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I&C Safety Guide DRAFT 20110803.doc
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Single failure criterion

7.8. SSR 2/1 Requirement 25 states that:

The single failure criterion shall be applied to each safety group incorporated in the plant design.

Spurious action shall be considered as one mode of failure when applying the concept to a safety group or system.

7.9. Normally it is necessary to employ concepts such as redundancy, independence, testability, continuous monitoring, environmental qualification, and maintainability to achieve compliance with the single failure criterion.

7.10. Each safety group should perform all actions required to respond to a pie in the presence of:

  1. Any single detectable failure within the safety system in combination with,

  2. All failures caused by the single failure,

  3. All failures and spurious system actions that cause, or are caused by, the design basis event requiring the safety function, and

  4. The removal from service or bypassed of safety channels for testing or maintenance that is allowed by plant operating limits and conditions.

7.11. Single failures include hardware failures, individual operator errors, and any failures caused by a single failure, including all cascading failures expected to result from the single failure. Both operator errors of commission (taking an incorrect action) and omission (failing to take a necessary action) are to be considered.

7.12. Common-cause failures to be considered when applying the single failure criterion include cascading failures and failures expected to be caused by a PIE. Other CCF do not need to be considered. Examples of such excluded CCF include failures of components due to:

  • Environmental conditions for which they have been qualified,

  • Design deficiencies,

For example, failures due to software errors are caused only by design deficiencies or coding errors and are thus excluded from consideration.

  • Manufacturing errors,

  • Maintenance errors, and

  • Operator errors.

7.13. Design qualification, diversity, personnel training, human factors engineering, and effective operating, maintenance, and surveillance procedures are expected to afford protection from such CCF.

7.14. Non-compliance with the single failure criterion may be justified for:

  • Very rare PIEs;

  • Very improbable consequences of PIEs;

  • Withdrawal from service of certain components for purposes of maintenance, repair or periodic testing, for limited periods of time;

  • Features that are provided only for response to design extension conditions; and

  • Postulated failures whose likelihood can be shown to be sufficiently remote as to be discounted.

7.15. Non-compliance with the single failure criterion should be exceptional and clearly justified in the safety analysis.

7.16. Reliability analysis, probabilistic assessment, operating experience, engineering judgment or a combination of these may be used to establish a basis for excluding a particular failure from consideration when applying the single failure criterion.

7.17. The situations in which the single failure criterion is not met in the case of maintenance, repair or testing need to be consistent with plant operating limits and conditions.

7.18. Where there is evidence that compliance with the single failure criterion is not sufficient to meet design basis reliability requirements, additional design features should be provided or corrective modifications to the design should be made to ensure that the system meets reliability requirements.

Redundancy

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