LAPSE:2023.17548v1
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.17548v1
Comparing Different Levels of Technical Systems for a Modular Safety Approval—Why the State of the Art Does Not Dispense with System Tests Yet
March 6, 2023
Abstract
While systems in the automotive industry have become increasingly complex, the related processes require comprehensive testing to be carried out at lower levels of a system. Nevertheless, the final safety validation is still required to be carried out at the system level by automotive standards like ISO 26262. Using its guidelines for the development of automated vehicles and applying them for field operation tests has been proven to be economically unfeasible. The concept of a modular safety approval provides the opportunity to reduce the testing effort after updates and for a broader set of vehicle variants. In this paper, we present insufficiencies that occur on lower levels of hierarchy compared to the system level. Using a completely new approach, we show that errors arise due to faulty decomposition processes wherein, e.g., functions, test scenarios, risks, or requirements of a system are decomposed to the module level. Thus, we identify three main categories of errors: insufficiently functional architectures, performing the wrong tests, and performing the right tests wrongly. We provide more detailed errors and present examples from the research project UNICARagil. Finally, these findings are taken to define rules for the development and testing of modules to dispense with system tests.
While systems in the automotive industry have become increasingly complex, the related processes require comprehensive testing to be carried out at lower levels of a system. Nevertheless, the final safety validation is still required to be carried out at the system level by automotive standards like ISO 26262. Using its guidelines for the development of automated vehicles and applying them for field operation tests has been proven to be economically unfeasible. The concept of a modular safety approval provides the opportunity to reduce the testing effort after updates and for a broader set of vehicle variants. In this paper, we present insufficiencies that occur on lower levels of hierarchy compared to the system level. Using a completely new approach, we show that errors arise due to faulty decomposition processes wherein, e.g., functions, test scenarios, risks, or requirements of a system are decomposed to the module level. Thus, we identify three main categories of errors: insufficiently functional architectures, performing the wrong tests, and performing the right tests wrongly. We provide more detailed errors and present examples from the research project UNICARagil. Finally, these findings are taken to define rules for the development and testing of modules to dispense with system tests.
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Keywords
automated driving systems, decomposition, fault tree analysis, modular safety approval, modular testing, safety validation
Subject
Suggested Citation
Klamann B, Winner H. Comparing Different Levels of Technical Systems for a Modular Safety Approval—Why the State of the Art Does Not Dispense with System Tests Yet. (2023). LAPSE:2023.17548v1
Author Affiliations
Klamann B: Institute of Automotive Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Darmstadt, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany [ORCID]
Winner H: Institute of Automotive Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Darmstadt, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany [ORCID]
Winner H: Institute of Automotive Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Darmstadt, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany [ORCID]
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
14
Issue
22
First Page
7516
Year
2021
Publication Date
2021-11-11
ISSN
1996-1073
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Original Submission
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PII: en14227516, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2023.17548v1
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https://doi.org/10.3390/en14227516
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Mar 6, 2023
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