학술논문

Structural Failure Analysis of a Small Foamed Asphalt Mixture Mixer
Document Type
Conference
Source
2019 International Conference on Quality, Reliability, Risk, Maintenance, and Safety Engineering (QR2MSE) Quality, Reliability, Risk, Maintenance, and Safety Engineering (QR2MSE), 2019 International Conference on. :1-7 Aug, 2019
Subject
Aerospace
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineering Profession
General Topics for Engineers
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Signal Processing and Analysis
Mixers
Shafts
Blades
Asphalt
Reliability
Fault trees
Belts
structural failure
failure mode and effects analysis
risk priority number
fault tree analysis
reliability
Language
Abstract
Foamed asphalt is the main means of achieving largescale road repairs. Small foam asphalt mixture mixers are necessary test equipment before the road construction process. To avoid serious injuries due to equipment failure, the structural reliability of the mixer is analyzed using failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) and fault tree analysis (FTA). Foamed asphalt is a metastable state product, and the mixer operation requires immediate and efficient operation, which results in a relatively complicated structure of the device. Potential faults are easily overlooked in reliability analyses of mixer systems. For FMEA, the familiarity proportionality coefficient should be introduced to ensure accurate ranking of the risk priority numbers and to reduce potential bias due to subjective evaluations by personnel. For FTA, the bottom event with the lowest probability of failure is removed while the bottom event with the smallest risk priority numbers and correlations are combined. The obtained FMEA table and structural fault tree model can improve the accuracy of the risk priority numbers, effectively reduce the workload of the reliability analysis, and obtain the structural reliability with less data.NomenclatureFoamed asphalt. Small foam asphalt mixture mixer. Risk priority number. Fault tree analysis. Failure mode and effects analysis. Reliability. The familiarity ratio coefficient of the scorer.