion University in the 1997/98 and 1998/99 academic years. Engineering students are mainly interested in the applied part of this theory. The value of preventive maintenance theory lies in the possibility of its imple­ mentation, which crucially depends on how we handle statistical reliability data. The very nature of the object of reliability theory - system lifetime - makes it extremely difficult to collect large amounts of data. The data available are usu­ ally incomplete, e.g. heavily censored. Thus, the desire to make the course material more applicable led me to include in the course topics such as mod­ eling system lifetime distributions (Chaps. 1,2) and the maximum likelihood techniques for lifetime data processing (Chap. 3). A course in the theory of statistics is aprerequisite for these lectures. Stan­ dard courses usually pay very little attention to the techniques needed for our purpose. A short summary of them is given in Chap. 3, including widely used probability plotting. Chapter 4 describes the most useful and popular models of preventive main­ tenance and replacement. Some practical aspects of applying these models are addressed, such as treating uncertainty in the data, the role of data contamination and the opportunistic scheduling of maintenance activities.
1117339240
Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance
The material in this book was first presented as a one-semester course in Relia­ bility Theory and Preventive Maintenance for M.Sc. students of the Industrial Engineering Department of Ben Gurion University in the 1997/98 and 1998/99 academic years. Engineering students are mainly interested in the applied part of this theory. The value of preventive maintenance theory lies in the possibility of its imple­ mentation, which crucially depends on how we handle statistical reliability data. The very nature of the object of reliability theory - system lifetime - makes it extremely difficult to collect large amounts of data. The data available are usu­ ally incomplete, e.g. heavily censored. Thus, the desire to make the course material more applicable led me to include in the course topics such as mod­ eling system lifetime distributions (Chaps. 1,2) and the maximum likelihood techniques for lifetime data processing (Chap. 3). A course in the theory of statistics is aprerequisite for these lectures. Stan­ dard courses usually pay very little attention to the techniques needed for our purpose. A short summary of them is given in Chap. 3, including widely used probability plotting. Chapter 4 describes the most useful and popular models of preventive main­ tenance and replacement. Some practical aspects of applying these models are addressed, such as treating uncertainty in the data, the role of data contamination and the opportunistic scheduling of maintenance activities.
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Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance

Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance

by Ilya Gertsbakh
Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance

Reliability Theory: With Applications to Preventive Maintenance

by Ilya Gertsbakh

Paperback(2000)

$54.99 
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Overview

The material in this book was first presented as a one-semester course in Relia­ bility Theory and Preventive Maintenance for M.Sc. students of the Industrial Engineering Department of Ben Gurion University in the 1997/98 and 1998/99 academic years. Engineering students are mainly interested in the applied part of this theory. The value of preventive maintenance theory lies in the possibility of its imple­ mentation, which crucially depends on how we handle statistical reliability data. The very nature of the object of reliability theory - system lifetime - makes it extremely difficult to collect large amounts of data. The data available are usu­ ally incomplete, e.g. heavily censored. Thus, the desire to make the course material more applicable led me to include in the course topics such as mod­ eling system lifetime distributions (Chaps. 1,2) and the maximum likelihood techniques for lifetime data processing (Chap. 3). A course in the theory of statistics is aprerequisite for these lectures. Stan­ dard courses usually pay very little attention to the techniques needed for our purpose. A short summary of them is given in Chap. 3, including widely used probability plotting. Chapter 4 describes the most useful and popular models of preventive main­ tenance and replacement. Some practical aspects of applying these models are addressed, such as treating uncertainty in the data, the role of data contamination and the opportunistic scheduling of maintenance activities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642086656
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 12/08/2010
Edition description: 2000
Pages: 219
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.24(d)

Table of Contents

1 System Reliability as a Function of Component Reliability.- 2 Parametric Lifetime Distributions.- 3 Statistical Inference from Incomplete Data.- 4 Preventive Maintenance Models Based on the Lifetime Distribution.- 5 Preventive Maintenance Based on Parameter Control.- 6 Best Time Scale for Age Replacement.- 7 Preventive Maintenance with Learning.- Solutions to Exercises.- Appendix A: Nonhomogeneous Poisson Process.- A.1 Definition and Basic Properties.- A.2 Parametric estimation of the intensity function.- Appendix B: Covariances and Means of Order Statistics.- Appendix C: The Laplace Transform.- Appendix D: Probability Paper.- Appendix E: Renewal Function.- References.- Glossary of Notation.
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