BS EN 50402:2017 – TC:2020 Edition
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Tracked Changes. Electrical apparatus for the detection and measurement of combustible or toxic gases or vapours or of oxygen. Requirements on the functional safety of gas detection systems
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2020 | 232 |
This European Standard is applicable to apparatus and systems for the detection and measurement of flammable or toxic gases or vapours or oxygen. This European Standard is a product standard which is based on EN 61508 (all parts) and for gas detection systems covers both low and high demand mode at SIL capabilities of 1, 2 or 3 only. Gas detection apparatus and gas detection systems are developed as generic products. This standard covers part of the phase 10 “realisation” of the overall safety lifecycle defined in Figure 2 of EN 61508-1:2010. Configuration and integration into specific applications is not covered by this standard. In the event of conflict between the requirements of this standard and those of EN 61508, EN 50402 will take precedence. NOTE 1 Applications requiring a SIL capability of 4 for a gas detection system are not practicable. NOTE 2 This European Standard is dedicated mainly to fixed apparatus. For portable gas detectors claiming a SIL higher than 1, this European Standard may be applied. This European Standard supplements the requirements of the European Standards for electrical apparatus for the detection and measurement of flammable gases, vapours (e.g. EN 60079-29-1 or EN 60079-29-4), toxic gases (e.g. EN 45544) or oxygen (e.g. EN 50104). NOTE 3 These European Standards are called in the text ‘metrological standards’. The examples above show the state of the standardisation for industrial applications at the time of publishing this European Standard. There may be other metrological standards covering other application fields, for which this European Standard is also applicable. EN 50271 specifies minimum requirements for apparatus using software and/or digital components. It also defines additional optional requirements for compliance with SIL 1 in low demand mode operation. EN 50402 includes all requirements of EN 50271. EN 50402 is also dedicated to apparatus and gas detection systems and/or components and should be used instead of EN 50271 in the following cases: – At SIL 1 when the system contains components not covered by EN 50271; – At SIL 2 and SIL 3; – At all SILs when non-digital based apparatus is used. Applying the above-mentioned metrological standards will ensure the measuring performance is adequate in normal operation of a gas detection system. Additionally the requirements of this European Standard address the functional safety of gas detection systems and encompass criteria for reliability, fault tolerance and avoidance of systematic failures. The avoidance and control of systematic failures will be covered by the requirements for the development processes and techniques and diagnostic measures chosen in the design. This European Standard will lead to the characterisation of the gas detection system by a SIL-capability and related hardware failure rate representing a hierarchical order of safety levels. This will allow the user to incorporate the gas detection system into an overall safety system according to the safety integrity levels of EN 61508 (all parts). This European Standard is applicable for gas detection systems, which may consist of the following functional units: – gas-sampling; – sensor; – signal transmission; – input to control unit; – signal processing in control unit; – output from control unit. This European Standard does not specify requirements for the installation and maintenance of gas detection systems. It also does not specify the physical positioning of measuring points / locations. This European Standard does not specify which SIL-capability is sufficient for which application. NOTE 4 The SIL-capability required for an application will be specified by the user (see Clause 9 and Annex A ).
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | compares BS EN 50402:2017 |
2 | TRACKED CHANGES Text example 1 — indicates added text (in green) |
142 | 1 Scope |
143 | 2 Normative references |
144 | 3 Terms and definitions |
149 | 4 General requirements 4.1 Specification of safety functions |
155 | 4.2 Determination of safety function |
156 | 4.3 Functional safety characteristics of modules |
157 | 5 Functional modules and elements — Characterization and requirements 5.1 General 5.1.1 Structure of functional modules |
161 | 5.1.2 General requirements |
162 | 5.2 Gas sampling 5.2.1 Gas aspiration 5.2.2 Conditioning of measured gas |
163 | 5.2.3 Gas multiplexer 5.2.4 Gas sampling by diffusion mode 5.2.5 Automatic calibration and adjustment |
164 | 5.3 Sensor |
165 | 5.4 Signal-transmission 5.4.1 General requirements 5.4.2 Signal-transmission between spatially separated modules |
167 | 5.4.3 Signal-transmission between modules not spatially separated |
168 | 5.5 Input to signal processing 5.5.1 General 5.5.2 Interface for measured signal 5.5.3 Input system communication 5.5.4 User interface |
169 | 5.5.5 Input from periphery 5.5.6 Power supply 5.5.6.1 External power connection 5.5.6.2 Internal regulated power supply 5.6 Signal processing 5.6.1 General |
171 | 5.6.2 Calculation of measured values 5.6.3 Special state |
172 | 5.6.4 Signal assessment |
173 | 5.6.5 Diagnostic means within a control unit |
175 | 5.6.6 Reduced mode of operation |
176 | 5.6.7 Aspiration control 5.6.8 Gas multiplexer control 5.6.9 Control of automatic calibration |
177 | 5.6.10 Control of automatic adjustment 5.7 Output of the control 5.7.1 Visual indication |
178 | 5.7.2 Switching output |
179 | 5.7.3 Output system communication |
180 | 5.7.4 Output to periphery 5.7.5 Data archives |
181 | 6 Software 6.1 General requirements 6.2 Context of the Software Standard 6.3 Requirements from EN 615083 |
182 | 6.4 List of replaced or not relevant clauses in EN 615083:2010 |
183 | 6.5 List of changes to clauses in EN 615083 |
186 | 6.6 EN 50402 Levels of rigour |
187 | 6.7 Tables of techniques and measures from EN 615083:2010, Annex A 6.7.1 Explanation of terms 6.7.2 Writing conventions in the tables of techniques and measures 6.7.3 Software requirements specification 6.7.3.1 EN 50402 software requirements specification |
189 | 6.7.3.2 Semi-formal and formal methods 6.7.3.3 Verification of the requirements specification 6.7.3.4 Verification of completeness and correctness |
190 | 6.7.3.5 Understandability 6.7.3.6 Freedom from adverse interference by non-safety functions 6.7.3.7 Capability of providing a basis for validation 6.7.4 Software architecture design 6.7.4.1 EN 50402 software architecture design |
193 | 6.7.4.2 Verification of the software architecture |
194 | 6.7.5 Software design and development – Support tools and programming language 6.7.6 Software detailed design 6.7.6.1 EN 50402 software detailed design |
196 | 6.7.6.2 Semi-formal methods |
197 | 6.7.7 Software module testing and integration |
199 | 6.7.8 PE integration (hardware + software) |
200 | 6.7.9 Software validation |
201 | 6.7.10 Modification |
202 | 6.7.11 Software Verification |
204 | 7 Combining Functional Modules to Safety Functions 7.1 SIL-capability |
205 | 7.2 Determination of SIL-capabilities for a safety function 7.2.1 General |
206 | 7.2.2 Summarizing of single chains 7.2.3 Summarizing of parallel chains |
207 | 8 Determination of hardware failure rates for each safety function |
208 | 9 Gas detection as part of an overall safety function |
209 | 10 Information requirements |
210 | 11 Validation |
211 | 12 Functional safety management 13 Functional safety assessment 14 Documentation |
212 | Annex A (normative)Transformation of the SIL-capabilities of gas detection systems A.1 Introduction A.2 Transformation of the SIL-capabilities of gas detection systems to the safety integrity levels of EN 61508 (all parts) |
213 | Annex B (normative)Transformation from generic standard requirements to modules B.1 General B.2 SIL-capability 1 B.3 SIL-capability 2 |
214 | B.4 SIL-capability 3 |
215 | Annex C (informative)Determination of SIL-capability of a safety functionof the gas detection system C.1 General C.2 Procedure of determination of SIL-capability |
221 | C.3 Example: Determination of SIL-capability for a gas detection system C.3.1 General C.3.2 Example: Characterization of relay outputs of control units A and B |
223 | C.3.3 Example: Characterization of relay output of common alarm |
225 | Annex D (informative)Failure modes for specific measuring principles D.1 Introduction D.2 Failure modes relevant to most or all types of measuring principles and types of sensing elements D.2.1 Generic failure modes D.2.2 Failure modes identified in the metrological standards |
226 | D.3 Catalytic sensing elements D.4 Thermal conductivity sensing elements D.5 Infrared sensing elements D.5.1 Point detectors |
227 | D.5.2 Open path detectors D.5.3 TDLAS (e.g. for oxygen) D.6 Semiconductor sensing elements D.7 Electrochemical sensing elements D.7.1 Galvanic — Lead based oxygen |
228 | D.7.2 Amperometric with organic or aqueous electrolyte D.8 FID sensing elements D.9 FTA sensing elements |
229 | D.10 Paramagnetic sensing elements D.10.1 General D.10.2 Principle using a dumbbell D.10.3 Microflow Measuring Principle |
230 | D.10.4 Measurement of magnetic susceptibility D.10.5 Paramagnetic thermal effect D.11 PID sensing elements |