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I&C Safety Guide DRAFT 20110803.doc
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7.19. I&c systems should be redundant to the degree needed to meet design basis reliability requirements.

7.20. Redundancy is commonly used in I&C systems to achieve system reliability goals including conformity with the single failure criterion. For redundancy to be fully effective, independence is also necessary (see paragraphs 7.21-7.47). Taken alone, redundancy increases the reliability, but it also increases the probability of spurious operation. Coincidence of redundant signals (voting logic) or a rejection scheme for spurious signals that is based on comparisons of the redundant signals is commonly used to obtain an appropriate balance of reliability and freedom from spurious operation.

Independence

7.21. SSR 2/1 Requirement 21 states that:

Interference between safety systems or between redundant elements of a system shall be prevented by means such as physical separation, electrical isolation, functional independence and independence of communication (data transfer), as appropriate.

7.22. SSR 2/1 Paragraph 5.35 states that:

The design shall be such as to ensure that any interference between items important to safety shall be prevented. In particular any failure of items important to safety in a system classified in a lower safety class will not propagate to a system classified in a higher safety class.

7.23. The concept of independence between systems and equipment encompasses the ability to perform required functions without being affected by the other equipment or system and the ability of the systems to perform their required functions without both being affected by the same PIE, internal hazard, or external hazard.

7.24. Independence is provided to prevent a failure or internal or external hazard from affecting redundant elements of safety systems. It also prevents a failure or hazard from affecting systems that provide different levels of defence in depth. Failure processes to be considered include: failures resulting from design basis events, exposure to the same hazards, failure of common support systems, electrical connections between systems or divisions, data exchange between systems or divisions, or common errors in design, manufacture, operations, or maintenance.

7.25. Redundant portions of safety groups should be independent from each other to ensure that the safety group can perform its safety functions during and following any design basis event that requires these functions.

7.26. Means for providing independence include the following features: physical separation, electrical isolation, functional independence, independence from the effects of communications errors, protection against errors in shared data, equipment qualification, and diversity. Generally a combination of these features may be necessary to achieve independence goals.

7.27. When isolation devices are used between systems of different safety importance, they should be a part of the system of higher importance.

7.28. Measures provided for isolation from various physical effects, electrical faults, and communications errors do not necessarily need to be in the same physical device or at the same location in a circuit. Isolation functions for a single effect may also be shared by more than one device.

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