Reliability of demand-based warm standby systems subject to fault level coverage

For mission‐critical or safety‐critical systems, redundancy techniques are often applied to satisfy the stringent reliability requirements of the system design. Warm standby sparing is a common redundancy technique, which compromises the high energy consumption of hot standby techniques and the long...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied stochastic models in business and industry Vol. 31; no. 3; pp. 380 - 393
Main Authors Zhai, Q., Peng, R., Xing, L., Yang, J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.05.2015
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Summary:For mission‐critical or safety‐critical systems, redundancy techniques are often applied to satisfy the stringent reliability requirements of the system design. Warm standby sparing is a common redundancy technique, which compromises the high energy consumption of hot standby techniques and the long recovery time of cold standby techniques. This paper considers a more general model for warm standby systems, that is, the demand‐based warm standby system, where each component bears a nominal capacity and the system fails if the total capacity of the working components cannot meet the system demand. Moreover, fault level coverage is considered to model the imperfect coverage effect in the standby system. A multivalued decision diagram based approach is proposed to evaluate the reliability of the demand‐based warm standby system subject to the fault level coverage. Examples are given to illustrate the proposed method. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Bibliography:istex:5B93B11308AE3F42A66E8888F1439EEC437AF947
ark:/67375/WNG-GPL4X50Z-V
ArticleID:ASMB2010
ISSN:1524-1904
1526-4025
DOI:10.1002/asmb.2010