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A Systematic Quantification of the Sources of Variation of Process Analytical Measurements in the Steel Industry
Authors:Renger H. Jellema   David J. Louwerse  Age K. Smilde  Mathieu J. P. Gerritsen  Daan Guldemond  Hilko van der Voet  Pieter F. G. Vereijken
Affiliation: a T.N.O. Nutrition and Food Research, Zeist, The Netherlandsb University of Amsterdam, Process Analysis and Chemometrics, Amsterdam, The Netherlandsc Corus Group, Laboratory for Analytical Chemistry, IJmuiden, The Netherlandsd Biometris, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:A strategy is proposed for the identification and quantification of sources of variation in a manufacturing process. The strategy involves six steps: identification and selection of factors, model selection, design of the experiments, performing the experiments, estimation of sources of variation, and finally, interpretation of the results. This strategy helps in finding those factors that contribute mostly to the total variation apparent in analysis results due to the production process itself, sampling, and analysis of samples. The strategy is then applied to a case study in which sources of variation in steel analysis are identified and quantified. The study develops mixed (random and fixed) effect models for the three phases of steel manufacturing—stirring, tundish, and mold. The models show that differences between spectrometers can have an important influence on the total variation apparent in the final analysis results.
Keywords:Strategy  Variation reduction  Variance components  Steel industry  Quality improvement
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