Description

Book Synopsis

Contains practical insights into automotive system safety with a focus on corporate safety organization and safety management

Functional Safety has become important and mandated in the automotive industry by inclusion of ISO 26262 in OEM requirements to suppliers. This unique and practical guide is geared toward helping small and large automotive companies, and the managers and engineers in those companies, improve automotive system safety. Based on the author's experience within the field, it is a useful tool for marketing, sales, and business development professionals to understand and converse knowledgeably with customers and prospects.

Automotive System Safety: Critical Considerations for Engineering and Effective Management teaches readers how to incorporate automotive system safety efficiently into an organization. Chapters cover: Safety Expectations for Consumers, OEMs, and Tier 1 Suppliers; System Safety vs. Functional Safety; Safety Audits and As

Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Foreword ix

Preface xi

Abbreviations xv

1 Safety Expectations for Consumers, OEMs, and Tier 1 Suppliers 1

Trustworthiness 1

Consumer Expectations 3

OEM Expectations 4

Supplier Expectations 6

2 Safety Organizations 11

The Need for a System Safety Organization 11

Functions of a Safety Organization 12

Critical Criteria for Organizational Success 13

Talent to Perform the Safety Tasks 14

Integral to Product Engineering 14

Career Path for Safety Personnel 15

Safety Process Owned by Program Management 15

Executive Review 16

Pillars of a Safety Process 18

Alternatives, Advantages, and Disadvantages 26

3 System Safety vs. Functional Safety in Automotive Applications 41

Safety Terminology 41

Functional Safety Standards vs. System Safety 42

Background 42

Application of Functional Safety Standards 42

Safety of the Intended Function (e.g. SOTIF, ISO PAS 21448) 44

Triggering Event Analyses 45

Background 45

Systematic Analyses 46

Validation 49

Validation Targets 49

Requirements Verification 50

Release for Production 53

Integration of SOTIF and Functional Safety and Other Considerations 55

Background 55

Analyses and Verification 57

Validation 58

4 Safety Audits and Assessments 61

Background 61

Audits 61

Audit Format 63

Use of External Auditors 65

Assessments 67

System Safety Assessment 67

Work Product Assessment 67

5 Safety Culture 71

Background 71

Characteristics of a Safety Culture 71

Central Safety Organization 72

Safety Managers 74

Joint Development 75

Enterprise Leadership 75

Liability 75

Customers 77

Safety Culture vs. Organization 77

6 Safety Lifecycle 79

Background 79

Concept Phase Safety 80

Preliminary Hazard Analysis 80

Preliminary Architecture 81

Requirements 83

Design Phase Safety 84

Design-Level Safety Requirements 84

Verification 86

Manufacturing

Phase Safety 86

Safety in Use 87

Safety in Maintenance 88

Safety in Disposal 90

7 Determining Risk in Automotive Applications 91

Analyze What the Actuator Can Do 91

Analyze Communication Sent and Received 93

Determine Potential for Harm in Different Situations and Quantify 94

Exposure 95

Priority 96

Consider Fire, Smoke, and Toxicity 97

8 Risk Reduction for Automotive Applications 99

History 99

Analysis of Architecture 99

System Interfaces 100

Internal Interfaces 101

Requirements Elicitation and Management 102

Three Sources of Requirements 102

Cascading Requirements 104

Conflicts with Cybersecurity 105

Determination of Timing Risks in an Automotive Application 106

Milestones 106

Samples 107

Program Management 108

Design and Verification 109

Sample Evaluation 109

Verification 111

9 Other Discussion and Disclaimer 113

Background 113

Three Causes of Automotive Safety Recalls – Never “Random” Failures 114

Failure Rates 114

Recalls Due to Random Hardware Failures 115

Causes of Recalls 116

Completeness of Requirements 117

Timing Risk 118

“But It’s Not in the ‘Standard’” 118

Competing Priorities 119

Audits and Assessments 120

Disclaimer and Motivation for Continuous Improvement 121

Policy Statement 122

Governance 122

Metrics 123

Process Documentation 124

Tiered Metric Reporting 125

Use of Metrics 126

10 Summary and Conclusions 131

Background 131

System Safety is More than Functional Safety 131

Safety Requirements 132

Safety Process 133

Five Criteria for a Successful Safety Organization are Key 134

Auditing and the Use of Metrics 135

Auditing 135

Metrics 135

Future Considerations for SOTIF 137

Machine Learning 138

Appendix A IEC 51508 Compared to Typical Automotive Practices 139

Appendix B ISO 26262 – Notes on Automotive Implementation 167

References 215

Index 217

Automotive System Safety

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    A Hardback by Joseph D. Miller

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Automotive System Safety by Joseph D. Miller

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 13/02/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119579625, 978-1119579625
      ISBN10: 1119579627

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Contains practical insights into automotive system safety with a focus on corporate safety organization and safety management

      Functional Safety has become important and mandated in the automotive industry by inclusion of ISO 26262 in OEM requirements to suppliers. This unique and practical guide is geared toward helping small and large automotive companies, and the managers and engineers in those companies, improve automotive system safety. Based on the author's experience within the field, it is a useful tool for marketing, sales, and business development professionals to understand and converse knowledgeably with customers and prospects.

      Automotive System Safety: Critical Considerations for Engineering and Effective Management teaches readers how to incorporate automotive system safety efficiently into an organization. Chapters cover: Safety Expectations for Consumers, OEMs, and Tier 1 Suppliers; System Safety vs. Functional Safety; Safety Audits and As

      Table of Contents

      Series Editor’s Foreword ix

      Preface xi

      Abbreviations xv

      1 Safety Expectations for Consumers, OEMs, and Tier 1 Suppliers 1

      Trustworthiness 1

      Consumer Expectations 3

      OEM Expectations 4

      Supplier Expectations 6

      2 Safety Organizations 11

      The Need for a System Safety Organization 11

      Functions of a Safety Organization 12

      Critical Criteria for Organizational Success 13

      Talent to Perform the Safety Tasks 14

      Integral to Product Engineering 14

      Career Path for Safety Personnel 15

      Safety Process Owned by Program Management 15

      Executive Review 16

      Pillars of a Safety Process 18

      Alternatives, Advantages, and Disadvantages 26

      3 System Safety vs. Functional Safety in Automotive Applications 41

      Safety Terminology 41

      Functional Safety Standards vs. System Safety 42

      Background 42

      Application of Functional Safety Standards 42

      Safety of the Intended Function (e.g. SOTIF, ISO PAS 21448) 44

      Triggering Event Analyses 45

      Background 45

      Systematic Analyses 46

      Validation 49

      Validation Targets 49

      Requirements Verification 50

      Release for Production 53

      Integration of SOTIF and Functional Safety and Other Considerations 55

      Background 55

      Analyses and Verification 57

      Validation 58

      4 Safety Audits and Assessments 61

      Background 61

      Audits 61

      Audit Format 63

      Use of External Auditors 65

      Assessments 67

      System Safety Assessment 67

      Work Product Assessment 67

      5 Safety Culture 71

      Background 71

      Characteristics of a Safety Culture 71

      Central Safety Organization 72

      Safety Managers 74

      Joint Development 75

      Enterprise Leadership 75

      Liability 75

      Customers 77

      Safety Culture vs. Organization 77

      6 Safety Lifecycle 79

      Background 79

      Concept Phase Safety 80

      Preliminary Hazard Analysis 80

      Preliminary Architecture 81

      Requirements 83

      Design Phase Safety 84

      Design-Level Safety Requirements 84

      Verification 86

      Manufacturing

      Phase Safety 86

      Safety in Use 87

      Safety in Maintenance 88

      Safety in Disposal 90

      7 Determining Risk in Automotive Applications 91

      Analyze What the Actuator Can Do 91

      Analyze Communication Sent and Received 93

      Determine Potential for Harm in Different Situations and Quantify 94

      Exposure 95

      Priority 96

      Consider Fire, Smoke, and Toxicity 97

      8 Risk Reduction for Automotive Applications 99

      History 99

      Analysis of Architecture 99

      System Interfaces 100

      Internal Interfaces 101

      Requirements Elicitation and Management 102

      Three Sources of Requirements 102

      Cascading Requirements 104

      Conflicts with Cybersecurity 105

      Determination of Timing Risks in an Automotive Application 106

      Milestones 106

      Samples 107

      Program Management 108

      Design and Verification 109

      Sample Evaluation 109

      Verification 111

      9 Other Discussion and Disclaimer 113

      Background 113

      Three Causes of Automotive Safety Recalls – Never “Random” Failures 114

      Failure Rates 114

      Recalls Due to Random Hardware Failures 115

      Causes of Recalls 116

      Completeness of Requirements 117

      Timing Risk 118

      “But It’s Not in the ‘Standard’” 118

      Competing Priorities 119

      Audits and Assessments 120

      Disclaimer and Motivation for Continuous Improvement 121

      Policy Statement 122

      Governance 122

      Metrics 123

      Process Documentation 124

      Tiered Metric Reporting 125

      Use of Metrics 126

      10 Summary and Conclusions 131

      Background 131

      System Safety is More than Functional Safety 131

      Safety Requirements 132

      Safety Process 133

      Five Criteria for a Successful Safety Organization are Key 134

      Auditing and the Use of Metrics 135

      Auditing 135

      Metrics 135

      Future Considerations for SOTIF 137

      Machine Learning 138

      Appendix A IEC 51508 Compared to Typical Automotive Practices 139

      Appendix B ISO 26262 – Notes on Automotive Implementation 167

      References 215

      Index 217

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