Optimal stopping problems for mission oriented systems considering time redundancy

Qingan Qiu, Meng Kou, Ke Chen, Qiao Deng*, Fengming Kang, Cong Lin

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    62 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Catastrophic failures of safety-critical systems could result in irretrievable economic losses and damage. To enhance the survivability of safety-critical systems, a mission can be terminated if the failure risk becomes too high. Time redundancy can be commonly observed in many practical systems where missions can be executed multiple times during a constrained time to improve the mission reliability. This paper investigates the optimal mission abort policies for systems with continuous degradation considering two types of time redundancy. Under type I time redundancy, the system should keep operational continuously for a time period greater than a specific value. In the second case, mission success requires that the cumulative working time should be greater than the given value. Dynamic mission abort decisions are considered based on the degradation level and mission attempts. Mission reliability and system survivability are derived under two types of time redundancy. The optimal mission abort threshold in each attempt is investigated to minimize the expected total cost of mission failure and system failure. A case study is presented to illustrate the obtained results.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number107226
    JournalReliability Engineering and System Safety
    Volume205
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jan 2021

    Keywords

    • Mission abort
    • Mission reliability
    • System survivability
    • Time redundancy

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