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Redundancy: How Many Unreliable Spares are Needed for High Reliability and Confidence?This paper investigates the number of redundant units needed to achieve high reliability with high confidence. The approach is developed for the case when the system failure rate is too high for a single unit to provide the required reliability over the mission duration. To achieve high reliability, N redundant units can be used, one operating unit and N – 1 spares. If the unit failure rate is f, the mission length is L, and f * L is small (not the case assumed here), the unit failure probability over the mission duration is F1 = f * L << 1. In this case, the probability that all N units will fail is Ffail = F1N, and the needed redundancy N = LN(F)/LN(F1). For the case of large f * L assumed here, F1 = f * L > 1, and F1 is the expected number of failures during the mission. (When F1 = f * L << 1, F1 is the probability that a unit will fail during the mission. When F1 = f * L > 1, F1 is the expected number of failures during the mission.) The needed redundancy, N, to achieve the required N redundant unit reliability, FN, can be computed using the cumulative Poisson distribution with mean equal to F1. The number of spares, N - 1, is increased until the probability - that the total number of failures will be less than N -1 - is equal to the required reliability. The confidence that this reliability can be achieved can be computed using the cumulative Poisson distribution or the chi-square distribution. Since the measured unit failure rate, f, has some probabilistic uncertainty, the actual failure rate will be randomly higher or lower. This means that the reliability of the N redundant systems will be overestimated about half the time. Adding more redundant units increases the confidence that the required reliability will be achieved. For a fixed number of redundant units, the expected reliability and confidence can be traded off, since lower reliability goals will be achieved with higher confidence. Both the desired reliability and confidence can be specified as initial requirements and the needed number of redundant units estimated using the measured failure rate.
Document ID
20230014159
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Harry W Jones ORCID
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Date Acquired
September 28, 2023
Publication Date
January 22, 2024
Subject Category
Quality Assurance and Reliability
Meeting Information
Meeting: 70th Annual Reliability & Maintainability Symposium (RAMS)
Location: Albuquerque, NM
Country: US
Start Date: January 22, 2024
End Date: January 25, 2024
Sponsors: Reliability and Maintainability Symposium Committee
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 251546.04.01.21
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Redundancy
Spares
High reliability
Confidence
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