OPSM 301 Operations Management Class 17: Quality: Statistical process control Koç University Zeynep Aksin
Announcement Group Case Assignment 2 See Web page to download a copy Due Thursday in class or Friday in my or Buse’s office
Statistical Quality Control Objectives 1.Reduce normal variation (process capability) –If normal variation is as small as desired, Process is capable –We use capability index to check for this 2.Detect and eliminate assignable variation (statistical process control) –If there is no assignable variation, Process is in control –We use Process Control charts to maintain this
Natural Variations Also called common causes Affect virtually all production processes Expected amount of variation, inherent due to: - the nature of the system - the way the system is managed - the way the process is organised and operated can only be removed by - making modifications to the process - changing the process Output measures follow a probability distribution For any distribution there is a measure of central tendency and dispersion
Assignable Variations Also called special causes of variation Exceptions to the system Generally this is some change in the process Variations that can be traced to a specific reason considered abnormalities often specific to a certain operator certain machine certain batch of material, etc. The objective is to discover when assignable causes are present Eliminate the bad causes Incorporate the good causes
1. Process Capability Design requirements: Diameter: 1.25 inch ±0.005 inch Specification Limits Lower specification Limit:LSL= =1.245 Upper Specification Limit:USL= =1.255 Example:Producing bearings for a rotating shaft
Relating Specs to Process Limits Process performance (Diameter of the products produced=D): Average 1.25 inch Std. Dev: inch Frequency Diameter 1.25 Question:What is the probability That a bearing does not meet specifications? (i.e. diameter is outside (1.245,1.255) ) P(defect)= =0.012 or 1.2% This is not good enough!!
Process capability What can we do to improve capability of our process? What should be to have Six-Sigma quality? We want to have: ( )/ = 6 = inch We need to reduce variability of the process. We cannot change specifications easily, since they are given by customers or design requirements. If P(defect)> then the process is not capable of producing according to specifications. To have this quality level (3 sigma quality), we need to have: Lower Spec: mean-3 Upper Spec:mean+3 If we want to have P(defect) 0, we aim for 6 sigma quality, then, we need: Lower Spec: mean-6 Upper Spec:mean+6
Six Sigma Quality
Process Capability Index C pk Shows how well the parts being produced fit into the range specified by the design specifications Want C pk larger than one For our example: C pk tells how many standard deviations can fit between the mean and the specification limits. Ideally we want to fit more, so that probability of defect is smaller
Process Capability Index C p Process Interval = 6 Specification interval = US –LS C p = (US-LS) / 6 Process Interval = 60 Specification Interval = US – LS = 60 C p = (US-LS) / 6 = 60 / 60 = 1 Process Interval Specification Interval 99.73% USUSLSLS = 10
Process Capability Index C p Process Interval = 6 = 30 Specification Interval = US – LS =60 C p = (US-LS) / 6 =2 Specification Interval 6 Process Interval 3 Process Interval USLS = 5 99.73% %
Process Mean Shifted US LS = 10 130 C pk = min{ (US - )/3 , ( - LS)/3 } C pk = min(2,0)=0 Specification 3 Process 70
2. Statistical Process Control: Control Charts Can be used to monitor ongoing production process quality LCL UCL
Setting Chart Limits For x-Charts when we know Upper control limit (UCL) = x + z x Lower control limit (LCL) = x - z x wherex=mean of the sample means or a target value set for the process z=number of normal standard deviations (=3) x =standard deviation of the sample means = / n =population standard deviation n=sample size
Setting Control Limits Hour 1 sample itemWeight of NumberOat Flakes Mean16.1 =1 HourMeanHourMean n = 9 For 99.73% control limits, z = 3 Sample size
Setting Control Limits Hour 1 SampleWeight of NumberOat Flakes Mean16.1 =1 HourMeanHourMean n = 9 For 99.73% control limits, z = 3 UCL x = x + z x = (1/3) = 17 LCL x = x - z x = (1/3) = 15
17 = UCL 15 = LCL 16 = Mean Setting Control Limits Control Chart for sample of 9 boxes Sample number |||||||||||| Variation due to assignable causes Variation due to natural causes Out of control
R – Chart Type of variables control chart Shows sample ranges over time Difference between smallest and largest values in sample Monitors process variability Independent from process mean
Setting Chart Limits For R-Charts Lower control limit (LCL R ) = D 3 R Upper control limit (UCL R ) = D 4 R where R=average range of the samples D 3 and D 4 =control chart factors
Setting Control Limits UCL R = D 4 R = (2.115)(5.3) = 11.2 pounds LCL R = D 3 R = (0)(5.3) = 0 pounds Average range R = 5.3 pounds Sample size n = 5 D 4 = 2.115, D 3 = 0 UCL = 11.2 Mean = 5.3 LCL = 0
Mean and Range Charts (a) These sampling distributions result in the charts below (Sampling mean is shifting upward but range is consistent) R-chart (R-chart does not detect change in mean) UCLLCL x-chart (x-chart detects shift in central tendency) UCLLCL
Mean and Range Charts R-chart (R-chart detects increase in dispersion) UCLLCL (b) These sampling distributions result in the charts below (Sampling mean is constant but dispersion is increasing) x-chart (x-chart does not detect the increase in dispersion) UCLLCL
Process Control and Improvement LCL UCL Out of ControlIn ControlImproved
Six Sigma Quality
Six Sigma a vision; a philosophy; a symbol; a metric; a goal; a methodology All of the Above
Six Sigma : Organizational Structure Champion –Executive Sponsor Master Black Belts –Process Improvement Specialist –Promotes Org / Culture Change Black Belts –Full Time –Detect and Eliminate Defects –Project Leader Green Belts –Part-time involvement
Six Sigma Quality: DMAIC Cycle (Continued) 5. Control (C) Customers and their priorities Process and its performance Causes of defects Remove causes of defects Maintain quality 1. Define (D) 2. Measure (M) 3. Analyze (A) 4. Improve (I)
Process Control and Capability: Review Every process displays variability: normal or abnormal Do not tamper with process “in control” with normal variability Correct “out of control” process with abnormal variability Control charts monitor process to identify abnormal variability Control charts may cause false alarms (or missed signals) by mistaking normal (abnormal) for abnormal (normal) variability Local control yields early detection and correction of abnormal Process “in control” indicates only its internal stability Process capability is its ability to meet external customer needs Improving process capability involves changing the mean and reducing normal variability, requiring a long term investment Robust, simple, standard, and mistake - proof design improves process capability Joint, early involvement in design improves quality, speed, cost