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Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA)

Introduction: FMEA

Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is a structured risk assessment method used to identify, evaluate, and prioritise potential failures in products, processes, or services. By analysing how failures may occur, their causes, and their effects, FMEA helps organisations prevent defects, improve reliability, and enhance customer satisfaction.
A related method, Failure Mode, Effects, and Criticality Analysis (FMECA), extends FMEA by adding a criticality assessment, which quantifies the severity and probability of failure to highlight the most critical risks.

Background

FMEA was first developed in the aerospace and defence industries in the 1940s to enhance reliability in mission-critical systems. It was later adopted in automotive through AIAG standards and is now widely used across industries such as healthcare, manufacturing, and electronics. FMECA emerged as an evolution of FMEA, particularly in aerospace and military contexts, where prioritising risks by criticality was essential for system safety and mission success.

Key Elements / Features

  • Types of FMEA:
    • Design FMEA (DFMEA): Analyses risks in product design.
    • Process FMEA (PFMEA): Analyses risks in manufacturing or service processes.
    • FMECA: Builds on FMEA by adding a formal criticality analysis.
  • Failure mode identification: Listing potential ways a product or process could fail.
  • Effects analysis: Evaluating the impact of each failure on system performance or end users.
  • Cause and detection analysis: Identifying root causes and assessing how well current controls detect issues.
  • Risk Priority Number (RPN): Severity × Occurrence × Detection, used in FMEA to rank risks.
  • Criticality analysis (FMECA): Weighs severity and likelihood to highlight failures with the greatest potential impact.
  • Corrective actions: Implementing improvements for high-priority or critical risks.
  • Follow-up: Reviewing and updating the analysis to reflect process or design changes.

Applications / Examples

  • Automotive: DFMEA to prevent design flaws in braking systems; PFMEA to control assembly quality.
  • Healthcare: Reducing risks in surgical procedures and medical device design.
  • Manufacturing: Identifying and correcting process gaps such as missing torque checks.
  • Aerospace and defence: Using FMECA to rank mission-critical system risks where failure could be catastrophic.

Relevance / Impact

Both FMEA and FMECA are proactive tools that support a culture of prevention rather than reaction. Key benefits include:

  • Risk reduction: Addressing potential failures before they occur.
  • Criticality focus (FMECA): Ensures that the most severe and likely risks receive priority attention.
  • Cost savings: Lowering warranty, recall, and repair costs.
  • Continuous improvement: Supporting Lean Six Sigma, ISO, and industry standards.
  • Customer trust: Delivering safer, higher-quality, and more reliable products and services.

See also

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