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FMEA Overview

Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is a systematic method for identifying potential failures in products or processes and assessing their impact.

What is FMEA?

FMEA helps engineering teams:

  • 🔍 Identify Failure Modes - Find potential ways systems can fail
  • ⚠️ Assess Risk - Calculate severity, occurrence, and detection ratings
  • 📊 Prioritize Actions - Focus on high-risk failure modes first
  • Mitigate Risks - Define and track corrective actions
  • 🔗 Link to Requirements - Trace failures back to requirements (coming soon)

FMEA Modes

NirmIQ offers Simple FMEA (quick start) and Advanced FMEA with the AIAG-VDA 7-Step Wizard for full industry compliance.

Simple FMEA vs Advanced FMEA

FeatureSimple FMEAAdvanced FMEA
Setup Time2 minutes10-15 minutes
StructureFlat listHierarchical tree
PriorityRPN onlyAction Priority (AIAG/VDA)
AnalyticsNoneHeatmap, Trending
Best ForQuick assessmentsRegulatory compliance
Recommended for Safety-Critical Industries

For automotive, aerospace, medical devices, and other regulated industries, use the AIAG-VDA 7-Step Wizard for full compliance with industry standards.

AIAG-VDA 7-Step Wizard

The 7-step wizard guides you through the complete FMEA process:

  1. Planning & Preparation - Define scope using the 5T's (InTent, Timing, Team, Task, Tool)
  2. Structure Analysis - Build system hierarchy (P-Diagram)
  3. Function Analysis - Define what each element should DO
  4. Failure Analysis - Identify failure modes, effects, and causes
  5. Risk Analysis - Rate Severity, Occurrence, Detection → Action Priority
  6. Optimization - Define and track corrective actions
  7. Documentation - Export compliant reports

Learn more about the AIAG-VDA 7-Step Wizard →

Learn more about Advanced FMEA →

FMEA Types

NirmIQ supports three main types:

Design FMEA (DFMEA)

Focus: Product design weaknesses

Used for:

  • New product development
  • Design changes
  • Component selection

Example failure modes:

  • "Bracket may fracture under load"
  • "Battery may overheat during charging"
  • "Software may crash with invalid input"

Process FMEA (PFMEA)

Focus: Manufacturing process issues

Used for:

  • Production planning
  • Process improvement
  • Quality control

Example failure modes:

  • "Weld may be incomplete"
  • "Paint may not adhere properly"
  • "Assembly may be reversed"

FMEA-MSR (Monitoring & System Response)

Advanced FMEA Only

FMEA-MSR is available in Advanced Mode.

Focus: System monitoring and failsafe responses

Used for:

  • Safety-critical systems
  • Autonomous vehicles
  • Medical devices
  • Real-time monitoring

Example failure modes:

  • "Collision sensor does not detect obstacle"
  • "Emergency braking system delayed"
  • "Patient alarm does not trigger"

Key Concepts

Failure Mode

What can go wrong?

A specific way in which a component or process can fail to meet requirements.

Examples:

  • Engine overheats
  • Door latch fails to engage
  • Software crashes unexpectedly

Effects

What happens when it fails?

The impact of the failure on the customer or next operation.

Examples:

  • Vehicle stalls (safety issue)
  • Door opens while driving (critical safety)
  • User loses unsaved data (inconvenience)

Causes

Why does it fail?

Root causes that lead to the failure mode.

Examples:

  • Coolant leak
  • Manufacturing defect
  • Unhandled exception

RPN (Risk Priority Number)

How risky is it?

RPN = Severity × Occurrence × Detection

RatingRangePriority
Critical125-1000Immediate action required
High50-124Action required
Medium10-49Action recommended
Low1-9Monitor only

Severity (S)

How bad is the effect?

RatingDescriptionExamples
10Hazardous without warningDeath, serious injury
9Hazardous with warningInjury, system damage
7-8Very highLoss of primary function
4-6ModerateReduced performance
2-3LowMinor inconvenience
1NoneNo effect

Occurrence (O)

How often does it happen?

RatingProbabilityFrequency
10Very high> 1 in 2
9High1 in 3
7-8Moderate1 in 8 to 1 in 20
4-6Low1 in 80 to 1 in 2,000
2-3Remote1 in 15,000 to 1 in 150,000
1Nearly impossible< 1 in 1,500,000

Detection (D)

How likely are we to catch it?

RatingLikelihoodDetection Method
10Absolute uncertaintyNo detection method
9Very remoteRandom inspection
7-8RemoteManual inspection
4-6ModerateAutomated inspection
2-3HighError-proof design
1Almost certainDefect cannot occur

FMEA Workflow

Typical Process

  1. Define Scope - What are you analyzing?
  2. Identify Failure Modes - What can go wrong?
  3. Assess Effects - What happens?
  4. Determine Causes - Why does it happen?
  5. Assign Ratings - S, O, D scores
  6. Calculate RPN - Prioritize risks
  7. Define Actions - Mitigation plans
  8. Implement - Execute actions
  9. Re-evaluate - New S, O, D after mitigation

Features

✅ Current Capabilities

  • Create FMEA entries (Simple and Advanced modes)
  • Assign S, O, D ratings
  • Auto-calculate RPN and Action Priority (AP)
  • AIAG-VDA 7-Step Wizard for structured analysis
  • System Structure Tree (P-Diagram) builder
  • Failure mode libraries with industry templates
  • Industry starter templates (Automotive, Aerospace, Medical, etc.)
    Template Restrictions

    FMEA templates cannot be applied to sample projects. Sample projects have pre-built traceability links that would be broken. Create a new project from the template instead.

  • Define actions and responsibilities
  • Track status (Open, In Progress, Closed)
  • Export to Excel (.xlsx)
  • Risk heatmaps and RPN trending
  • DTC (Diagnostic Trouble Code) library for automotive

🚧 Coming Soon

  • AI-powered FMEA import from documents
  • AI-generated failure mode suggestions
  • Collaboration and comments
  • PDF export with custom templates

Best Practices

Conducting Effective FMEA

  1. Assemble Team: Include design, manufacturing, quality experts
  2. Start Early: Conduct in design phase, not after problems occur
  3. Be Specific: Clear, detailed failure mode descriptions
  4. Focus on High RPN: Prioritize actions for RPN > 100
  5. Document Actions: Clear owners and due dates
  6. Follow Through: Track and verify mitigation effectiveness
  7. Update Regularly: FMEA is a living document

Rating Guidelines

Severity:

  • Based on worst case scenario
  • Customer perspective
  • Cannot be reduced (inherent to design)

Occurrence:

  • Based on current controls
  • Use data when available
  • Can be reduced via design changes

Detection:

  • Based on current test methods
  • Before delivery to customer
  • Can be improved via better testing

Integration with Requirements

Coming soon: Link FMEA entries to specific requirements.

Benefits:

  • Trace failures to requirements
  • Ensure all requirements have FMEA coverage
  • Impact analysis when requirements change
  • Complete traceability matrix

What's Next?