Analysis of stress-strength reliability with m-step strength levels under type I censoring and Gompertz distribution

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Because of modern technology, product reliability has increased, making it more challenging to evaluate products in real-world settings and raising the cost of gathering sufficient data about a product's lifetime. Instead of using stress to accelerate failures, the most practical way to solve this problem is to use accelerated life tests, in which test units are subjected to varying degrees of stress. This paper deals with the analysis of stress-strength reliability when the strength variable has changed m levels at predetermined times. It is common for the observed failure time data of items to be partially unavailable in numerous reliability and life-testing studies. In statistical analyses where data is censored, lowering the time and expense involved is vital. Maximum likelihood estimation when the stress and strength variables follow the Gompertz distribution was introduced under type I censoring data. The bootstrap confidence intervals were deduced for stress-strength reliability under m levels of strength variable and applying the Gompertz distribution to model time. A simulation study was introduced to find the maximum likelihood estimates, bootstrapping, and credible intervals for stress-strength reliability. Real data was presented to show the application of the model in real life.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)30728-30744
Number of pages17
JournalAIMS Mathematics
Volume9
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Akaike information criterion
  • Bayesian estimation
  • Bayesian information criterion
  • Gompertz distribution
  • Hannan-Quinn information criterion
  • Kolmogorov-Smirnov test
  • MCMC method
  • bootstrap interval
  • consistent AIC
  • credible interval
  • maximum likelihood estimation
  • stress-strength reliability
  • type I censoring

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