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Statistical Process Control: Ooppeerraattiioonnss Mmaannaaggeemmeenntt Operations Management

This document discusses statistical process control (SPC) and quality management. It covers basics of SPC including control charts, control chart patterns, and distinguishing between common and special causes of variation. Control charts for attributes like p-charts and c-charts are explained. The document also discusses applying SPC to services and gives examples of processes that should be monitored with control charts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

Statistical Process Control: Ooppeerraattiioonnss Mmaannaaggeemmeenntt Operations Management

This document discusses statistical process control (SPC) and quality management. It covers basics of SPC including control charts, control chart patterns, and distinguishing between common and special causes of variation. Control charts for attributes like p-charts and c-charts are explained. The document also discusses applying SPC to services and gives examples of processes that should be monitored with control charts.

Uploaded by

fabyunaaa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 66

Chapter 3

Statistical Process Control

OOppeerraatioonnssManagement
Operations
MMaannaaggeemmeennt
Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III
Lecture Outline

 Basics of Statistical Process


Control
 Control Charts
 Control Charts for Attributes
 Control Charts for Variables
 Control Chart Patterns
 SPC with Excel and OM Tools
 Process Capability
3-121
Basics of Statistical
Process Control
 Statistical Process Control
(SPC)
 monitoring production process
to detect and prevent poor UCL
quality
 Sample
subset of items
produced to use for LCL
inspection
 Control Charts
 process is within statistical
control limits

3-122
Basics of Statistical
Process Control (cont.)
 Random 
Non-Random
 inherent in a process  special causes

 depends on equipment  identifiable and


and machinery, correctable
engineering, operator,  include equipment out of
and system of adjustment, defective
measurement materials, changes in
 natural occurrences parts or materials, broken
machinery or equipment,
operator fatigue or poor
work methods, or errors
due to lack of training
3-123
SPC in Quality Management


SPC  tool for identifying problems in
order to make improvements
 contributes to the TQM goal of
continuous improvements

3-124
Quality Measures:
Attributes and Variables


Attribute
 a product characteristic that can be

evaluated with a discrete


 response
good – bad; yes - no
 Variable
measure
 a product characteristic that is continuous

and can be measured


 weight - length

3-125
SPC Applied to
Services

 Nature of defect is different in


services
 Service defect is a failure to meet
customer requirements
 Monitor time and customer
satisfaction

3-126
SPC Applied to
Services
(cont.)
 Hospitals
 timeliness and quickness of care, staff responses to
requests, accuracy of lab tests, cleanliness, courtesy,
accuracy of paperwork, speed of admittance and checkouts
 Grocery stores
 waiting time to check out, frequency of out-of-stock items,
quality of food items, cleanliness, customer complaints,
checkout register errors
 Airlines
 flight delays, lost luggage and luggage handling, waiting time
at ticket counters and check-in, agent and flight attendant
courtesy, accurate flight information, passenger cabin
cleanliness and maintenance

3-127
SPC Applied to
Services
(cont.)
 Fast-food restaurants
 waiting time for service, customer complaints,
cleanliness, food quality, order accuracy, employee
courtesy
 Catalogue-order companies
 order accuracy, operator knowledge and courtesy,
packaging, delivery time, phone order waiting
time
 Insurance companies
 billing accuracy, timeliness of claims processing,
agent availability and response time

3-128
Where to Use Control Charts

 Process has a tendency to go out of control


 Process is particularly harmful and
costly if it goes out of control
 Examples
 at the beginning of a process because it is a waste of
time and money to begin production process with
bad supplies
 before a costly or irreversible point, after
which product is difficult to rework or correct
 before and after assembly or painting operations that
might cover defects
 before the outgoing final product or service
is delivered

3-129
Control Charts

 A graph that establishes Types of


control limits
of a process charts
 Attributes

 Control limits  p-chart


 upper and lower bands  c-chart
of a control chart
 Variables
 mean (x bar – chart)
 range (R-chart)

3-130
Process Control Chart
Out of control
Upper

control
limit

Proces
s
average
Lower

control
limit

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Sample number

3-131
Normal Distribution

95%
99.74%
-3 -2 -1 =0 1 2 3

3-132
A Process Is in
Control If …

1. … no sample points outside limits


2. … most points near process average
3. … about equal number of points
above and below centerline
4. … points appear randomly distributed

3-133
Control Charts
for Attributes

 p-chart
 uses portion defective in a sample
 c-chart
 uses number of defective items in
a sample

3-134
p-Chart

UCL = p + zp
LCL = p - zp
z = number of standard deviations from
process average
p = sample proportion defective; an estimate
of process average
p = standard deviation of sample proportion

p(1 - p)
p =
n
3-135
Construction of p-Chart

NUMBER OF PROPORTION
SAMPLE DEFECTIVE
1 DEFECTIVES .06
2 6 .00
3 0 .04
: 4 :
: : :
: .18
20
18
200
20 samples of 100 pairs of jeans

3-136
Construction of p-Chart
(cont.)
total defectives
p= = 200 / 20(100) = 0.10
total sample observations
p(1 - p) 0.10(1 - 0.10)
UCL = p + z = 0.10 + 3
n 100
UCL = 0.190
p(1 - p) 0.10(1 - 0.10)
LCL = p - z = 0.10 - 3
n 100
LCL = 0.010

3-137
0.20

0.18 UCL = 0.190

0.16

0.14

Proportion defective
of p-
Construction 0.12
p = 0.10
0.10
Chart 0.08

(cont.) 0.06

0.04

0.02 LCL = 0.010

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18
20
Sample number

3-138
c-Chart

UCL = c + zc
c = c
LCL = c - zc

where

c = number of defects per sample

3-139
c-Chart (cont.)
Number of defects in 15 sample
rooms
NUMBER
OF
SAMPLE
DEFECTS 190
c= = 12.67
1 12 15
2 8
3 16 UCL = c + zc
= 12.67 + 3 12.67
: : = 23.35
: :
LCL = c - zc
15 15
= 12.67 - 3 12.67
190
= 1.99

3-140
24
UCL = 23.35
21

18

Number of defects
c = 12.67

c-Chart
15

12

(cont.) 6

3 LCL = 1.99

2 4 6 8 12 14 16
10
Sample number

3-141
Control Charts
for Variables
 Range chart ( R-Chart )
 uses amount of dispersion in a
sample
 Mean chart ( x -Chart )
 uses process average of a
sample

3-142
x-bar Chart:
Standard Deviation Known

UCL = x= + zx LCL = =x -


zx
1 + 2 + ... n
x= n
=
wher
e =
x = average of sample
means
3-143
x-bar Chart Example:
Standard Deviation Known (cont.)

3-144
x-bar Chart Example:
Standard Deviation Known (cont.)

3-145
x-bar Chart Example:
Standard Deviation Unknown

UCL = x=+ LCL = x= -


A 2R A 2R

where

x = average of sample
means

3-146
Control
Limits

3-147
x-bar Chart Example:
Standard Deviation Unknown
OBSERVATIONS (SLIP- RING DIAMETER, CM)
SAMPLE k 1 2 3 4 5 x R
1 5.02 5.01 4.94 4.99 4.96 4.98 0.08
2 5.01 5.03 5.07 4.95 4.96 5.00 0.12
3 4.99 5.00 4.93 4.92 4.99 4.97 0.08
4 5.03 4.91 5.01 4.98 4.89 4.96 0.14
5 4.95 4.92 5.03 5.05 5.01 4.99 0.13
6 4.97 5.06 5.06 4.96 5.03 5.01 0.10
7 5.05 5.01 5.10 4.96 4.99 5.02 0.14
8 5.09 5.10 5.00 4.99 5.08 5.05 0.11
9 5.14 5.10 4.99 5.08 5.09 5.08 0.15
10 5.01 4.98 5.08 5.07 4.99 5.03 0.10
Example 15.4 50.09 1.15
3-148
x-bar Chart Example:
Standard Deviation Unknown (cont.)
∑R 1.15
R= k = 10 = 0.115

x 50.09
= = 5.01
x= cm
= k 10

UCL = x +=A2R = 5.01 + (0.58)(0.115) =


5.08

LCL = x =- A2RRetrieve
= 5.01 -Factor
(0.58)(0.115)
Value A=2 4.94
3-149
5.10 –

5.08 –
UCL = 5.08

5.06 –

5.04 –

Mean 5.02 – x== 5.01

5.00 –

x- bar 4.98 –
Chart
Example 4.96 – LCL = 4.94

(cont.) 4.94 –

4.92 – | | | | |
| | | | | 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Sample number

3-150
R- Chart

UCL = D4R LCL = D3R

R
R=
k
where
R = range of each sample
k = number of samples

3-151
R-Chart Example
OBSERVATIONS (SLIP-RING DIAMETER, CM)
SAMPLE k 1 2 3 4 5 x
R
1 5.02 5.01 4.94 4.99 4.96 4.98 0.08
2 5.01 5.03 5.07 4.95 4.96 5.00 0.12
3 4.99 5.00 4.93 4.92 4.99 4.97 0.08
4 5.03 4.91 5.01 4.98 4.89 4.96 0.14
5 4.95 4.92 5.03 5.05 5.01 4.99 0.13
6 4.97 5.06 5.06 4.96 5.03 5.01 0.10
7 5.05 5.01 5.10 4.96 4.99 5.02 0.14
8 5.09 5.10 5.00 4.99 5.08 5.05 0.11
9 5.14 5.10 4.99 5.08 5.09 5.08 0.15
10 5.01 4.98 5.08 5.07 4.99 5.03 0.10
Example 15.3 50.09 1.15
3-152
R-Chart Example (cont.)

UCL = D4R = 2.11(0.115) = 0.243

LCL = D3R = 0(0.115) = 0

Retrieve Factor Values D3 and D4

Example 15.3
3-153
R-Chart Example (cont.)
0.28 –

0.24 – UCL = 0.243


0.20 –
Range

0.16 – R = 0.115

0.12 –

0.08 –
LCL = 0
0.04 – | | | | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
0– Sample number

3-154
Using x- bar and R-Charts
Together

 Process average and process variability must be in


control
 It is possible for samples to have very narrow
ranges, but their averages might be beyond control
limits
 It is possible for sample averages to be in
control, but ranges might be very large
 It is possible for an R-chart to exhibit a distinct
downward trend, suggesting some nonrandom cause is
reducing variation

3-155
Control Chart Patterns

 Run
 sequence of sample values that display same
characteristic
 Pattern test
determines if observations within limits of a control chart display
a nonrandom pattern
 To identify a pattern:
 8 consecutive points on one side of the center line
 8 consecutive points up or down
 14 points alternating up or down
 2 out of 3 consecutive points in zone A (on one side of center
line)
 4 out of 5 consecutive points in zone A or B (on one side
of center line)

3-156
Control Chart Patterns (cont.)
UCL

UCL

LCL

Sample observations
LCL
consistently below the
center line
Sample observations
consistently above the
center line
3-157
Control Chart Patterns (cont.)
UCL

UCL

LCL

Sample observations
consistently increasing LCL

Sample observations
consistently decreasing

3-158
Zones for Pattern Tests
UCL =
3 sigma = x + A2R
Zone A
= 2
2 sigma = x + (A2R)
3
Zone B
= 1
1 sigma = x + (A2R)
3
Zone C
Process =
x
average Zone C
= 1
1 sigma = x - (A2R)
3
Zone B
= 2
2 sigma = - (A R)
x
Zone A
2
=
LCL 3 sigma = x - A2R
| | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 | | |
Sample number
| | 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13
3-159
Performing a Pattern Test
SAMPLE x ABOVE/BELOW UP/DOWN ZONE

1 4.98 B — B
2 5.00 U
3 4.95 B C
4 4.96 D
5 4.99 B U A
C
6 5.01 — D
7 5.02 B
A U A
C
8 5.05
9 5.08 A U C
10 5.03
A U B

A U A
3-160

D B
Sample Size Determination

 Attribute charts require larger sample


sizes  50 to 100 parts in a sample
 Variable charts require smaller samples
 2 to 10 parts in a sample

3-161
SPC with Excel

3-162
SPC with Excel and OM Tools

3-163
Process Capability


Tolerances
 design specifications reflecting product

requirements
 Process
capability
 range of natural variability in a process—

what we measure with control charts

3-164
Process Capability (cont.)
Design
Specifications

(a)Natural variation
exceeds design
specifications; process
is not capable of
meeting specifications
all the time.
P
r
o
c
e
s
s
Design
Specifications

(b)Design specifications
and natural variation the
same; process is capable
of meeting specifications
most of the time. 3-165
Process Capability (cont.)
Design
Specifications

(c)Design
specifications greater
than natural variation;
process is capable of
always conforming to
specifications.
P
r
o
c
e
s
s
Design
Specifications

(d)Specifications
greater than natural
variation, but process off 3-166
center; capable but
Process Capability Measures

Process Capability Ratio

tolerance range
Cp
= process range

upper specification limit -


lower specification limit
=
6

3-167
Computing Cp
Net weight specification = 9.0 oz  0.5 oz
Process mean = 8.80 oz
Process standard deviation = 0.12 oz

upper specification limit -


lower specification limit
Cp
= 6

= 9.5 - 8.5 = 1.39


6(0.12)

3-168
Process Capability Measures

Process Capability Index

= x - lower specification limit


3
,
Cpk = minimum
=
upper specification limit - x
3

3-169
Computing Cpk
Net weight specification = 9.0 oz  0.5 oz
Process mean = 8.80 oz
Process standard deviation = 0.12 oz

=
x - lower specification limit
,
= minimum 3 =
Cpk upper specification limit - x
3

8.80 - 8.50 9.50 - 8.80


= minimum 3(0.12) , 3(0.12) = 0.83

3-170
Process Capability
with Excel

3-171
Process Capability
with Excel and OM Tools

3-172
Chapter 3 Supplement

Acceptance Sampling

OOppeerraatioonnssManagement
Operations
MMaannaaggeemmeennt
Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III
Lecture Outline

 Single-Sample Attribute Plan


 Operating Characteristic Curve
 Developing a Sampling Plan with
Excel
 Average Outgoing Quality
 Double - and Multiple-Sampling Plans

Supplement 3-174
Acceptance Sampling

Accepting or rejecting a production lot


based
on the number of defects in a sample
philosophy
Not consistent with TQM or Zero Defects
 producer and customer agree on the number of
acceptable defects
 a means of identifying not preventing poor
quality
 percent of defective parts versus PPM
Sampling plan
 provides guidelines for accepting a lot
Supplement 3-175
Single–Sample
Attribute Plan
Single sampling plan
N = lot size
n = sample size (random)
c = acceptance number
d = number of defective items in sample
If d ≤ c, accept lot; else reject

Supplement 3-176
Producer’s and
Consumer’s Risk
 AQL or acceptable quality level
 proportion of defects consumer will accept in
a given lot
  or producer’s risk
 probability of rejecting a good lot
 LTPD or lot tolerance percent
defective
 limit on the number of defectives the
customer will accept
 β or consumer’s risk
 probability of accepting a bad lot
Supplement 3-177
Producer’s and
Consumer’s Risk
(cont.)Accept
Good Lot
Reject

Type I Error
No Error
Producer’ Risk
Bad Lot

Type II Error
No Error
Consumer’s Risk

Sampling Errors

Supplement 3-178
Operating Characteristic
(OC) Curve
 shows probability of accepting lots of
different quality levels with a specific
sampling plan
 assists management to discriminate
between good and bad lots
 exact shape and location of the
curve is
defined by the sample size (n) and
acceptance level (c) for the sampling
plan
Supplement 3-179
OC Curve (cont.)
1.00 –
 = 0.05

0.80 –

Probability of acceptance, Pa

0.60 – OC curve for n and c

0.40 –

0.20 –

 = 0.10
| | | | |
– | | | | |
0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.10 0.12 0.14 0.16 0.18
AQL LTPD
0.20
Proportion defective
Supplement 3-180
Developing a Sampling
Plan with OM Tools

ABC Company produces mugs


in lots of 10,000. Performance
measures for quality of mugs
sent to stores call for a
producer’s risk of 0.05 with an
AQL of 1% defective and a
consumer’s risk of 0.10 with a N = 10,000 n=?
LTPD of 5% defective. What α = 0.05 c=
size sample and what ?
acceptance number should
ABC use to achieve β = 0.10
performance measures AQL = 1%
called for in the sampling LTPD = 5%
plan?
Supplement 3-181
Average Outgoing
Quality (AOQ)

Expected number of defective


items that will pass on to
customer with a sampling plan
 Average outgoing quality limit
(AOQL)
 maximum point on the curve
 worst level of outgoing quality

Supplement 3-182
AOQ Curve

Supplement 3-183
Double-Sampling Plans

 Take small initial sample


 If # defective ≤ lower limit, accept
 If # defective > upper limit, reject
 If # defective between limits, take
second sample
 Accept or reject based on 2 samples
 Less costly than single-sampling plans

Supplement 3-184
Multiple-Sampling Plans

 Uses smaller sample sizes


 Take initial sample
 If # defective ≤ lower limit, accept
 If # defective > upper limit, reject
 If # defective between limits, resample
 Continue sampling until accept or reject
lot based on all sample data

Supplement 3-185

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