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I&C Safety Guide DRAFT 20110803.doc
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3.12. In addition to the above the design basis for the reactor protection system should specify the following:

  1. The limiting values of parameters required to actuate for safety systems (analytical limits);

  2. Variables and states that must be displayed so that the operators can confirm the operation of protective system functions;

  3. The justification for any safety actions that are not automatically initiated, including:

  1. The time and plant conditions for which manual control is allowed.

  2. The justification for permitting initiation or control after initiation, solely by manual means.

  3. The range of environmental conditions under which the operators must take manual action during plant operational states and accident conditions.

  4. The variables that must be displayed so that the operators can take them into account when performing manual actions.

  1. The conditions under which bypass of I&C safety functions are to be permitted.

A method of temporarily disabling an I&C safety function, called an Operational Bypass, might be needed to allow for changes in operating modes.

Maintenance bypasses might also be needed to allow disabling or reducing the redundancy of a I&C function to allow for maintenance or testing during reactor operation. Reactors that have short operating cycles (e.g., less than 90 days) may not need Maintenance Bypasses.

Both maintenance and operational bypasses need to be taken into account.

  1. The requirements for diverse functions to mitigate the consequences of common cause failure.

  2. The limitations on materials to be used to avoid damage from DBA conditions.

4. Guidance for overall I&c system architecture architectural design

4.1. The overall I&C system architecture provides high level definition of the I&C systems, the assignment of I&C functions to these systems, and the communications between I&C systems. The implementation of the defence-in-depth concept for I&C is mostly achieved at the level of the overall I&C architectural design as are many of the provisions to achieve independence between levels of defence in depth.

4.2. Modern I&C systems are more highly integrated than were the last generation of I&C systems. The architecture of highly integrated systems needs to be carefully considered to ensure proper implementation of a defence in depth concept. A well designed architecture can reduce the complexity of I&C systems and can locate essential complexity in systems where it can be better managed or where it will pose less risk to plant safety. For example, in existing designs the separation of I&C functions between safety and safety related systems allocates complex functions to safety related systems and limits the safety systems to the performance of simple functions.

4.3. The overall I&c architecture should:

  1. Provide all I&C functions needed to fulfil the design basis;

  2. Provide systems necessary to support the defence in depth concept of the plant;

  3. Define the interfaces between the individual I&C systems, and

  4. Divide the overall I&C system into individual systems as necessary to:

  1. Support design basis requirements for independence between functions in different levels of the defence in depth concept;

  2. Adequately separate systems and functions of different safety classes;

  3. Establish the redundancy needed to fulfil design basis reliability requirements;

  4. Support the compliance of safety systems with the single failure criterion;

  5. Provide necessary information to the main control room and supplementary control rooms;

  6. Provide necessary operator controls in the main control room and supplementary control rooms; and

  7. Provide automatic controls necessary to maintain and limit the process variables within the specified operational ranges.

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