The goal behind Functional Safety is to anticipate the potential hazard scenarios (a.k.a. harm sequences) that a system may produce and address those scenarios in such a way as to mitigate or even eliminate them. A major challenge in determining hazard scenarios is trying to assess an adequate amount of scenarios, considering the large size of a hazard space. Typically assessing the entire hazard space is difficult to achieve, resulting in the possibility of overlooking some critical scenarios that can result in harm to either system operators, system by-standers, or both. In this paper we will explore a rule-based approach for concisely describing hazard scenarios, which could potentially enable us to examine the entire hazard space in a short amount of time. Our approach, called Hazard Space Analysis, combines three key activates: determining hazard scenarios, assigning a risk factor to those scenarios, and mapping those hazard scenarios directly to safety rules. We will detail the approach, show how the approach could be automated, and present a simple aviation related example that demonstrates the approach's potential in enabling stakeholders to explore a large hazard space.


    Zugriff

    Zugriff prüfen

    Verfügbarkeit in meiner Bibliothek prüfen

    Bestellung bei Subito €


    Exportieren, teilen und zitieren



    Titel :

    A Means of Assessing the Entire Functional Safety Hazard Space


    Weitere Titelangaben:

    Sae Technical Papers


    Beteiligte:

    Kongress:

    AeroTech Congress & Exhibition ; 2017



    Erscheinungsdatum :

    2017-09-19




    Medientyp :

    Aufsatz (Konferenz)


    Format :

    Print


    Sprache :

    Englisch




    A Means of Assessing the Entire Functional Safety Hazard Space

    Aceituna, Daniel | British Library Conference Proceedings | 2017


    Assessing the Fire Hazard

    Aarons, R. N. | British Library Online Contents | 1996


    Functional Hazard Analysis

    Ericson, Clifton A. II | Wiley | 2005



    Dredge Safety Hazard Analysis

    L. Schaffer / W. Patterson / C. Davis | NTIS | 1981