4.7 Article

Integrated remanufacturing, maintenance and spares policies towards life extension of a multi-component system

Journal

RELIABILITY ENGINEERING & SYSTEM SAFETY
Volume 215, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ress.2021.107872

Keywords

Remanufacturing; Life extension; Obsolescence; Maintenance; Spares; Circular economy

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This paper discusses the significance of end-users and maintenance functions in decision making for remanufacturing as a life extension solution for ageing equipment. It develops an integrated methodology to optimize maintenance, remanufacturing, and multiple spare strategies, considering the asymmetric relationship between end-users and remanufacturers. The study demonstrates the robust decision support and the importance of maintenance function and end-user influence in remanufacturing decision making.
The decision for remanufacturing as a life extension solution for ageing equipment approaching their end of life (EOL), has marginalized the active role of the end-users and maintenance functions, by predominantly considering the remanufacturers (OEM/R) context. However, the decisions influencing the immediate core (used item/part of its component) condition like corrective maintenance actions used, and when to return a core for remanufacturing or exchange with a remanufactured part, are often the end-users responsibility. Factors like remanufacturing cost, alternative maintenance and spare strategies, introduce conflicting preferences, hence an asymmetric relationship between the end-user and the remanufacturer. This paper develops an integrated methodology to optimize maintenance, remanufacturing, and multiple spare strategies (new and remanufactured exchange) jointly, for life extension of an ageing multi-component system with dependencies. The model inculcates the asymmetric relationship to assist the end-user to derive decision support on optimal maintenance and remanufacturing strategies while minimizing the costs. A case study of an ageing turbine rotor assembly of a turbocharger with spare obsolescence demonstrates the utility of the proposed model. The study shows that the approach offers robust decision support, and further demonstrates the significance of the maintenance function and end-user influence in the remanufacturing decision making.

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