A combined synthetic and np scheme for detecting increases in fraction nonconforming

The applications of attribute control charts cover a wide variety of manufacturing processes in which quality characteristics cannot be measured on a continuous numerical scale or even a quantitative scale. The np control chart is an attribute chart used to monitor the fraction nonconforming p of a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khoo, Michael B. C., Haridy, Salah, Wu, Zhang, Yu, Fong-Jung
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/97449
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/13135
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
Description
Summary:The applications of attribute control charts cover a wide variety of manufacturing processes in which quality characteristics cannot be measured on a continuous numerical scale or even a quantitative scale. The np control chart is an attribute chart used to monitor the fraction nonconforming p of a process. This chart is effective for detecting large process shifts in p. The attribute synthetic chart is also proposed to detect p shifts. It utilizes the information about the time interval or the Conforming Run Length (CRL) between two nonconforming samples. During the implementation of a synthetic chart, a sample is classified as nonconforming if the number d of nonconforming units falls beyond a warning limit. Unlike the np chart, the synthetic chart is more powerful to detect small and moderate p shifts. This article proposes a new scheme, the Syn-np chart, which comprises a synthetic chart and an np chart. Since the Syn-np chart has both the strength of the synthetic chart for quickly detecting small p shifts and the advantage of the np chart of being sensitive to large p shifts, it has a better and more uniform overall performance. Specifically, it is more effective than the np chart and synthetic chart by 73% and 31%, respectively, in terms of Weighted Average of Average Time to Signal (WAATS) over a wide range of p shifts under different conditions.