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Risk Analysis of Autonomous Underwater Vehicle Operation in a Polar Environment Based on Fuzzy Fault Tree Analysisopen access

Authors
Noh, HyonjeongKang, KwanguPark, Jin-Yeong
Issue Date
10월-2023
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Keywords
fuzzy fault tree analysis; inherent system failures; polar environment-induced failures
Citation
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, v.11, no.10, pp 1 - 22
Pages
22
Journal Title
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Volume
11
Number
10
Start Page
1
End Page
22
URI
https://www.kriso.re.kr/sciwatch/handle/2021.sw.kriso/9753
DOI
10.3390/jmse11101976
ISSN
2077-1312
2077-1312
Abstract
Autonomous underwater vehicles have long been used in marine explorations, and their application in recent polar expeditions is particularly noteworthy. However, the complexity and extreme conditions of the polar environment pose risks to the stable operation of autonomous underwater vehicles. This study adopted the methodology of fuzzy fault tree analysis to deeply analyze the operational risks of autonomous underwater vehicles in polar environments. While traditional fault tree analysis maps the causal relationships and probabilities between basic and intermediate events, fuzzy fault tree analysis models the uncertainty of data and determines the failure probability by integrating expert opinions. This study revealed that polar environment-induced failures play a more substantial role in autonomous underwater vehicle loss in polar regions than inherent system failures. The study identified ‘recovery failure’ and ‘poor communication’ as the major risk factors facing autonomous underwater vehicles in polar environments, exhibiting the highest failure probabilities. Specifically, among various polar environmental factors, ‘large ice concentration’, ‘ice thickness’, and ‘roughness of ice underside’ under ‘bad’ conditions were found to have a significant impact on the autonomous underwater vehicle’s failure probability. The fuzzy fault tree analysis method in this study successfully filled the gap created by the absence of historical data by effectively incorporating expert opinions, enabling a quantitative presentation of the impact of polar environments, which has been previously difficult to convey in qualitative terms.
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