ICLL
Electrical
- Mar 22, 2006
- 13
Hope this is the right forum for this question...
I have a client who operates a not-normally-manned ten-year-old compressor station on a natural gas pipeline. He wants me to do a SIL evaluation of the ESD shutdown system (hardwired relay-based) for the station in accordance with IEC61511, as he is concerned that the station may not be sufficiently safe. (I am a reasonably experienced facilitator of such reviews). The compressor controls are a separate proprietary system and are excluded from the scope.
On examination of the ESD system I find that there are only three or four true "preventative" instrumented protective functions such as I'm used to in process plants (level and temperature shutdowns). The other 90% of the ESD system functions are what I would call "mitigating" functions such as ESD pushbuttons and fire and gas detectors. These would usually only help to stop a hazardous event from escalating and not prevent it in the first place. When I have done SIL classification reviews for other clients these sort of devices (pushbuttons and F&G detectors) have always been excluded from the scope. However, this client wants me to classify these devices. Environmental and asset damage evalutions are to be performed as well as the normal safety evaluation.
My questions are:
1. Do you think it is the intent of 61511 to include such devices in the safety lifecycle and should I include these devices in the classification scope?
2. If I should include them, how would you pick a demand rate for, say, an ESD pushbutton? (Remember this is a process plant shutdown pushbutton not a machinery protective emergency-stop). The button will only ever be pressed if a hazardous event such as a pipe rupture or catastrophic compressor damage has already occurred. And, of course, the facility is only manned, say, 10% of the time.
3. For fire and gas detectors, presumably the review would have to assess a SIL value based on the difference between the device being there (possibly only a small gas leak) or not being there (possibly an uncontrolled fire). Is this a valid approach?
Your thoughts?
I have a client who operates a not-normally-manned ten-year-old compressor station on a natural gas pipeline. He wants me to do a SIL evaluation of the ESD shutdown system (hardwired relay-based) for the station in accordance with IEC61511, as he is concerned that the station may not be sufficiently safe. (I am a reasonably experienced facilitator of such reviews). The compressor controls are a separate proprietary system and are excluded from the scope.
On examination of the ESD system I find that there are only three or four true "preventative" instrumented protective functions such as I'm used to in process plants (level and temperature shutdowns). The other 90% of the ESD system functions are what I would call "mitigating" functions such as ESD pushbuttons and fire and gas detectors. These would usually only help to stop a hazardous event from escalating and not prevent it in the first place. When I have done SIL classification reviews for other clients these sort of devices (pushbuttons and F&G detectors) have always been excluded from the scope. However, this client wants me to classify these devices. Environmental and asset damage evalutions are to be performed as well as the normal safety evaluation.
My questions are:
1. Do you think it is the intent of 61511 to include such devices in the safety lifecycle and should I include these devices in the classification scope?
2. If I should include them, how would you pick a demand rate for, say, an ESD pushbutton? (Remember this is a process plant shutdown pushbutton not a machinery protective emergency-stop). The button will only ever be pressed if a hazardous event such as a pipe rupture or catastrophic compressor damage has already occurred. And, of course, the facility is only manned, say, 10% of the time.
3. For fire and gas detectors, presumably the review would have to assess a SIL value based on the difference between the device being there (possibly only a small gas leak) or not being there (possibly an uncontrolled fire). Is this a valid approach?
Your thoughts?