System Readiness Level Index

From apppm
Revision as of 13:26, 14 February 2021 by S203227 (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

The System Readiness Level (SRL) index is an index of maturity applied at the system-level concept with the objective of correlating this indexing to appropriate systems engineering management principals [1]. The SRL of a given system is a function of individual TRLs and the maturities of the links between them, which will be defined based on a scale of integration readiness levels (IRLs). The resulting function of this interaction is then correlated to a five level SRL index. This SRL index is defined by the current state of development of a system in relation to the DoD’s Phases of Development for the Life Cycle Management Framework [2].


Contents

Background

NASA

Since the 1980’s the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has used technology readiness level (TRL) as a means to assess the maturity of a particular technology and a scale to compare technologies.

DoD

In 1999, the Department of Defense (DoD) embraced a similar TRL concept in their programs. The TRL scale is a measure of maturity of an individual technology, with a view towards operational use in a system context. A more comprehensive set of concerns become relevant when this assessment is abstracted from an individual technology to a system context, which may involve interplay between multiple technologies. The System Readiness Level (SRL) incorporates the current TRL scale and introduce the concept of an integration readiness level (IRL) to dynamically calculate a SRL index [3].

[4]

TRL

IRL

The Five Level SRL Index

References

  1. From TRL to SRL: The Concept of Systems Readiness Levels, B. Sauser Et al., 2006.
  2. Dod Directive 5000.1, Department of Defense, 2005.
  3. From TRL to SRL: The Concept of Systems Readiness Levels, B. Sauser Et al., 2006.
  4. A Quantitative Analysis of System Readiness Level Plus (SRL+): Development of Readiness Level Measurement, N. Marlyana Et al., 2018.
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox