ISO 26262-9:2011

Road vehicles — Functional safety — Part 9: Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL)-oriented and safety-oriented analyses ISO 26262-9:2011

Publication date:   Nov 14, 2011

95.99 Withdrawal of Standard   Dec 17, 2018

General information

95.99 Withdrawal of Standard   Dec 17, 2018

ISO

ISO/TC 22/SC 32 Electrical and electronic components and general system aspects

International Standard

43.040.10   Electrical and electronic equipment

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Scope

ISO 26262 is intended to be applied to safety-related systems that include one or more electrical and/or electronic (E/E) systems and that are installed in series production passenger cars with a maximum gross vehicle mass up to 3 500 kg. ISO 26262 does not address unique E/E systems in special purpose vehicles such as vehicles designed for drivers with disabilities.
Systems and their components released for production, or systems and their components already under development prior to the publication date of ISO 26262, are exempted from the scope. For further development or alterations based on systems and their components released for production prior to the publication of ISO 26262, only the modifications will be developed in accordance with ISO 26262.
ISO 26262 addresses possible hazards caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems, including interaction of these systems. It does not address hazards related to electric shock, fire, smoke, heat, radiation, toxicity, flammability, reactivity, corrosion, release of energy and similar hazards, unless directly caused by malfunctioning behaviour of E/E safety-related systems.
ISO 26262 does not address the nominal performance of E/E systems, even if dedicated functional performance standards exist for these systems (e.g. active and passive safety systems, brake systems, Adaptive Cruise Control).
ISO 26262-9:2011 specifies the requirements for Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL)-oriented and safety-oriented analyses, including the following:

requirements decomposition with respect to ASIL tailoring,
criteria for coexistence of elements,
analysis of dependent failures, and
safety analyses.

Life cycle

NOW

WITHDRAWN
ISO 26262-9:2011
95.99 Withdrawal of Standard
Dec 17, 2018

REVISED BY

PUBLISHED
ISO 26262-9:2018