4.5 Article

Resilience-Driven System Design of Complex Engineered Systems

Journal

JOURNAL OF MECHANICAL DESIGN
Volume 133, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.4004981

Keywords

resilience; reliability; complex engineered systems; prognostics and health management

Funding

  1. SNU-IAMD (Seoul National University-Institute of Advanced Machinery and Design)
  2. Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials [SC0830]
  3. Korea Research Council for Industrial Science Technology
  4. National Research Council of Science & Technology (NST), Republic of Korea [SC0830] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Most engineered systems are designed with a passive and fixed design capacity and, therefore, may become unreliable in the presence of adverse events. Currently, most engineered systems are designed with system redundancies to ensure required system reliability under adverse events. However, a high level of system redundancy increases a system's life-cycle cost (LCC). Recently, proactive maintenance decisions have been enabled through the development of prognostics and health management (PHM) methods that detect, diagnose, and predict the effects of adverse events. Capitalizing on PHM technology at an early design stage can transform passively reliable (or vulnerable) systems into adaptively reliable (or resilient) systems while considerably reducing their LCC. In this paper, we propose a resilience-driven system design (RDSD) framework with the goal of designing complex engineered systems with resilience characteristics. This design framework is composed of three hierarchical tasks: (i) the resilience allocation problem (RAP) as a top-level design problem to define a resilience measure as a function of reliability and PHM efficiency in an engineering context, (ii) the system reliability-based design optimization (RBDO) as the first bottom-level design problem for the detailed design of components, and (iii) the system PHM design as the second bottom-level design problem for the detailed design of PHM units. The proposed RDSD framework is demonstrated using a simplified aircraft control actuator design problem resulting in a highly resilient actuator with optimized reliability, PHM efficiency and redundancy for the given parameter settings. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4004981]

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