Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA)
Failure
modes and effects analysis (FMEA) is a systematic technique
intended to recognize
and evaluate the
potential failure of a product or process, and the effects of that failure. It
is also intended to
identify actions that could eliminate or reduce the chance of the
potential failure. It involves the recording and analysis of actual and
potential problems with a product design or process, along with the
related solutions. This information makes it possible to improve
accountability, avoid repeated mistakes, and improve the quality of the
end product.
FMEA
data is maintained as general FMEA information, with the FMEA
function at the top level.
If the user wishes to have design FMEAs, he
creates a design FMEA header for a
Product Structure or Recipe Structure Alternate.
If the user wishes to have process FMEAs, he creates a Process FMEA
header for a routing alternate. The
user can define new FMEA failure (and lower level) information for these
headers, or use existing general FMEA data.
The
process FMEA header serves as the connection between a routing
alternate and a generic FMEA function.
FMEA functions can be linked to
multiple FMEA headers for different
parts, structure types, or even to
design FMEA headers.
The
design FMEA header serves as the connection between a structure
alternate and a generic FMEA Function.
FMEA functions can be linked to
multiple FMEA headers for different
parts, structure types or even to
process FMEA headers.
In
IFS Applications, each product structure alternate, recipe structure
alternate, or routing alternate performs
one or more intended functions.
The
FMEA function is defined as a functionality that the part is to
perform or as an important attribute the
part has. For example, it
could be a requirement to fall within a
specific temperature range, the
dimensions of the item, foot-pounds of
torque, or a more general thing
like the asthetic appearance of the
part.
Each function can have one or more
failures. These are conditions that
prevent the product or process from
performing as intended.
An
FMEA failure is a problem, failure, or shortcoming based on an FMEA
function.
An FMEA failure represents a problem in the part or in the
process to make the part.
An FMEA failure has two elements; FMEA
Causes and FMEA Effects.
The FMEA cause is the details about how
the FMEA failure was caused to
happen; there may be one or more FMEA
causes for an FMEA failure. An
FMEA cause has an occurrence level. The
problems that happen more often
have a high occurrence level, while very
rare problems have a low
occurrence level.
The FMEA effect is the details about the effects the FMEA
failure will
have on the part, in the making of the
part, or on the end user. This
includes information about the severity
of the FMEA effect. An FMEA
effect that causes bodily harm to the
end user would be very severe,
while an FMEA effect that manifests
itself as a slight smell would be a
minor to moderate severity.
The
FMEA causes have details of their own. They are FMEA Controls and
FMEA Recommended Actions. Also each
cause can have one or more controls.
These are mechanisms that detect the
failure and/ or its effects before
they reach the customer.
FMEA
controls detail the detection, inspection, or remediation
mechanisms used to detect (and possibly
avoid) the FMEA failure. There
could be many possible controls. Each
FMEA control has a detection
rating, which indicates how likely that
FMEA control is to detect the
problem. A high detection rating would
represent a poor chance of
detection, while a low detection rating
would represent a good chance of detection.
FMEA
recommendations are a list of possible actions, process changes, or activities
that could be used to make the FMEA Failure less common,
reduce the severity of the FMEA effect,
or make it easier to detect the
FMEA failure. These recommendations may
or may not be acted upon; those
that are, will have FMEA actions
associated with them.
The
user may wish to use a graph to determine which FMEA problems are
most likely to require immediate
attention.
The FMEA Analysis Graph plots the risk priority number (RPN) against the
severity for all defined causes. The graph is a traditional quadrant graph;
those FMEA causes that plot in the upper right quadrant have high severity and
RPN values and are the most important, while those in the lower right quadrant
are less important.
Using
this data, you can prioritize the problems with a product or
process, taking into account their
likelihood and the severity of each
occurrence. This allows you to decide
which problems require immediate
action and which can be ignored. Once
you decide on the appropriate
controls, you can do further analysis to
assess their effectiveness.