Natural Tolerance Limits: Ch. 7 Process Capability Analysis (PCA)
Natural Tolerance Limits: Ch. 7 Process Capability Analysis (PCA)
x̄ ± 3s = 37.6 ± 7.5
i.e. Approximately 99.73% of sugar content measurements will lie between 30.1
and 45.1%.
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◦◦ This compares the width of the specifications to the width of the interval
containing approximately 99.73% of the measurements.
◦◦ if Cp < 1.0, then the process is not potentially capable of meeting specifications.
◦◦ if Cp > 2.0, then the process is potentially capable of meeting specifications at
the 6σ level
◦◦ A potentially capable process might not be actually capable if it is not centered
on or near the target value.
◦◦ Example B.
Suppose the mean of a process is 15.7, and the process standard deviation is
4.5, when the process is in control. If USL= 38 and LSL= 3, then compute Cp
and interpret. Is the process capable?
38−3
Cp = 6(4.5) = 1.296. The process is potentially capable.
◦◦ The percentage of the specification interval used by the process is
µ ¶
1
P = 100%
Cp
e.g. P = 1/1.296 = .772 so 77.2% of the specification band is used up the process.
◦◦ Cp can be estimated from large samples, using σ b = R̄/d2 or S.
◦◦ Example A (cont’d). If sugar content is required to be between 28 and 45%, then
we estimate Cp as
bp = U SL − LSL = 1.15
C
6s
Potentially capable
◦ One-Sided Tolerances
U SL − µ
Cpu =
3σ
µ − LSL
Cpl =
3σ
U SL − µ
Cpu = = 1.65
3σ
The process is sufficiently far from the upper specification limit.
µ − LSL
Cpl = = .94
3σ
The process is too close to the lower specification limit. Not Capable.
◦ Measuring Actual Capability with One Index
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◦ Example A (cont’d). Estimate Cpk for the Frosted Flakes sugar content data and
interpret.
◦ An Alternative to Cpk
U SL − LSL
Cpm = p
6 σ 2 + (µ − T )2
where T is the target value.
e.g. A: USL = 45, LSL = 28, x̄ = 37.6, s = 2.47, T = 36.5
Cpm = 1.05 ≥ 1. Process is capable.
e.g. B: USL = 38, LSL = 3, µ = 15.7, σ = 4.5, T = 20.5
Cpm = .89. Process is not capable.
◦ Confidence Intervals and Tests on Cp and Cpk
bp and C
◦◦ C bpk are estimates of process capability
◦◦ Confidence intervals for the true values can be set up.
A 1 − α confidence interval for Cp is
s s
χ21−α/2,n−1 χ2α/2,n−1
Cbp bp
,C
n−1 n−1
◦◦ The 1 − α confidence interval for Cpk is given as equation 7-18 on page 369 of the
textbook.
◦◦ Exercise: Find a 95% confidence interval for Cpk for the sugar content
measurements.
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◦◦ Hypothesis Testing.
Does Cp take on a particular value Cp0 ?
Simplest approach: construct a 1 − α confidence interval for Cp .
If Cp0 is not in the interval, we conclude (at the α level, that Cp0 is not the true
value of Cp .
e.g. For the Frosted Flakes example, we can conclude (at level α = .05) that
Cp 6= .9. We cannot conclude (at the same level) that Cp 6= 1.0.
• 7.4 PCA Using Control Charts
◦ DOE is a system for analyzing the effects of controllable inputs or factors on quality
characteristics of interest
◦ It helps to identify which factors have an effect, and at what levels these inputs
should be set at for optimal performance
◦ DOE can help isolate and estimate sources of variability in a process.
◦ Popular model
2 2 2
σtotal = σFactor 1 + · · · + σFactor m
◦ By taking repeated measurements on the same part, one can assess gauge capability.
◦ Control Chart Method:
1. Take n measurements on each of m parts.
2. Construct an R-chart
3. Points plotting out of control represent operator difficulties and should be
removed.
4. Estimate σgauge using R̄/d2
2
5. Estimate σtotal by calculating S 2 for entire set of n × m measurements
2
6. Estimate σproduct by subtraction:
2
σ
bproduct = S 2 − (R̄/d2 )2
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Estimate:
R̄
p × 100%
d22 S 2 − (R̄)2
◦ Example. Data are from Exercise 7-18. Two measurements are taken using the
same gauge on each of 20 different parts. Assess the capability of the gauge.
part measurement
no. 1 2
[1,] 19 23
[2,] 22 28
[3,] 19 24
................
[19,] 25 23
[20,] 17 16
◦◦ R̄ = 2.8 and n = 2
◦◦ R-chart: UCL = 2.8(3.267) = 9.1; LCL = 0
◦◦ All ranges plot in control. No need to revise.
◦◦ d2 = 1.128 and S 2 = 15.4
◦◦ Capability Estimate:
R̄
p × 100%
2
d2 S − (R̄)2
2
2.8
=p × 100%
1.1282 (15.4) − 2.82
= 90.2%
This is unacceptably high. (Compare with Example 7-7 which contains data
from a different gauge having capability 29.2%)
◦ tolerance stack-up: when the final product fails to meet specifications, even though
individual parts meet specifications
◦ When a product is composed of many parts, the probability of failing to meet
specifications depends on the behaviour of the individual components:
◦◦ Final product: n components with quality characteristics x1 , x2 , . . . , xn ,
◦◦ Quality characteristic of final product:
y = a1 x1 + a2 x2 + · · · + an xn
a1 µ1 + · · · + an µn
and variance
a21 σ12 + · · · + a2n σn2
◦ Example. Gear Set - Gear, Clip and Washer. Each component is produced
independently of the others.
◦◦ The total width of these three parts must be kept between 29 and 31 mm.
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◦◦ Gear width: normally distributed with mean 27 and standard deviation .3
◦◦ Clip width: normally distributed with mean 2 and standard deviation .2
◦◦ Washer width: normally distributed with mean 1.1 and standard deviation .08
◦◦ ⇒ Total width W : normally distributed with mean 30.1 and standard deviation:
√
.09 + .04 + .0064 = .37
◦ What are the specifications on gear width, clip width and washer width so that the
proportion of nonconforming gear sets is no more than .0001?
◦◦ Center the process: By decreasing mean gear width to 26.9 mm, we obtain a
mean total width of 30 mm.
◦◦ With no further changes, the fraction nonconforming would become
P (Z > 2.70) + P (Z < −2.70) = .007
◦◦ We require
P (W > 31) + P (W < 29) = .0001
or
1
P (Z > ) = .00005
σ
◦◦ Normal Table ⇒
1
= 3.90
σ
or
σ = .256 ⇒ σ 2 = .0655
◦◦ The current value of σ 2 is .09 + .04 + .0064 =.1364 so we will require the
component variances to be decreased substantially.
◦◦ Reducing washer width variance will not have much effect. The largest effect
will come from reducing gear width variance.
◦◦ There are many solutions; one possibility is
.04 + .02 + .0055 = .0655
i.e. standard deviation of gear width = .2, clip width .14, washer width .074
◦◦ If we set up the specification limits for each part so that the process limits
match exactly, then we have
U SL = 26.9 + 3(.2) = 27.5
LSL = 26.3 (gear width)
U SL = 2 + 3(.14) = 2.42
LSL = 1.58 (clip width)
U SL = 1 + 3(.074) = 1.22
LSL = 0.78 (washer width)
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◦ General Principle: To set specification limits on components,
1. determine the variance allowable for the final product to meet specifications
with probability 1 − α:
µ ¶2
2 U SL − LSL
σ =
2Zα/2
2. determine component standard deviations σ12 , . . . , σn2 so that
a1 σ12 + · · · + an σn2 ≤ σ 2
µi ± 3σi
µ ± 6σ
x̄ ± Ks
◦ K depends on n and on α
◦ e.g. For a sample of size 10, take K = 4.433 in order to have 95% confidence that our
estimated natural tolerance limits will contain 99% of the measurements.
◦ Example. A sample of 12 measurements on a normally distributed quality
characteristic has a mean of 80 and a standard deviation of 7. Estimate 90%
natural tolerance limits for which you can have a confidence level of 95%.
n = 12 ⇒ K = 2.655
⇒ U N T L = 80 + 2.655(7) = 98.6
and
LN T L = 71.4
◦ What if the measurements are not normally distributed?
Try to determine the distribution of the measurements as well as possible. Use this
to determine these percentiles.
◦ A nonparametric method also exists - not practical