cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Try the Materials Informatics Toolkit, which is designed to easily handle SMILES data. This and other helpful add-ins are available in the JMP® Marketplace
Choose Language Hide Translation Bar
albiruni81
Level II

Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Hi,

 

What is the best method to do a failure rate comparison between two process. 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

If the problem is as simple as you describe (compare two failure rates), then you can use a contingency table analysis. Try these steps:

  1. Enter your data as Chamber (A,B), Status (Defective,Non-defective), and Devices (counts).
  2. Select Analyze > Fit Y by X.
  3. Select Status and click Y.
  4. Select Chamber and click X.
  5. Select Devices and click Freq.

Here is what my data table looks like, based on your example:

capture.jpeg

Here is the result of the analysis:

capture.jpeg

Does this approach help?

View solution in original post

10 REPLIES 10
dale_lehman
Level VII

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Could you provide a bit more information about the kind of data you have or plan to collect?  Assuming there is data for a specified time period during which some items fail and some do not, and there are multiple processes you are comparing, your data is censored - items that have not yet failed, might still fail if the experiment/process were to be run for a longer period of time.  In that case, some type of survival (e.g., proporational hazards) model might be appropriate.  On the other hand, if you have data that spans the lifetime of these items, during which some have failed and some have not, then a classification model could be used.  So, if you provide more information about the nature of your data, a better answer can be provided.

albiruni81
Level II

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Dear Dale, lets assume that I have a two separate process chambers that I would like to monitor the failure that it has for the last 3 month. The failure of the chamber is related to defectivity. For example this chamber might have 3 particle failure per week while the other chamber is having 9 particle failure per week, what is the best method to do a comparison for these 2 chambers

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

To add to Dale's reply, see Help > Books > Reliability and Survival Methods > Life Distribution. There is a feature of this platform to compare groups that is fully explained in this chapter along with examples.

This solution assumes that you have life data, censored or exact.

albiruni81
Level II

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Dear Mark, i actually went through the example of this life distribution, but this chart is normally been used to determine the lifetime of a certain product right?Can I use this chart for the example i stated above?

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

If the problem is as simple as you describe (compare two failure rates), then you can use a contingency table analysis. Try these steps:

  1. Enter your data as Chamber (A,B), Status (Defective,Non-defective), and Devices (counts).
  2. Select Analyze > Fit Y by X.
  3. Select Status and click Y.
  4. Select Chamber and click X.
  5. Select Devices and click Freq.

Here is what my data table looks like, based on your example:

capture.jpeg

Here is the result of the analysis:

capture.jpeg

Does this approach help?

dale_lehman
Level VII

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

I agree with Mark's suggestion, but make sure you know exactly what question you want to ask.  Mark's continency table will answer the question whether the failure rate differs after 3 months.  If you want to answer a more general question - do the failure rates differ - then your data probably is censored, meaning that you have a measurement after 3 months, but the lifetimes are actually longer.  I suspect the two analyses will yield similar qualitative comparisons, but not quantitatively equivalent.

albiruni81
Level II

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Dear dale,

Able to elaborate what do you mean by my data probably is censored?

Rgrds

Irfan
dale_lehman
Level VII

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

From your response to Mark below, it sounds like you have observations that span a period of time during which some items fail and some do not.  At the end of that time period, the question is what is that state of items that did not fail?  Are they beyond the end of their useful life?  Are you only interested in whether they fail within X months time?  If the time period is arbitrarily chosen (that's when data collection ended), then all you know about items that have not failed is that they have not failed "yet."  It is the "yet" that would make your data censored.  This means that you can't claim they won't fail, only that they will not have failed at that particular time mark.

 

Expanding a bit further - your question to Mark below speaks of wanting to model the time to failure.  This is a typical kind of survival analysis.  I think there are 2 general approaches.  If the items have all reached the end of their useful life, but some items have failed and they fail at different times, then your dependent variable would be the the time to failure and you would do a regression analysis (not the contingency analysis which only look at whether they fail or not, but an analysis that focuses on the time to failure).  If the end of data collection is arbitrary (in the sense I describe above) then a survival analysis would be appropriate.  The dependent variable is still the time to failure (it is a type of regression analysis), but your data is censored - so you would use the survival platform rather than the fit model platform.

albiruni81
Level II

Re: Best method to do Failure Rate comparison

Hi Mark,

yes this sure helps, another problem that i have lets assume that for a particular chamber the high failure rate is due to some degrading parts and it is not related to the baseline performance of the chambers, is there a way for statistical analysis to screen this out. Another problem that I have is if would like to analyze the Mean time to failure which means that maybe a certain chamber is able to run until fail for 20 days while the other chamber might run and fail after every other 4 days. Do I use the contigency table as well?