Basics of SIS

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Basic Fundamentals of Safety Instrumented Systems SIS

The operation of many industrial processes involve inherent risks due to the presence of dangerous material like
gases and chemicals. Safety Instrumented Systems SIS are specifically designed to protect personnel, equipment
and the environment by reducing the likelihood (frequency) or the impact severity of an identified emergency
event.
Explosions and fires account for millions of dollars of losses in the chemical or oil and gas industries each year.
Since a great potential for loss exists, it is common to employ Safety Instrumented Systems SIS to provide safe
isolation of flammable or potentially toxic material in the event of a fire or accidental release of fluids.
Today SIS Safety Instrumented Systems play an increasingly important role in many process plants. Safety
standards such as IEC 61508, IEC61511 and ISA S84.01, are creating more stringent safety requirements for
process plants.
Depending on application use, other names used for SIS Safety Instrumented Systems are:
Emergency Shutdown Systems (ESD), Burner Management Systems (BMS), Fire and Gas Systems (F&G), Critical
Turbomachinery Control, Railway Switching, Semiconductor Life Safety Systems (SEMI S2), Nuclear 1E Safety
Systems, High Integrity Protection Systems (HIPS), High Integrity Pressure Protection System (HIPPS)
Typically, Safety Instrumented Systems consist of three elements: A Sensor, a Logic Solver and a Final Control
Element

Sensors:
Field sensors are used to collect information necessary to determine if an emergency situation exists. The purpose
of these sensors is to measure process parameters (e.g. temperature, pressure, flow, etc.) used to determine if the
equipment or process is in a safe state. Sensor types range from simple pneumatic or electrical switches to Smart
transmitters with on-board diagnostics. These sensors are dedicated to the Safety Instrumented System SIS.
Logic Solver:
The purpose of this component of Safety Instrumented Systems SIS is to determine what action is to be taken
based on the information gathered. Highly reliable logic solvers are used which provide both fail-safe and faulttolerant operation. It is typically a controller that reads signals from the sensors and executes pre-programmed
actions to prevent a hazard by providing output to final control elements.
Final Control Element:
It implements the action determined by the logic system. This final control element is typically a pneumatically
actuated On-Off valve operated by solenoid valves.
It is imperative that all three elements of the SIS system function as designed in order to safely isolate the process
plant in the event of an emergency.
A Safety Instrumented System SIS consists of one or more Safety Instrumented Functions SIF.

A Safety Instrumented Function SIF is defined as a Function to be implemented by a SIS, which is intended to
achieve or maintain a safety state for the process with respect to a specific hazardous event"

IEC 61511
This international standard gives requirements for the specification, design, installation, operation and
maintenance of a safety instrumented system, so that it can be confidently entrusted to place and/or maintain the
processin a safe state.

IEC 61508
The function of an industrial safety instrumented system SIS is to automatically shutdown the process if a
dangerous condition is detected. Although different kinds of equipment are used, there is a strong trend towards
the use of programmable electronic equipment (processor based logic). For these systems to be certified for use inn
certain types of safety applications, they must meet the standards IEC 61508 and ANSI/ISA 84.01 for functional
safety.

Basics of Safety and Layers of Protection

Safety is provided by layers of protection. These layers start with safe and effective process control, extend to
manual and automatic prevention layers, and continue with layers to mitigate the consequences of an event.
The first layer is the Basic Process Control System BPCS. The control system itself provides significant safety
through proper design of process control.
The next layer of protection is also provided by the control system and the system operators. Automated shutdown
sequences in the process control system combined with operator intervention to shut down the process are the
next layer of safety.
The third layer is the Safety Instrumented System SIS. It is a safety system independent of the process control
system. It has separate sensors, valves and logic system. No process control is performed in this system, its only
role is safety.
These layers are designed to prevent a safety related event. If a safety related event occurs there are additional
layers designed to mitigate the impact of the event.
The fourth layer is an active protection layer. This layer may have valves or rupture disks designed to provide a
relief point that prevents a rupture, large spill or other uncontrolled release that can cause an explosion or fire.
The fifth layer is a passive protection layer. It may consist of a dike or other passive barrier that serves to contain a
fire or channel the energy of an explosion in a direction that minimizes the spread of damage.
The final layer is plant and emergency response. If a large safety event occurs this layer responds in a way that
minimizes ongoing damage, injury or loss of life. It may include evacuation plans, fire fighting, etc.
Overall safety is determined by how these layers work together.

Safety Integrity Level SIL is a measure of risk reduction provided by a SIF based on four levels. Each level
represents an order of magnitude of risk reduction. Every SIF has a SIL assigned to it, the SIS and equipment does
not have a SIL assigned to it.

SIL
Safety Integrity Level

RRF
Risk Reduction Factor

PFD
Probability of Failure on Demand
pro year = 1/RRF

SIL 4

100,000 to 10,000

>= 10-5 to < 10-4

SIL 3

10,000 to 1,000

>= 10-4 to < 10-3

SIL 2

1,000 to 100

>= 10-3 to < 10-2

SIL 1

100 to 10

>= 10-2 to < 10-1

Probability of Failure upon Demand PFD


By understanding how components of an Safety Instrumented System SIS can fail, it is possible to calculate a
Probability of Failure on Demand PFD. There are two basic ways for SIS to fail. The first way is commonly called a
spurious trip which usually results in an unplanned but safe process shutdown. While there is no danger associated
with this type of SIS failure, the operational costs can be very high. The seconf type of failure does not cause a
process shutdown or nuisance trip. Instead, the failure remains undetected, permitting continued process operation
in an unsafe or dangerous manner. If an emergency demand occurred, the SIS would be unable to respond
properly. These failures are known as covert or hidden failures and contribute to the probability PFD of the system
failing in a dangerous manner on demand.
The PFD for the Safety Instrumented System SIS is the sum of PFD's for each element of the system. In order to
determine the PFD of each element, the analyst needs documented, historic failure rate data for each element. This
failure rate (dangerous) is used in conjunction with the Test Interval TI term to calculate the PFD. It is the test
interval TI that accounts for the length of time before a covert fault is discovered through testing. Increases in the
test interval directly impact the PFD value in a linear manner; e.g. if you double the interval between tests, you will
double the Probability of Failure on Demand, and make it twice as difficult to meet the target Safety Integrity Level
SIL.
The governing standards for Safety Instrumented Systems SIS state that plant operators must determine and
document that equipment is designed, maintained, inspected, tested and operated in a safe manner. Thus, it is
imperative that these components of Safety Instrumented Systems be tested frequently enough to reduce the PFD
and meet the target SIL.

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