CHAPTER 3-3

 

The Role of Failure in Engineering Design: Case Studies

Objectives

  • Learn about the role of failure in engineering design
  • Discuss classic design failures as case studies

The pages of engineering history are full of examples of design flaws that escaped detection in the design phase only to reveal themselves once the device was in actual use. Although many devices are plagued by minor design flaws from time to time, a few failure cases have become notorious because they affected many people, caused great property damage, or led to sweeping changes in engineering practice. In this section, we review several design failures from the annals of engineering lore. Each event involved the loss of human life or major destruction of property, and each was caused by an engineering design failure. The mistakes were made by engineers who did the best they could, but had little prior experience or had major lapses in engineering judgement. After each incident, similar disasters were averted, because engineers were able to study the causes of the problems and establish new or revised engineering standards and guidelines. Studying these classic failures and the mistakes of the engineers who caused them will help you to avoid making similar mistakes in your own work.

The failure examples to follow all had dire consequences. Each occurred once the product was in use, long after the initial design, test, and evaluation phases. It's always better for problems to show up before the product has gone to market. Design problems can be corrected easily during testing, burn-in, and system evaluation. If a design flaw shows up in a product or system that has already been delivered for use, the consequences are far more serious. As you read the examples of this section, you might conclude that the causes of these failures in the field should have been obvious, and that failure to avoid them was the result of some engineer's carelessness. Indeed, it's relatively easy to play “Monday-morning quarterback” and analyze the cause of a failure after it has occurred. But as any experienced engineer will tell you, spotting a hidden flaw during the test phase is not always easy when a device or system is complex and has many parts or subsystems that interact in complicated ways. Even simple devices can be prone to hidden design flaws that elude the test and evaluation stages. Indeed, one of the marks of a good engineer is the ability to ferret out flaws and errors before the product finds its way to the end user. You can help to strengthen your abilities with the important intuitive skill of flaw detection by becoming familiar with the classic failure incidents discussed in this section. If you are interested in learning more details about any of the case studies, you might consult one of the references listed at the end of the chapter.

1 Case 1: Tacoma Narrows Bridge

The Tacoma Narrows Bridge, built across Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington in 1940, was the longest suspension bridge of its day. The design engineers copied the structure of smaller, existing suspension bridges and simply built a longer one. As had been done with countless shorter spans, support trusses deep in the structure of the bridge's framework were omitted to make it more graceful and visually appealing. No calculations were done to prove the structural integrity of a longer bridge lacking internal support trusses. Because the tried-and-true design methods used on shorter spans had been well tested, the engineers assumed that these design methods would work on longer spans. On November 7, 1940, during a particularly windy day, the bridge started to undulate and twist, entering into the magnificent torsional motion shown in Figure 3. After several hours, the bridge crumbled as if it were made from dry clay; not a piece remained between the two main center spans.


3. The Tacoma Narrows Bridge in torsional vibration.

What went wrong? The engineers responsible for building the bridge had relied on calculations made for smaller bridges, even though the assumptions behind those calculations did not apply to the longer span of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Had the engineers heeded some basic scientific intuition, they would have realized that three-dimensional structures cannot be directly scaled upward without limits.

2 Case 2: Hartford Civic Center

The Hartford Civic Center was the first of its kind. At the time of its construction in the mid 1970s, no similar building had been built before. Its roof was made from a space frame structure of interconnected rods and ball sockets, much like a child's construction toy. Hundreds of rods were interconnected in a visually appealing geodesic pattern like the one shown in Figure 4. Instead of performing detailed hand calculations, the design engineers relied on the latest computer models to compute the loading on each individual member of the roof structure. Recall that computers in those days were much more primitive than those we enjoy today. The PC had not yet been invented, and all work was performed on slow large-mainframe computers.


4. Geodesic, rod-and-ball socket construction.

On January 18, 1978, just a few hours after the center had been filled to capacity with thousands of people watching a basketball game, the roof collapsed under a heavy snow load, demolishing the building. Miraculously, no one was hurt in the collapse.

Why did the collapse occur? Some attribute the failure to the engineers who designed the civic center and chose not to rely on their basic judgement and intuition gleaned from years of construction practice. Instead, they relied on computer models of their new space frame design. These computer models had been written by programmers, not structural engineers, during the days when computer modeling was in its infancy. The programmers based their code algorithms on structural formulas from textbooks. Not one of the programmers had ever actually built a roof truss. All failed to include basic derating factors at the structural joints to account for the slight changes in layout (e.g., minor variations in angles, lengths, and torsion) that occur when a complex structure is actually built. The design engineers trusted the output of computer models that never had been fully tested on actual construction. Under normal roof load, many ball-and-socket joints were stressed beyond their calculated limits. The addition of a heavy snow load to the roof load proved too much for the structure to bear.

3 Case 3: Space Shuttle Challenger

The NASA Space Shuttle Challengerblew up during launch on a cold day in January 1986 at Cape Kennedy (Canaveral) in Florida. Thousands witnessed the explosion as it happened [see Figure 5]. Hundreds of millions watched news tapes of the event for weeks afterwards. After months of investigation, NASA traced the problem to a set of O-rings used to seal sections of the multisegmented booster rockets. The seals were never designed to be operated in cold weather, and on that particular day, it was about 28°F (2°C), a very cold day for Florida. The frozen O-rings were either too stiff to properly seal the sections of the booster rocket or became brittle and cracked due to the unusually cold temperatures. Flames spewed from an open seal during acceleration and ignited an adjacent fuel tank. The entire spacecraft blew up, killing all seven astronauts on board, including a high school teacher. It was the worst space disaster in U.S. history.


5. The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes during launch. (Photo courtesy of RJS Associates.)

In using O-rings to seal adjacent cylindrical surfaces, such as those depicted in Figure 6, the engineers had relied on a standard design technique for rockets. The Challenger's booster rockets, however, were much larger than any on which O-rings had been used before. This factor, combined with the unusually cold temperature, brought the seal to its limit, and it failed.


6. Schematic depiction of O-ring seals.

There was, however, another dimension to the failure. Why had the booster been built in multiple sections, requiring O-rings in the first place? The answer is complex, but the cause was largely attributable to one factor: The decision to build a multisection booster was, in part, political. Had engineering common sense been the sole factor, the boosters would have been built in one piece without O-rings. Joints are notoriously weak spots, and a solid body is almost always stronger than a comparable one assembled from sections. The manufacturing technology existed to build large, one-piece rockets of appropriate size. But a senator from Utah lobbied heavily to have the contract for constructing the booster rockets awarded to a company in his state. It was not physically possible to transport a large, one-piece booster rocket all the way from Utah to Florida over existing rail lines. Trucks were too small, and no ships were available that could sail to land-locked Utah, which lies in the middle of the United States. The decision by NASA to award the contract to the Utah company resulted in a multisection, O-ring-sealed booster rocket whose smaller pieces would easily be shipped by rail or truck.

Some say the catastrophe resulted from a lack of ethics on the part of the design engineers who suspected the O-ring design of having potential problems. Some say it was the fault of NASA for succumbing to political pressure from Congress, its ultimate funding source. Others say it was just an unusual convergence of circumstances, since neither the Utah senator nor the design engineers knowingly advocated for a substandard product. The sectioned booster had worked flawlessly on many previous shuttle flights that had not been launched in subfreezing temperatures. Still, others say that by putting more weight on a political element of the project, rather than on pure engineering concerns, the engineers were compromised into a less-than-desirable design concept that had never before been attempted on something so large.

4 Case 4: Kansas City Hyatt

If you've ever been inside a Hyatt hotel, you know that their internal architectures are very unique. The typical Hyatt hotel has cantilevered floors that form an inner trapezoidal atrium, and the walkways and halls are open, inviting structures. There's nothing quite like the inside of a Hyatt. In the case of the Kansas City Hyatt, first opened in 1981, the design included a two-layer, open-air walkway that spanned the entire lobby in midair, from one balcony to another. During a party that took place not long after the hotel opened, the walkway was filled with people dancing in time to the music. The weight and rhythm of the load of people, perhaps in resonance with the walkway, caused it to collapse suddenly. Over one hundred people died, and the event will be remembered forever in the history of hotel management. Although the hotel eventually reopened, to this day the walkway has never been rebuilt.

The collapse of the Hyatt walkway is a classic example of failure due to lack of construction experience. In this case, however, the error originated during the design phase, not the construction phase. In order to explain how the walkway collapsed, consider the sketch of the skeletal frame of the walkway, as specified by the design engineer, shown here in Figure 7.


7. Kansas City Hyatt walkway support structure as designed.

Each box beam was to be held up by a separate nut threaded onto a suspended steel rod. The rated load for each nut-to-beam joint was intended to be above the maximum weight encountered during the time of the accident. What's wrong with this picture? The problem is that the structure as specified was not a realistic structure to build. The design called for the walkway's two decks to be hung from the ceiling by a single rod at each support point. The rods were made from smooth steel having no threads. Threading reduces the diameter of a rod, so it's impossible to get a nut to the middle of a rod unless the rod is threaded for at least half its length. In order to construct the walkway as specified, each rod would have to be threaded along about 20 feet of its length, and numerous rods were needed for the long span of the walkway. Even with an electric threading machine, it would have taken days to thread all the needed rods. The contractor who actually built the walkway proposed a modification to the construction so that only the very ends of the rods would have to be threaded. The modification is illustrated in Figure 8.


8. Kansas City Hyatt walkway support structure as actually built.

The problem with this modification is that the nut (A) at the lower end of the upper rod now had to support the weight of both walkways. A good analogy would be two mountain climbers hanging onto a rope. If both grabbed the rope simultaneously, but independently, the rope could hold their weight. If the lower climber grabbed the ankles of the upper climber instead of the rope, however, the upper climber's hands would have to hold the weight of two climbers. Under the full, or maybe excessive, load conditions of that day, the weight on nut (A) of the Hyatt walkway was just too much, and the joint gave way. Once the joint on one rod failed, the complete collapse of the rest of the joints and the entire walkway quickly followed.

Some attributed the fatal flaw to the senior design engineer who specified single rods requiring 20 feet of threading. Others blamed it on the junior engineer, who signed off on the modifications presented by the construction crew at the construction site, and the senior engineer, who should have communicated to the junior engineer the critical nature of the rod structure as specified. Perhaps both engineers lacked seasoning—the process of getting their hands dirty on real construction problems as a way of gaining a feeling for how things are made in the real world.

Regardless of who was at fault, the design also left little room for safety margins. It's common practice in structural design to leave at least a factor-of-two safety margin between the calculated maximum load and the expected maximum load on a structure. The safety margin allows for inaccuracies in load calculations due to approximation, random variations in material strengths, and small errors in fabrication. Had the walkway included a safety margin of a factor of two or more, the doubly stressed joint on the walkway might not have collapsed, even given its modified construction. The design engineers specified a walkway structure that was possible, but not practical, to build. The construction supervisor, unaware of the structural implications, but wishing to see the job to completion, ordered a small, seemingly innocent, but ultimately fatal, change in the construction method. Had but one of the design engineers ever spent time working on a construction site, this shortcoming might have been discovered. Errors such as the one that occurred at the Kansas City Hyatt can be prevented by including workers from all phases of construction in the design process, ensuring adequate communication between all levels of employees, and adding far more than minimal safety margins where public safety is at risk.

5 Case 5: Three Mile Island

Three Mile Island was a large nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania (see Figure 9). It was the sight of the worst nuclear accident in the United States and nearly comparable to the total meltdown at Chernobyl, Ukraine. Fortunately, the incident at Three Mile Island resulted in only a near miss at a meltdown, but it also led to the shutting down and trashing of a billion-dollar electric power plant and significant loss of electrical generation capacity on the power grid in the eastern United States.


9. Three Mile Island power plant.

On the day of the accident, a pressure buildup occurred inside the reactor vessel. It was normal procedure to open a relief valve in such situations to reduce the pressure to safe levels. The valve in question was held closed by a spring and was opened by applying voltage to an electromagnetic actuator. The designer of the electrical control system had made one critical mistake. As suggested by the schematic diagram shown in Figure 10, indicator lights in the control room lit up when power was applied to or removed from the valve actuator coil, but the control panel gave no indication about the actual position of the valve. After a pressure-relief operation, the valve at Three Mile Island became stuck in the open position. Although the actuation voltage had been turned off and lights in the control room indicated the valve to be closed, it was actually stuck open. The mechanical spring responsible for closing the valve did not have enough force to overcome the sticking force. While the operators, believing the valve to be closed, tried to diagnose the problem, coolant leaked from the vessel for almost two hours. Had the operators known that the valve was open, they could have closed it manually or taken other corrective measures. In the panic that followed, however, the operators continually believed their control-panel indicator lights and thought that the valve was closed. Eventually the problem was contained, but not before a rupture nearly occurred in the vessel. Such an event would have resulted in a complete core meltdown and spewed radioactive gas into the atmosphere. Even so, damage to the reactor core was so severe that the plant was permanently shut down. It has never reopened.


10. Valve indicator system as actually designed.

The valve actuation system at Three Mile Island was designed with a poor human-machine interface. The ultimate test of such a system, of course, would be during an emergency when the need for absolutely accurate information would be critical. The operators assumed that the information they were receiving was accurate, while in reality it was not. The power plant's control panel provided the key information by inference, rather than by direct confirmation. A better design would have been one that included an independent sensor that unambiguously verified the true position of the valve, as suggested by the diagram of Figure 11.


11. Valve indicator system as it should have been designed and built.

6 Case 6: USS Vincennes

The Vincennes was a U.S. missile cruiser stationed in the Persian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq war. On July 3, 1988, while patrolling the Persian Gulf, the Vincennes received two IFF (Identification: Friend or Foe) signals on its Aegis air-defense system. Aegis was the Navy's complex, billion-dollar, state-of-the-art information-processing system that displayed more information than any one operator could possibly hope to digest. Information saturation was commonplace among operators of the Aegis system. The Vincennes had received two IFF signals, one for a civilian plane and the other for a military plane. Under the pressure of anticipating a possible attack, the overstimulated operator misread the cluttered radar display and concluded that only one airplane was approaching the Vincennes. Repeated attempts to reach the nonexistent warplane by radio failed. The captain concluded that his ship was under attack and made the split-second decision to have the civilian airplane shot down. Two hundred ninety civilians died needlessly.

What caused this catastrophic outcome? Was it bad military judgment? Was it an operating error? Were the engineers who designed the system at fault? The Navy officially attributed the accident to “operator error” by an enlisted sailor, but in some circles the blame was placed on the engineers who had designed the system. Under the stress of possible attack and deluged with information, the operator simply could not cope with an ill-conceived human-machine interface designed by engineers. Critical information, being needed most during crisis situations, should have been uncluttered and easy to interpret. The complex display of the Aegis system was an example of something that was designed just because it was technically possible. It resulted in a human-machine interface that became a weak link in the system.

7 Case 7: Hubble Telescope

The Hubble is an orbiting telescope that was put into space at a cost of over a billion dollars. Unaffected by the distortion experienced by ground-based telescopes due to atmospheric turbulence, the Hubble has provided spectacular photos of space and has made possible numerous astronomical discoveries. Yet the Hubble telescope did not escape design flaws. Of the many problems that plagued the Hubble during its first few years, the most famous was its improperly fabricated mirrors. They were distorted and had to be corrected by the installation of an adaptive optic mirror that compensated for aberrations. The repairs were carried out by a NASA Space Shuttle crew. Although this particular flaw is the one most often associated with the Hubble, it was attributed to sloppy mirror fabrication rather than to a design error. Another, less-well-known design error more closely illustrates the lessons of this chapter. The Hubble's solar panels were deployed in the environment of space, where they were subjected to alternate heating and cooling as the telescope moved in and out of the earth's shadow. The resulting expansion and contraction cycles caused the solar panels to flap like the wings of a bird. Attempts to compensate for the unexpected motion by the spacecraft's computer-controlled stabilizing program led to a positive feedback effect which only made the problem worse. Had the design engineers anticipated the environment in which the telescope was to be operated, they could have compensated for the heating and cooling cycles and avoided the problem. This example illustrates that it's difficult to anticipate all the conditions under which a device or system may be operated. Nevertheless, extremes in operating environment often are responsible for engineering failures. Engineers must compensate for this problem by testing and retesting devices under different temperatures, load conditions, operating environments, and weather conditions. Whenever possible (though obviously not possible in the case of the Hubble), a system should be developed and tested in as many different environmental conditions as possible if a chance exists that those conditions will be encountered in the field.

8 Case 8: De Haviland Comet

The De Haviland Comet was the first commercial passenger jet aircraft. A British design, the Comet enjoyed many months of trouble-free flying in the 1950s until several went down in unexplained crashes. Investigations of the wreckages suggested that the fuselages of these planes had ripped apart in midflight. For years, the engineers assigned the task of determining the cause of the crashes were baffled. What, short of an explosion, could have caused the fuselage of an aircraft to blow apart in flight? No evidence of sabotage was found at any of the wreckage sites. After some time, the cause of the crashes was discovered. No one had foreseen the effects of the numerous pressurization and depressurization cycles that were an inevitable consequence of takeoffs and landings. Before jet aircraft, lower altitude airplanes were not routinely operated under pressure. Higher altitude jet travel brought with it the need to pressurize the cabin. In the case of the Comet, the locations of the rivets holding in the windows developed fatigue cracks, which, after many pressurization and depressurization cycles, grew into large, full-blown cracks in the fuselage. This mode of failure is depicted in Figure 12.


12. Stress cracks around the window rivets of the De Haviland Comet.

Had the design engineers thought about the environment under which the finished product would be used, the problem could have been avoided. Content instead with laboratory stress tests that did not mimic the actual pressurization and depressurization cycles, the engineers were lulled into a false sense of security about the soundness of their design. This example of failure again underscores an important engineering lesson: Always test a design under the most realistic conditions possible. Always assume that environmental conditions will affect performance and reliability.