Browse Publications Technical Papers 2011-01-2665
2011-10-18

A Hierarchical Reasoning Structure to Support Aerospace IVHM 2011-01-2665

One of the inherent functions of an integrated vehicle health management (IVHM) system is the reasoning capability that is built on the knowledge of how the individual line replaceable units (LRU) and subsystems are functionally interconnected across the vehicle. Once known and mathematically represented, the IVHM system has the ability to utilize knowledge obtained from the individual LRU/subsystems to determine the overall health state and functional capabilities of the vehicle. This process must go beyond the basic diagnoses of the observed health condition of the isolated subsystems and their remaining functionality. The IVHM reasoning process described herein employs a hierarchical structure that accounts for the failure modes at the LRU level and can also determine the functional impact of those LRUs in terms of remaining functional/operational availability at the subsystem and vehicle levels. This type of architecture is also consistent with an enhanced fault isolation process in cases when fault indications result in ambiguous outcomes, providing additional information to help isolate the root cause and reduce the ambiguity group size. In addition, the IVHM reasoner must also attempt to provide estimates of the severity of the underlying fault/failure modes and the remaining useful life of the integrated systems when prognostic information is available. Thus, providing real-time vehicle health and remaining functionality information will be useful to operations and maintenance personnel for decision support.
The following paper will present a framework and an associated aircraft system use case for performing hierarchical reasoning at the vehicle level based on individual subsystem health indicators. Within the presented architecture, a low level diagnostic reasoning engine seeks to classify fault/failure mode indications from raw sensor data or feature data processed by the subsystem specific modules within the monitoring system. Mid-level reasoning is employed to determine the overall functional capability of the constituent subsystems, specifically what are the implications of the detected failure modes on the functional availability of the subsystem. The vehicle-level reasoning will then “roll up” and quantify the true capability of the vehicle based on the health assessments from all underlying subsystems, taking into account their interconnections (failure mode propagation), criticality and redundancies.

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