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Introduction To Statistical Process Control

This document provides an introduction to statistical process control (SPC). It defines key SPC concepts like common and special cause variability, process characterization states, and process capability ratios. The document explains that SPC focuses on monitoring and reducing variability in a process to improve quality, rather than just inspecting final products. Controlling special causes of variability is identified as the first priority before adjusting a process mean. SPC tools can be applied without deep statistical knowledge to improve complex industrial operations.

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Rahul Dalvi
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views

Introduction To Statistical Process Control

This document provides an introduction to statistical process control (SPC). It defines key SPC concepts like common and special cause variability, process characterization states, and process capability ratios. The document explains that SPC focuses on monitoring and reducing variability in a process to improve quality, rather than just inspecting final products. Controlling special causes of variability is identified as the first priority before adjusting a process mean. SPC tools can be applied without deep statistical knowledge to improve complex industrial operations.

Uploaded by

Rahul Dalvi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Statistical Process Control

Engineering Experimental Design Valerie L. Young

Outline
Description of and justification for Statistical Process Control Fundamental definitions and principles
Variability, specifications, capability Process characterization Why focus on variability first?

Constructing control charts Calculating process capability ratios

What is Statistical Process Control?


Strategy for process improvement that uses statistics-based techniques to evaluate the process and identify opportunities for improvement Strategy that focuses on quantifying, classifying, and reducing variability in the process Based on the philosophy that making the right product in the first place is better than trying to rework the wrong product

Quality Control vs. Process Control


Traditional quality control focuses on the product
Monitor product quality Rework or scrap off-spec product

Statistical process control focuses on the process


Monitor process behavior (including product quality) Adjust the process to eliminate off-spec production

Quality Control vs. Process Control


Traditional quality control focuses on the values
A value outside specifications is a signal that the product must be reworked or scrapped

Statistical process control focuses on the variability


Variation outside usual limits in ANY process measurement is a signal that the process should be adjusted to prevent production of unacceptable product

The Inspection Exercise


Count the Fs in the paragraph. Results:

Why Not Just Inspect & Reject?


Reality of escaping defects
Even the most careful inspection misses sometimes Bad product means unhappy customers

Inspection costs money Rejection wastes resources Reworking/scrapping wastes time, money, and resources

Why Use Statistics?


Intuition and gut feelings work for . . .
Simple problems Inexpensive solutions Low risk in case of failure

Statistical evaluation works for . . .


Complex problems Expensive solutions High risk in case of failure

Is this theory, or is this relevant?


Major corporations all over the world have adopted a Statistical Process Control strategy called Six Sigma, and are applying it to ALL operations, including production, marketing, and customer service. Many of the tools of Statistical Process Control (control charts, capability indices) can be used without any theoretical understanding of statistics.

Two Types of Variability


Common cause (Random)
Always present, even when process operation is consistent Can be quantified with summary statistics that are consistent over time CANNOT be reduced by adjusting the existing process, only by changing it

Special cause (Assignable)

Two Types of Variability


Common cause (Random) Special cause (Assignable)
Response to some inconsistency in process operation (purposefully adjusting that factor would give a predictable response) Causes summary statistics that are not consistent over time CAN be reduced by adjusting the existing process

Two Types of Variability

How could you reduce the Common cause (Random) variability Precision limits of instrumentation from each of these sources? Changes in ambient conditions

Special cause (Assignable)


Each operator has his own style Raw materials purchased from different suppliers have different properties Equipment wear causes drift over time

Two Types of Variability


Common cause (Random)
Precision limits of instrumentation
Buy better instruments

Changes in ambient conditions


Relocate process to climate-controlled building

Special cause (Assignable)


Each operator has his own style
Retrain operators

Raw materials purchased from different suppliers


Stick with one supplier; buy higher-grade supplies

Equipment wear
Increase maintenance frequency

Two Types of Variability


(This may hurt your brain at first)

Common cause (Random)


Random, so its effect on the product is predictable. If only common cause variability is present, then product quality will only vary within a specified range. (99+ % of product will be within 3 standard deviations of the mean value.)

Special cause (Assignable)


Non-random, so its effect on the product is UNpredictable until you identify the special cause. When special cause variability is present, but the cause has not been identified, product quality can change in any direction at any time.

Specifications
The range of acceptable values
May be given as Value Tolerance May be given as USL (upper specification limit) and LSL (lower specification limit)

Determined by the user, not by the process


Not calculated from process data

Product that does not meet specifications is termed off-spec

Process Capability Ratios


(Desired Performance) / (Actual Performance) Process performance is not necessarily centered between the spec limits The shaded areas represent the percentage of off-spec production

This curve is the distribution of data from the process

Voice of Customer
Voice of Process Ideally, you want to reduce the variability in the product until NO offspec product is made, and the capability ratio is 1 or more

Process Characterization
Ideal State
Process in control (all special causes of variability are eliminated, and only random variability remains) 100 % acceptable product (mean value variability of product is inside the specification limits)

Threshold State Brink of Chaos What happens if you do not distinguish State of Chaos between random and special cause

variability, and start adjusting the process to try to reverse a random fluctuation?

Process Characterization
Ideal State
Process in control
Only random variability remains Adjusting the process to try to correct a random fluctuation will destabilize the process

100 % acceptable product (mean value variability of product is inside the specification limits)

Threshold State Brink of Chaos State of Chaos

Process Characterization
Ideal State Threshold State
Process in control
all special cause variability eliminated only random variability remains

You should be able to use the expertise developed by controlling special cause variation to adjust the process to center the mean.

Some off-spec product


Mean value not centered between specification limits and/or Random process variability exceeds specification limits

Brink of Chaos State of Chaos

Adjusting the variables you already control will not fix this. Process modification is required.

Process Characterization
Ideal State Threshold State Brink of Chaos
Why is this a problem? The product is all OK.

Process out of control; product quality wanders due to


Uncontrolled special causes AND Inherent random variability

100 % acceptable product

State of Chaos

Process Characterization
Ideal State Threshold State Brink of Chaos
Could begin producing off-spec product at any time!

State of Chaos

Process Characterization
Ideal State Threshold State Brink of Chaos State of Chaos
Which problem should you address first: an offcenter mean, or special cause variability?

Process out of control; product quality wanders due to


Uncontrolled special causes AND Inherent random variability

Some off-spec product


Mean value not centered between specification limits and/or Process variability exceeds specification limits

Process Characterization
Ideal State Threshold State Brink of Chaos State of Chaos
Control special cause variability BEFORE you try to adjust the mean If you adjust the mean first, your work may be undone at any time by an uncontrolled special cause

Reality of Real Processes


Real processes, left unattended, will tend to a state of chaos Statistical process control monitors all processes, even those that have achieved the Ideal State, so that changes in process operation can be detected and corrected before they lead to off-spec product.

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