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Telecommunications Engineering: Ele5Tel 1

This document provides an overview of key concepts in telecommunications system reliability. It discusses reliability functions, availability, mean time between failures (MTBF), mean time to repair (MTTR), and failure rate. Common probability distributions for modeling reliability are also described, including the exponential distribution and Weibull distribution. The document is intended to introduce engineering students to important metrics and concepts for evaluating telecommunication system reliability.

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Basit Khan
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views

Telecommunications Engineering: Ele5Tel 1

This document provides an overview of key concepts in telecommunications system reliability. It discusses reliability functions, availability, mean time between failures (MTBF), mean time to repair (MTTR), and failure rate. Common probability distributions for modeling reliability are also described, including the exponential distribution and Weibull distribution. The document is intended to introduce engineering students to important metrics and concepts for evaluating telecommunication system reliability.

Uploaded by

Basit Khan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

ELE5TEL 1

Telecommunications Engineering

Dr. David Tay


Room BG434
x 2529
d.tay@latrobe.edu.au

DT
ELE5TEL 156

System Reliability
• Virtually all telecommunication systems will fail at some
point in time and needs to be repaired / serviced or re-
placed.

• Important to have an objective measure, i.e. metric, of


the reliability of the system.

• Requires concepts from probability and statistics.

Reliability Function

• The state variable X(t) describe the operational state of


a system or an item:

X(t) = 1 if system/item is functional or working

X(t) = 0 if system/item has failed or not working

• TTF: Time-To-Failure which is a random variable de-


noted by T . The probability density function is denoted
by f (u).

• The CDF (Cumulative-Density-Function) is given by


Z t
F (t) ≡ Pr(T ≤ t) = f (u)du
0

DT
ELE5TEL 157

• The reliability of a system/item at time t is the proba-


bility the system/item does not fail, i.e. still working, at
time t. The reliability or survivor function R(t) is
then given by
Z t
R(t) = 1 − F (t) = 1 − f (u)du
0

Example with Gaussian distribution

DT
ELE5TEL 158

Availability

• A system/item is available if it is ready or present for


immediate use - important in contracts.

• Measures of availability can be specified instantaneously


or as an average over a period of time, eg. life cycle of
system/item.

• Instantaneous availability:

A(t) = Pr(X(t) = 1)

• Average availability:
t2
1
Z
Aaverage = A(t)dt
t2 − t1 t1

• Aaverage gives the percentage the system/item is working


with respect to the total time the system/item has been
in operation.

• Aaverage can be a crude / rough measure that does not


tell the whole story.

DT
ELE5TEL 159

• Examples with the same Aaverage

The time in takes to repair failed system is an important


factor.

DT
ELE5TEL 160

• MTBF (Mean-Time-Between-Failure): the average amount


time a system/item is functioning.

• MTTR (Mean-Time-To-Repair): the average amount of


time it takes to repair/replace a system/item. The MTTR
gives an indication of the maintainability of a sys-
tem/item which is defined as how quickly a system can
be repaired.

• Average availability can also be calculated as:

MTBF
Aaverage =
MTBF + MTTR

• Instantaneous unavailability is defined as the

U (t) = Pr(X(t) = 0)

• Average unavailability:

MTTR
Uaverage = 1 − Aaverage =
MTBF + MTTR

• Important to note that MTBF and MTTR are average


values and the actual failure / repair time can be quite
different if the variance in the probability distribution is
large.

DT
ELE5TEL 161

MTTF

MTTF: Mean-Time-To-Failure is defined as mean (or aver-


age) value of TTF of a system/item:
Z ∞ Z ∞
MTTF = E[TTF] = tf (t)dt = R(t)dt
0 0

where the second equality follows by applying the relation-


ship f (t) = −R′ (t) and using integration by parts.

MTTF and MTBF is usually used interchangebly to mean


the same thing. MTBF is used in the system/item that can
be repaired.
Example: A system has a life-cycle of 2 years during which
it failed 3 times. The failure happened after 60 days, 200
days, and 450 days of service. The time it took to repair
the failures were 7 days, 3 days and 5 days. Determine (i)
MTBF, (ii) MTTR and (iii) Aaverage .
Solution:
(i) TBF1 = 60 days, TBF2 = 200 - 60 - 7 = 133 days, TBF3
= 450 - 200 - 3 = 247 days, TBF4 = 730 - 450 - 5 = 275
days.

60 + 133 + 247 + 275


MTBF = = 179 days
4

DT
ELE5TEL 162

(ii)
7+3+5
MTTR = = 5 days
3
(iii)
179
Aaverage = = 0.973
179 + 5

Failure Rate

The failure rate z(t) is given by

f (t)
z(t) =
R(t)

which is the conditional probability per unit time

Pr(t < T ≤ t + ∆t | T > t)/∆t

The probability is for the case the system/item fails within


the interval ∆t given that it did not fail before time t.
The failure rate z(t) gives the failures per unit time (usually
hours) as a function of time and is generally not constant.
The common failure rate follows a bathtub curve

DT
ELE5TEL 163

High failure rates at the beginning and end of the life cycle.

Exponential Distribution
• Used extensively to model reliability in telecommunica-
tion systems.

• Fairly accurate representation of electronic component

DT
ELE5TEL 164

TTF.

• Has memory-less feature: after a system/item has been


repaired, it does not remember the previous TTF, ie.
the next TTF is independent of the previous TTF. The
system/item behaves like it is ”as good as new”.

• PDF is given by

f (x) = λe−λx for x ≥ 0

and f (x) = 0 for x < 0. The MTTF is given by:


Z ∞
1
MTTF = E[X] = x f (x) dx =
0 λ

DT
ELE5TEL 165

Example of PDF

• CDF is given by
Z x
F (x) = f (u)du = 1 − e−λx for x ≥ 0
0

DT
ELE5TEL 166

Example of CDF

• Reliability

R(t) = 1 − F (t) = e−λt for t ≥ 0

DT
ELE5TEL 167

• Failure rate
f (t)
z(t) = =λ
R(t)

Example: A component has a MTTF of 100 hours can be


modelled with an exponential distribution. If it is required
to have a reliability of at least 50%, what is the maximum
recommended operating time?
Solution: λ = 1/100 hr−1

R(t) = e−λtmax = 0.5

1
tmax = − loge 0.5 = −100 loge 0.5 = 69 hours
λ

Weibull Distribution

• Extremely flexible distribution in the field of reliability


engineering.

• Has a shape parameter for accurate modelling for TTF


or TTR distribution.

• PDF given by:

α α−1 −(λt)α
f (t) = αλ t e for t ≥ 0

• The parameter α > 0 is called the shape parameter.

DT
ELE5TEL 168

• The parameter λ > 0 is called the scale parameter.

• Mean (not so easy to calculate) given by


Z ∞ Z ∞
αλα tα e−(λt) dt
α
E[T ] = tf (t)dt =
0 0
 
1 1
E[T ] = Γ 1 +
λ α
where Γ is the Gamma function given by
Z ∞
Γ(t) = xt−1 e−x dx
0

The Gamma function is the generalization of the facto-


rial. When t is a positive integer Γ(t) = t.(t − 1). . . . 2.1.

• Careful selection of α and λ either from expert knowledge


or empirical data allows accurate modelling for TTF or
TTR.

• CDF
α
F (t) = 1 − e−(λt) for t ≥ 0

• Reliability function
α
R(t) = e−(λt) for t ≥ 0

• Failure rate
f (t)
z(t) = = αλα tα−1
R(t)
which is not a constant unlike in exponential distribution.

DT
ELE5TEL 169

• When α = 1, the Weibull distribution becomes the spe-


cial case of exponential distribution.

• Example for modelling TTR

System Modelling
• A system is made of on the interconnection of compo-
nents that interact which each other.

DT
ELE5TEL 170

• The reliability of the system is dependent on:

1. Reliability of the individual components.


2. How the components interact with each other.

• Suppose the system is composed on n components, each


with state variable Xi (t) (i = 1, . . . , n)

Xi (t) = 1 if component i is working

Xi (t) = 0 if component i has failed

• The reliability of component i is given by:

Ri (t) = E[Xi (t)] = 0 × Pr(X(t) = 0) + 1 × Pr(X(t) = 1)

which is the probability component i survives for a time


t.

• A RBD (Reliability Block Diagram) is used to show the


interconnection between components:

DT
ELE5TEL 171

DT
ELE5TEL 172

Structure Function

The structure function of a system is a function of the state


variables of the components

S(X) = S(X1 , X2 , . . . , Xn )

where the state vector of the system is

X = [X1 , X2 , . . . , Xn ]

The structure function gives the state of the system

S(X) = 1 if system working

S(X) = 0 if system has failed

Series Structure

• System will work only if all components are working.

• Structure function is given by


n
Y
S(X(t)) = X1 × X2 × . . . × Xn = Xi (t)
i=1

DT
ELE5TEL 173

• Reliability is given by
" n # n n
Y Y Y
R(S(t)) = E Xi (t) = E[Xi (t)] = Ri (t)
i=1 i=1 i=1

• The weakest link, ie. min (Ri (t)), is the most important
in determining the system reliability.

R(S(t)) ≤ min {Ri (t)}

DT
ELE5TEL 174

Example: single-thread satellite link RF chain.

The MTBF for the components are

1. Frequency converter (FC) MTBF = 95,000 hours.

2. Digital modem (DM) MTBF = 120,000 hours.

3. High-Power amplifier (HPA) MTBF = 75,000 hours.

Want to calculate system survives after 6 months of oper-


ation t = 365 × 24/2 = 4380 hours assuming exponential
distribution.
Solution: λ = 1/MTBF and R(t) = e−λt .

RF C = e−4380/95000 = 0.955

DT
ELE5TEL 175

RDM = e−4380/120000 = 0.964

RHP A = e−4380/75000 = 0.943


n
Y
R(S(t)) = Ri (t) = RRC × RDM × RHP A = 0.868
i=1

Lower reliability than individual components reliability.

Parallel Structure

• System will work if any components are working.

DT
ELE5TEL 176

• Structure function is given by

S(X(t)) = 1 − (1 − X1 ) × (1 − X2 ) × . . . × (1 − Xn )
n
Y
=1− (1 − Xi (t))
i=1

• Reliability is given by
n
" #
Y
R(S(t)) = E 1 − (1 − Xi (t)) =
i=1

n
Y n
Y
1− (1 − E[Xi (t)]) = 1 − (1 − Ri (t))
i=1 i=1

• There is n degree of redundancy in the system, ie. for


the system to fail all components must fail.

DT
ELE5TEL 177

Example: parallel satellite link RF chain.

The MTBF for the components are

1. Frequency converter (FC) MTBF = 95,000 hours.

2. Digital modem (DM) MTBF = 120,000 hours.

DT
ELE5TEL 178

3. High-Power amplifiers (HPA1 and HPA2) MTBF = 75,000


hours.

Want to calculate system survives after 6 months of oper-


ation t = 365 × 24/2 = 4380 hours assuming exponential
distribution.
Solution: Reliability of High-Power amplifier system (HPAS)
is
RHP AS = 1 − (1 − RHP A1 ) × (1 − RHP A2 )

= 1 − (1 − 0.943)2 = 0.997

Total system reliability


n
Y
R(S(t)) = Ri (t) = RF C × RDM × RHP AS
i=1

= 0.955 × 0.964 × 0.997 = 0.918

which is an improvement of the system without redundancy


(0.868).

DT

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