Agent skill

failure-analysis

Systematic failure analysis methodology for mechanical component failures

Stars 514
Forks 31

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/a5c-ai/babysitter/tree/main/library/specializations/domains/science/mechanical-engineering/skills/failure-analysis

Metadata

Additional technical details for this skill

phase
8
domain
science
category
materials-testing
priority
medium
specialization
mechanical-engineering
tools libraries
[
    "SEM/EDS analysis tools",
    "Metallographic equipment",
    "NDT methods"
]

SKILL.md

Failure Analysis Skill

Purpose

The Failure Analysis skill provides systematic methodology for investigating mechanical component failures, enabling root cause identification through fractography, metallography, stress analysis, and structured problem-solving approaches.

Capabilities

  • Fractography interpretation (SEM, optical)
  • Metallographic examination guidance
  • Root cause analysis frameworks (5-Why, Fishbone)
  • Failure mode identification (fatigue, corrosion, overload)
  • Stress analysis correlation to failure location
  • Chemical analysis interpretation
  • Corrective action development
  • Failure analysis report generation

Usage Guidelines

Investigation Process

Phase 1: Evidence Preservation

  1. Documentation

    • Photograph failed components as-received
    • Document orientation and assembly position
    • Record operating conditions at failure
    • Preserve all fragments
  2. Chain of Custody

    • Log all handling
    • Secure storage
    • Controlled access
    • Document any cleaning or cutting

Phase 2: Visual Examination

  1. Macroscopic Features

    Feature Indication
    Beach marks Fatigue
    Chevron marks Brittle fracture
    Shear lips Ductile overload
    Corrosion products Environmental attack
    Wear patterns Tribological failure
  2. Fracture Origin

    • Identify initiation site
    • Look for stress concentrations
    • Check for material defects
    • Document surface conditions

Phase 3: Fractography

  1. Optical Microscopy

    • Low magnification overview
    • Document fracture features
    • Identify regions of interest
  2. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)

    Fracture Feature Failure Mode
    Striations Fatigue crack growth
    Dimples Ductile overload
    Cleavage facets Brittle fracture
    Intergranular Creep, SCC, hydrogen
    Quasi-cleavage Mixed mode
  3. EDS Analysis

    • Identify corrosion products
    • Detect contamination
    • Verify material composition

Phase 4: Metallography

  1. Sample Preparation

    • Section perpendicular to fracture
    • Mount in appropriate media
    • Grind and polish
    • Select appropriate etchant
  2. Examination

    • Grain structure
    • Heat treatment condition
    • Inclusions and defects
    • Microcracking
    • Decarburization

Failure Mode Identification

Fatigue Failure

Characteristics:
- Beach marks (macroscopic)
- Striations (microscopic)
- Origin at stress concentration
- Minimal plastic deformation
- Flat fracture surface

Contributing Factors:
- Cyclic loading
- Stress concentration
- Residual stress
- Material defects
- Environmental effects

Overload Failure

Ductile:
- Significant plastic deformation
- Cup-and-cone fracture (tensile)
- Shear lips
- Dimpled fracture surface

Brittle:
- Little plastic deformation
- Flat fracture surface
- Chevron marks pointing to origin
- Cleavage or intergranular fracture

Corrosion Failures

Type Characteristics Environment
Uniform General metal loss Acids, bases
Pitting Localized attack Chlorides
SCC Branching cracks Specific ion + stress
Corrosion fatigue Accelerated fatigue Cyclic + corrosive
Hydrogen embrittlement Intergranular fracture Hydrogen source

Wear Failures

Type Mechanism Evidence
Adhesive Material transfer Galling, scoring
Abrasive Hard particle cutting Grooves, scratches
Erosive Fluid/particle impact Surface damage pattern
Fretting Small amplitude motion Oxide debris, pitting

Root Cause Analysis

5-Why Method

Problem: Shaft failure
Why 1: Fatigue fracture
Why 2: High stress concentration at keyway
Why 3: Sharp corner radius
Why 4: Drawing did not specify radius
Why 5: Design review did not catch omission

Root Cause: Inadequate design review process

Fishbone Diagram Categories

  • Material: Composition, defects, properties
  • Machine: Equipment condition, maintenance
  • Method: Process, procedure, design
  • Man: Training, error, supervision
  • Environment: Temperature, humidity, contamination
  • Measurement: Calibration, accuracy

Process Integration

  • ME-016: Failure Analysis Investigation

Input Schema

json
{
  "failed_component": {
    "part_number": "string",
    "material": "string",
    "service_history": "string",
    "failure_date": "date"
  },
  "operating_conditions": {
    "loads": "string",
    "environment": "string",
    "temperature": "number (C)",
    "cycles_or_hours": "number"
  },
  "available_evidence": {
    "fracture_surfaces": "boolean",
    "mating_parts": "boolean",
    "lubricant_samples": "boolean",
    "maintenance_records": "boolean"
  },
  "analysis_scope": "preliminary|comprehensive"
}

Output Schema

json
{
  "failure_mode": "fatigue|overload|corrosion|wear|other",
  "root_cause": "string",
  "contributing_factors": "array",
  "evidence_summary": {
    "visual": "string",
    "fractography": "string",
    "metallography": "string",
    "chemical": "string"
  },
  "corrective_actions": [
    {
      "action": "string",
      "category": "design|material|process|maintenance",
      "priority": "high|medium|low"
    }
  ],
  "preventive_recommendations": "array",
  "report_reference": "string"
}

Best Practices

  1. Preserve evidence before any destructive examination
  2. Document all observations photographically
  3. Follow systematic investigation process
  4. Consider multiple failure mechanisms
  5. Correlate fracture features with stress analysis
  6. Validate root cause with evidence

Integration Points

  • Connects with FEA Structural for stress analysis
  • Feeds into Material Selection for improved materials
  • Supports Design Review for lessons learned
  • Integrates with Quality for corrective actions

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

a5c-ai/babysitter

gsd-tools

Central utility skill for GSD operations. Provides config parsing, slug generation, timestamps, path operations, and orchestrates calls to other specialized skills. Acts as the unified entry point that the original gsd-tools.cjs provided via its lib/ modules (commands, config, core, init).

514 31
Explore
a5c-ai/babysitter

model-profile-resolution

Resolve model profile (quality/balanced/budget) at orchestration start and map agents to specific models. Enables cost/quality tradeoffs by selecting appropriate AI models for each agent role.

514 31
Explore
a5c-ai/babysitter

verification-suite

Plan structure validation, phase completeness checks, reference integrity verification, and artifact existence confirmation. Provides the structured verification layer ensuring GSD artifacts are well-formed and complete.

514 31
Explore
a5c-ai/babysitter

state-management

STATE.md reading, writing, and field-level updates. Provides cross-session state persistence via .planning/STATE.md with structured fields for current task, completed phases, blockers, decisions, and quick tasks.

514 31
Explore
a5c-ai/babysitter

git-integration

Git commit patterns, formats, and conventions for GSD methodology. Provides atomic commits per task, structured commit messages, planning file commits, branch management, and milestone tag operations.

514 31
Explore
a5c-ai/babysitter

frontmatter-parsing

YAML frontmatter parsing and manipulation for .planning/ documents. Provides read, write, update, query, and validation operations on frontmatter blocks in GSD markdown artifacts.

514 31
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results