Reliability apportionment is a power tool to enable your team to make decisions while fully considering the reliability impact.

A good physics of failure (PoF) model helps you understand the impact of stresses on the time-to-failure distribution for a specific failure mechanism. Let's discuss PoF models, including how to create and use them effectively.
The development of PoF models got off to a slow start in the 1960s. Recently, scientists and engineers have developed numerous PoF models for many of the common failure mechanisms we face in our products.
Let's define a PoF model and how to create a model with a specific failure mechanism. Plus, let's explore how to find and adapt models in the literature.
While not every failure mechanism will have a suitable model, those provide a quicker analysis of failure risks for your product. Your team can consider design changes, changes in material, assembly changes, or changes to environmental protection and quickly assess the impact (good or bad) on the expected time to failure distribution.
A mixture of models allows you to model the many competing threats to your product's successful operation over time. Combining these models with differences in use or environmental stresses across your customer base permits modeling the effective field reliability performance.
Let's consider PoF models, how to use them, plus how to create them as a central element of your reliability program. We'll discuss a range of models and where you can find more to help describe your salient failure mechanisms.
This Accendo Reliability webinar originally broadcast on 8 January 2019.
To view the recorded video/audio of the event, visit the webinar page.
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Reliability apportionment is a power tool to enable your team to make decisions while fully considering the reliability impact.
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Let's consider physics of failure (PoF) models, how to use them, plus how to create them, as a central element of your reliability program.
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