par Mercier, Sophie;Labeau, Pierre-Etienne
Référence Applied stochastic models in business and industry, 20, 1, page (73-91)
Publication Publié, 2004-03
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Most maintenance policies assume that failed or used components are replaced with identical units. Actually, such a hypothesis neglects the possible obsolescence of the components. When a new, more reliable and less consuming technology becomes available, a decision has to be made as for the replacement strategy to be used: old-type components can all be immediately replaced, or new-type units can be introduced progressively, each time a corrective action is undertaken. Partly corrective, partly preventive policies can also be envisioned.This work tackles this issue in the case of a series system made of n identical and independent components with a constant failure rate. It provides, under given modelling assumptions, the fully analytical expression of the mean total cost induced by each possible strategy, as well as the optimal replacement policy, as a function of the problem parameters. This is performed by accounting for different costs for preventive or corrective replacements, with some economical dependence between replacements, different energy consumption rates for old-type and new-type components as well as a discount rate. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.