- Fault Tree Analysis Methods And Applications
- Application Of The Fault Tree Analysis For Assessment Of Power System Reliability
Fault tree analysis diagrams are commonly used to illustrate events that might lead to a failure so the failure can be prevented. Fault tree analysis diagrams are commonly used in Six Sigma processes, particularly in the Analyze phase of the Six Sigma business improvements process.
You begin by defining the top event (or failure). Then you can use event and gate shapes to illustrate, top-down, the process that might lead to the failure. Once you complete the diagram, you can use it to identify ways to eliminate causes of the failure and to devise corrective measures for preventing such failures.
Fault Tree Analysis Methods And Applications
Isograph's fault tree analysis software package FaultTree+ is the most comprehensive and easy to use fault tree analysis and event tree analysis software.
Application Of The Fault Tree Analysis For Assessment Of Power System Reliability
In Visio 2013 and newer versions: Start Visio, and click Business > Fault Tree Analysis Diagram > Create.
In Visio 2010: On the File menu, point to New, point to Business, and then click Fault Tree Analysis Diagram.
From Fault Tree Analysis Shapes, drag the Event shape to the top of the drawing page.
Drag a gate shape, such as the Exclusive OR gate, onto the drawing page directly below the first event shape.
Continue dragging other event and gate shapes onto the page, positioning them in top-down order to identify the potential causes of the failure represented by the top-level event shape.
Connect the shapes.
Drag a shape from a stencil onto the drawing page and position it near another shape.
While still holding down the mouse button, move the pointer over one of the blue triangles. The triangle turns dark blue.
Release the mouse button. The shape is placed on the drawing page, and a connector is added and glued to both shapes.
To add text to a shape, select it, and then type. When you are finished typing, click outside the text block.
Notes:
To edit text, double-click the shape, place the cursor where you want to change the text, and then type.
To hyperlink a shape to supporting or explanatory documents, select the shape, and then, on the Insert menu, click Hyperlinks.
To align multiple shapes vertically or horizontally, select the shapes you want to align, then, on the Home tab > Arrange group, click Align.
To distribute three or more shapes at regular intervals, select the shapes, and then, on the Home tab, click Position and pick a Distribute option.