Safety Integrity Level Selection Proper design of safety instrumented systems begins with the selection of a performance target for the functions employed by a SIS. Standards such as ISA 84.01 call this target the Safety Integrity Level (SIL). Selection of an appropriate SIL as an exercise in risk analysis. Selection considers the frequency of initiating events, consequences of inaction, and other independent protection layers to determine the performance target. Conceptual Design Verification After a performance target has been selected, achievement of this target should be verified by quantitative means. Verification includes determination of probability of failure on demand, spurious trip rates, and other performance metrics. This verification considers the type of equipment employed, advanced voting arrangements, diagnostics, and testing frequency. Kenexis performs design verification utilizing its advanced software tools and proprietary databases of equipment performance statistics. Safety Requirements Specification All of the requirements developed during risk analysis and conceptual design phases of the lifecycle, and other safety critical requirements, need to be collected and presented in a design basis document that can be used for subsequent detailed design engineering. Kenexis assists in the preparation of safety requirements specifications packages that ensure a sound design basis and provide a guideline for subsequent acceptance testing activities. Maintenance and Testing (Validation) Ensuring the ongoing integrity of a SIS throughout its lifecycle requires vigilant maintenance and testing practices that are in alignment with the risk analysis assumptions and requirements specifications. Kenexis helps its customers to meet their mechanical integrity requirements by developing test procedures for safety instrumented systems, and assisting in the implementation of those tests. Kenexis also helps to ensure good lifecycle performance by monitoring and tracking actual equipment performance against assumptions, and auditing system activity and changes to reconcile system performance and equipment changes against initial assumptions and specifications.
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