Robust Failure Mode and Effects Analysis
Robust Failure Mode and Effects Analysis extends the classical FMEA framework by explicitly incorporating noise factors, parameter variability, and environmental variation into the risk assessment process. Rather than treating failure likelihood as a single deterministic estimate, it uses robust design principles — most notably from Taguchi's quality engineering — to evaluate how process variability and uncontrollable noise factors influence the probability and severity of each failure mode, yielding risk priority numbers that reflect real-world variability.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Stamatis, D. H. (2003). Failure Mode and Effect Analysis: FMEA from Theory to Execution (2nd ed.). ASQ Quality Press. · ISBN 978-0873895989
- Phadke, M. S. (1989). Quality Engineering Using Robust Design. Prentice Hall. · ISBN 978-0137451593
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Related methods
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