Industrial safety system

An industrial safety system is a countermeasure crucial in any hazardous plants such as oil and gas plants and nuclear plants. They are used to protect human, industrial plant, and the environment in case of the process going beyond the allowed control margins.

Protection through the use of safety layers.

As the name suggests, these systems are not intended for controlling the process itself but rather protection. Process control is performed by means of process control systems (PCS) and is interlocked by the safety systems so that immediate actions are taken should the process control systems fail.

Process control and safety systems are usually merged under one system, called an integrated control and safety system (ICSS). Industrial safety systems typically use dedicated systems that are SIL 2 certified at minimum; whereas control systems can start with SIL 1. SIL applies to both hardware and software requirements such as cards, processors redundancy and voting functions.

Types

There are 2 main types of industrial safety systems in process industry:[1]

  • Process safety system (PSS) or process shutdown system (PSS).
  • Safety shutdown system (SSS): This includes emergency shutdown (ESD) and emergency depressurization (EDP) systems.

A third system also exists which acts as a barrier and contains the spray out of hot oil & gases from flanges, valves & pipe joints. These systems are popularly known as safety spray shields and flange guards. The use of spray guards is mandated by OSHA.

Emergency shutdown (ESD)

These systems may also be redefined in terms of ESD/EDP levels as:

  • ESD level 1: In charge of general plant area shutdown, can activate ESD level 2 if necessary. This level can only be activated from main control room in the process industrial plants.
  • ESD level 2: This level shuts down and isolates individual ESD zones and activates if necessary EDP.
  • ESD level 3: provides "liquid inventory containment".

Safety shutdown system (SSS)

The safety shutdown system (SSS) shall shut down the facilities to a safe state in case of an emergency situation, thus protecting personnel, the environment and the asset. The safety shutdown system shall manage all inputs and outputs relative to emergency shutdown (ESD) functions (environment and personnel protection). This system might also be fed by signals from the main fire and gas system.

Fire and gas system (FGS)

The main objectives of the fire and gas (FGS) system are to protect personnel, environment, and plant (including equipment and structures). The FGS shall achieve these objectives by:

  • Detecting at an early stage, the presence of flammable gas,
  • Detecting at an early stage, the liquid spill (LPG and LNG),
  • Detecting incipient fire and the presence of fire,
  • Providing automatic and/or facilities for manual activation of the fire protection system as required,
  • Initiating environmental changes to keep liquids below their flash point[2]
  • Initiating signals, both audible and visible as required, to warn of the detected hazards,
  • Initiating automatic shutdown of equipment and ventilation if 2 out of 2 or 2 out of 3 detectors are triggered,
  • Initiating the exhausting system.[3]

Emergency depressurization (EDP)

Emergency depressurization, or blowdown, is an important system for safeguarding process plant in the event of an emergency. Equipment such as pressure vessels exposed to fire could undergo catastrophic failure leading to an uncontrolled loss of containment. Depressurization reduces potential failure by removing inventory from the plant thereby decreasing the internal mechanical stresses and extending the plant’s integrity at elevated temperatures.[4]

As described above a process plant is typically divided into isolatable sections by emergency shutdown valves (ESDVs). Each section may be designated as belonging to a fire zone that is depressurized by a dedicated blowdown (depressurization) valve (BDV). During ESD conditions, the depressurization of only specific isolatable sections is undertaken. However, during more widespread emergency circumstances, the whole facility may be depressurized.[4]

In a typical depressurization system, the goal is to reduce the pressure in the plant to less than 50% of the design pressure within 15 minutes, or to reduce the internal pressure to 7 barg from the design pressure in 15 minutes.[4]

In certain circumstances, flare systems may not have the capacity to handle the entire plant's depressurization load. The blowdown of certain plant may be delayed until after the peak of the depressurization flow has passed.

Depressurization facility

A depressurization system comprises an actuated valve and a restriction orifice. The BDV valve is normally held in the closed position but opens on demand or on failure of the actuator. A restriction orifice (RO) downstream of the BDV is sized to achieve the desired blowdown rate. A locked open valve may be located downstream of the orifice. The valve, in the closed position, allows the functionality of the BDV to be tested without depressurizing that section of the plant.[5]

Pressure safety valves

Pressure safety valves (PSVs) are usually used as a final safety solution when all previous systems fail to prevent any further pressure accumulation and protect vessels from rupture due to overpressure by their designed action.

See also

Notes

  1. Most of this article is summarized from some Yemen LNG documentation on safety systems, No. YE-001-30-POC-JBS-25300 and YE-001-30-POC-JBS-25200.
  2. "Flash Points and Industrial Fire Safety Videos". Falck Productions. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  3. "Ventilation. - 1926.57". U.S. DOL, OSHA. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  4. Dole, R (December 2013). "Design a staggered depressurization sequence for flare systems". Hydrocarbon Processing. 92 (12): 57, 58, 60.
  5. Piping and Instrumentation Diagrams, various plants
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