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John Farquharson jfarquharson@absconsulting.com Safety Analysis Approaches – ISA vs. DSA – One Safety Analyst’s Opinion John Farquharson jfarquharson@absconsulting.com.

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Presentation on theme: "John Farquharson jfarquharson@absconsulting.com Safety Analysis Approaches – ISA vs. DSA – One Safety Analyst’s Opinion John Farquharson jfarquharson@absconsulting.com."— Presentation transcript:

1 John Farquharson jfarquharson@absconsulting.com
Safety Analysis Approaches – ISA vs. DSA – One Safety Analyst’s Opinion John Farquharson

2 Introduction For commercial nuclear fuel cycle facilities (e.g., enrichment, fuel fabrication), the NRC requires compliance with 10 CFR through an Integrated Safety Analysis (ISA) For DOE nonreactor nuclear facilities, the DOE requires compliance with 10 CFR 830 through a Documented Safety Analysis (DSA) This paper looks at similarities and differences between the ISA and DSA approach

3 Similarities Both regulations have been in existence for approximately a decade (since ~2000) The processes analyzed are both nonreactor, nuclear facilities with similar potential accidents of interest (i.e., loss of confinement, fires, nuclear criticality accidents)

4 Similarities (cont.) Both regulations reference a standard for the structure of the safety basis documents DOE-STD-3009 for DSAs NUREG-1513 (ISA guidance) Both regulations address multiple receptors “Facility workers” Co-located workers Public

5 Similarities (cont.) Consequence thresholds and categories for radiation and toxic exposures are similar Likelihood categories are generally similar (order of magnitude bins) Both standards reference the Center for Chemical Process Safety (CCPS) “red book” for hazard analysis methodology

6 Differences ISA promotes a layer of protection analysis (LOPA) approach with an approved scenario risk matrix used to: Judge acceptability of credited controls Items relied on for safety (IROFS) Provide guidance for probability of failure values for controls Screen out low likelihood initiating events

7 Differences (cont.) DSA is more consequence-driven
Qualitative guidance on acceptable controls No allowances to screen out initiating events No approved risk matrix Some DOE facilities (e.g., Pu) may have potentially higher consequences as compared to NRC-regulated ISA facilities

8 General Hazard Procedure (either approach)
Perform hazard identification Perform hazard evaluation List all available controls Select safety controls IROFS for ISA Safety class or safety significant structures, systems, and components (SSCs) for DSA Detailed accident analysis Derive agreement for operations of controls Management measures for ISA Technical safety requirements for DSA

9 Main Differences Between DSA and ISA Approach
Method for acceptance of risk due to postulated operational accident DSA – pick controls based on qualitative guidance Engineered over administrative controls Passive over active, etc. ISA – guidance in risk matrix approach that factors: Likelihood of postulated initiating event Probability of failure on demand of IROFS 9

10 LOPA More quantitative than a hazard and operability (HAZOP) analysis
Less quantitative than fault tree/event tree analyses Focuses on one scenario at a time Looks at Independent Layers of Protection (IPLs) Is another tool for judging risk 10 Course 201, Section 6

11 Layers of Defense Against a Possible Accident
11

12 LOPA is limited to evaluating a single cause-consequence pair
12

13 13

14 DSA Guidance for Choosing Safety Controls
From DOE-STD-3009, choose controls that: Are preventive over mitigative Reduce source term Are passive over active Are engineered over administrative Are nearest source Have the fewest active features Reduce risk the most Are effective for other accidents 14

15 ISA Guidance for Choosing Safety Controls
10 CFR – Performance Requirements (b) The risk of high consequence events must be limited. Engineering and administrative controls shall be used to keep events highly unlikely (guidance in NUREG-1520 as <1E-5/yr) or their consequences less than high High consequence event acute worker dose ³ 100 rem person outside controlled area dose ³ 25 rem 15

16 ISA Guidance for Choosing Safety Controls (cont.)
10 CFR – Performance Requirements (c) The risk of intermediate consequence events must be limited. Engineering and administrative controls shall be used to keep events unlikely (guidance in NUREG-1520 as <1E-4/yr) or their consequences low Intermediate consequence event not a high consequence event acute worker dose ³ 25 rem person outside controlled area dose ³ 5 rem 16

17 Standard Review Plan Risk Matrix
NUREG 1520 — Risk Matrix Likelihood Category 1: highly unlikely Likelihood Category 2: unlikely Likelihood Category 3: not unlikely Consequence Category 3 High 3 acceptable 6 unacceptable 9 unacceptable Consequence Category 2 Intermediate 2 acceptable 4 acceptable 6 unacceptable Consequence Category 1 Low 1 acceptable 2 acceptable 3 acceptable 17

18 Likelihood 10 CFR requires the applicant to define the likelihood terms “unlikely,” “highly unlikely,” and “credible.” All credible high-consequence events must be highly unlikely, and credible intermediate-consequence events must be unlikely for the risk to be acceptable. Events that are not credible may be exempt from the use of controls 18

19 Likelihood of Occurrence
Composed of the following two elements: The frequency of the initial event occurring despite prevention measures The reliability or effectiveness of protection measures that protect against the event progressing to the accident IROFSs Active engineered controls (AECs) Passive engineered controls (PECs) Administrative IROFSs 19

20 Not Credible Events External events < 1.0E-6/y
Process deviations requiring many unlikely human actions/errors for which there is no motive or reason Process deviations for which a convincing argument, based on physical laws, shows that they are not possible or unquestionably extremely unlikely 20

21 Highly Unlikely Events
Double contingency protection Likelihood index < -5 Estimated likelihood below 1.0E-5/y 21

22 Unlikely Events Engineered, hardware controls with high grade of management measures Enhanced administrative controls Likelihood index > -5 and < -4 Estimated likelihood below 1.0E-4/y 22

23 NUREG 1520 — Table A-8: Determination of Likelihood Category
Likelihood Index T (= sum of index numbers) 1 T £ - 5 2 - 5 < T £ - 4 3 - 4 < T 23

24 NUREG 1520 — Table A-9: Failure Frequency Index Numbers
-6* -4* -3* Based on Evidence External event with frequency <10-6/yr No failures in 30 years for hundreds of similar IROFS in industry No failures in 30 years for tens of similar IROFS in industry Based on Type of IROFS** Exceptionally robust passive engineered IROFS (PEC), or an inherently safe process, or 2 independent active engineered IROFS, PEC, or enhanced administrative IROFS A single IROFS with redundant parts, each a PEC or AEC Comments If initiating event, no IROFS needed Rarely can be justified by evidence. Further, most types of single IROFS have been observed to fail. -2* -1 No failure of this type in this plant in 30 years A few failures may occur during plant lifetime Failures occur every 1-3 years A single PEC A single AEC, an enhanced administrative IROFS, an administrative IROFS with large margin, or a redundant administrative IROFS A single administrative IROFS 1 Several occurrences per year Frequent event, inadequate IROFS 2 Occurs every week or more often Very frequent event, an inadequate IROFS Not for IROFS, just initiating events 24

25 NUREG 1520 — Table A-10: Failure Probability Index Numbers
-6* -4 or -5* Probability of Failure on Demand 10-6 Based on Type of IROFS Exceptionally robust passive engineered IROFS (PEC), or an inherently safe process, or 2 redundant IROFS more robust than simple administrative IROFS(AEC, PEC, or enhanced administrative) Comments If initiating event, no IROFS needed Rarely can be justified by evidence. Most types of single IROFS have been observed to fail. -3 or -4* A single passive engineered IROFS (PEC) or an active engineered IROFS (AEC) with high availability -2 or -3* -1 or -2 A single active engineered IROFS (AEC), or an enhanced administrative IROFS, or an administrative IROFS for routine planned operations An administrative IROFS that must be performed in response to a rare unplanned demand 25

26 Footnotes for Tables A-9 and A-10
* Indices less than (more negative than) -1 should not be assigned to IROFS unless the configuration management, auditing, and other management measures are of high quality, because without these measures, the IROFS may be changed or not maintained. ** Failure frequencies based on experience for a particular type of IROFS, as described in this column, may differ from values in column 1; in this case, data from experience take precedence.

27 Severity of Consequences
The severity of consequences of an accident is measured in terms of resulting health effects, including fatalities or exceeding personnel exposure limits 27

28 10 CFR 70.61 – Performance Requirements
4/21/2017 10 CFR – Performance Requirements High consequence event Acute worker dose ³ 100 rem Person outside controlled area dose ³ 25 rem Person outside controlled area intake ³ 30 mg soluble U Acute chemical exposure (from or produced by licensed material) that could endanger a worker’s life or could cause irreversible or serious, long-lasting health effects to persons outside the controlled area 28 347c01, Section 1

29 10 CFR 70.61 – Performance Requirements (cont.)
Immediate consequence event Not a high consequence event Acute worker dose ³ 25 rem Person outside controlled area dose ³ 5 rem 24-hour average release of radioactive material outside restricted area concentration > 5,000 times Table 2, App B, Part 20 Acute chemical exposure (from or produced by licensed material) that could cause irreversible or serious, long-lasting worker health effects or mild, transient health effects to persons outside the controlled area 29

30 Comparisons – DSA vs. ISA
DSA – qualitative guidance on picking controls ISA – agency-wide accepted risk matrix approach ISA – justification for operational events being “noncredible” Same controls selected? 30

31 WRAF FACILITY HVAC/HEPA Roof Fire Suppression System Notes:
Block wall Backup N2 Supply Ground Level Sloping floor & Graded Sump Concrete Lid Precipitate Tank Sludge Transfer Recycle Site N Supply Benzene Purge Tank Overflow Rollup Door Roof Tank Air Vent valve Fire Suppression System Facility Stack HVAC/HEPA Benzene/O2 Monitor System N2 pressure gauge and alarm WRAF FACILITY Notes: _____________________________________________________________________

32 Using the WRAF Example Identify the set of controls for a case study accident scenario identified in the hazard analysis EXPLOSION (Exposure to off site > 100 rem) Potential controls: 1. Benzene purge 2. Confinement ventilation 3. Benzene/oxygen monitoring 4. Fire suppression system


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