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Reliability, Availability, Maintainability &
Safety [ RAMS ] Conference & Workshop 2006
25 – 27 April 2006
Crowne Plaza Mutiara Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
The Impact of Surge Protection on
Reliability, Availability, Maintenance
and Return on Assets
Alvin Chin
MTL Instruments Pte Ltd
The Impact of Surge Protection on Reliability, Availability,
Maintenance and Return on Assets
Abstract :
There’s a lot of pressure on process plants these days to invest in order to
maximize efficiency. However, addressing a much overlooked and underestimated problem
can have a significant positive effect, at a minimal cost.
Transient voltages (or surges) are the root cause of up to 30% of premature
hardware failures and can be the cause of catastrophic plant failure. Conversely, controlling
surge voltages by the strategic application of surge protection
devices has been shown to improve the return achieved on plant assets and
mitigate the undesirable consequences of a catastrophic event.
Keywords
Surge protection, reliability, availability and lightning protection.
Acknowledgement :
The assistance given by Mr. Anthony Bird ( MTL Surge Technologies Business Unit )
in the preparation of this paper is gratefully acknowledged.
1. Introduction
For many years process plant managers have installed surge protection devices as a precaution against cata-
strophic damage due to lightning. The most keen are those whose memory of serious trouble is fresh. However,
studies have shown that the obvious surge related damage ( blackened hardware) is only the tip of a very large
iceberg. A recent study by a major European insurance company indicated that lightning and surge are the
single most significant cause for control equipment failure. A close second is lack of maintenance. Together
surge and maintenance account for over 50% of premature electronic equipment failures.
This paper postulates that there is an appropriate level of surge protection, that when applied to a plant, re-
duces equipment failure directly, increases plant availability and indirectly frees the maintenance team up to
perform a more proactive role and tackles the issues of lacking maintenance .
Improvements can be measured in terms of Return on Assets (ROA) – a key measure of operational
performance.
Surge protection can lead to improvements in ROA in three areas.
1. Direct savings in hardware
- reduction in premature equipment / instrument failures
- elimination of catastrophic failure
2. Increased plant availability
3. Indirect savings as a result of a better deployed maintenance crew
2. Underestimating the problem
Surge overvoltages are simply short duration, high magnitude impulses that exist on all electrical (power and
signal) lines for a very short microsecond duration. Common causes can range from lightning strikes to switch-
ing of electrical loads [1]. The common belief among plant managers and finance gurus is that their plant does
not experience surge-related problems. This belief guarantees that preventative action (such as surge protec-
tion) will not be taken. However a closer inspection reveals that a wide range of electronic devices are failing
well short of their design life. These failures are just not associated with surge overvoltage by the plant mainte-
nance team and are being overlooked as equipment ‘s wear and tear.
A study by a major European insurance company illustrates the problem. Over 7700 items of industrial electron-
ics were evaluated. The most significant cause of premature failure was Surge overvoltage. In fact surge
damage contributed to 28% of failures.
Just as interesting is the next most significant category; lack of maintenance which contributed 25% of failures.
The intriguing prospect is that much effort and “focus” is devoted to maintenance. However, surge protection
could eliminate a substantial number of failures, maximize the design life of hardware and potentially freeing up
time for the maintenance team , hence improving the efficiency and availability of the maintenance team.
3. Why are surge voltages a problem now?
Few would argue with the relentless increase in sophistication of 21st century control and instrumentation
architecture. Trends that have been in place for the last decade are accelerating. Control (and processing
power) has escaped from the control room and is being rapidly deployed all over the plant in remote I/O,
sensors and actuators.
Due to the increase miniaturization of electronics , modern day instruments and its associated electronics
systems are much more susceptible to the damaging surge overvoltages. Who would argue that a lightning
strike to a modern facility poses a much greater threat to operational performance than a strike to an older
generation plant deploying pneumatic control. More importantly who would argue that the next generation of
instruments will be more sophisticated than the current offering.
In a similar vein the current trend toward buses (Fieldbus etc.) has obvious and significant benefits to
operational performance and installed cost. However, there is also a dark side. One cable is used to
connect many field devices, up to 32 in the case of Fieldbus, back to the control host. One surge related
incident now has the potential to affect a whole plant area as compared to the traditional poin to point
whereby one device is on a single 4-20mA loop.
Now is the time to consider surge protection!
4. Purported mitigation techniques
There are many techniques adopted in a process plant that do have a beneficial effect in reducing the magni-
tude of the surge threat. Unfortunately the inexperienced often overestimate this beneficial effect.
The phrase, “We don’t need to use surge protection because we have……. ..” is a common cry, (fill in the blank
with, lightning protection, earthing, bonding, or a UPS etc.). The following paragraphs explain the erroneous
nature of such assumptions. A more rigorous evaluation is detailed in the references.
4.1 Structural lightning protection and earthing
Structural lightning protection comprises an air terminal, down conductors (or contiguous metal structure) and
an earthing system. The purpose of which is to safely route lightning current to ground [2], [3].
In the example shown in Fig 2, lightning hits the air terminal on the stack and, as you would expect, current
flows into the earth. The structural lightning protection has indeed done its job - providing a point of attachment
for the lightning channel and a safe path
to earth. Some would believe that that’s the end of it, but lightning current does not miraculously disappear.
Ground has resistance.
Let’s assume the facility has a good, low impedance earth of 1 ohm. Close to the point at which the current
enters the ground a potential of 100kV ( assuming a 100kA strike ; V = R x I ) will be developed momentarily for
a couple of hundreds of micro seconds . This rise in ground voltage is known as earth potential rise ( EPR ) and
this voltage will decay as you move further away from the stack . This develops a potential gradient across the
ground commonly known as earth potential gradient (EPG). At several hundred meters the voltage will be a few
kV. The result of this potential gradient is that 97kV exists between the control room at the Main Control Building
and the stack structure.
The fact that 97kV appears between the stack and the control room is not actually a problem until you connect
an instrumentation cable between a transmitter on the stack and the control room.
Once an instrumentation cable links the two points, the shear magnitude of the 97kV will break down the
isolation of the transmitter and allow a small portion of the lightning current to flow in the instrument cable. So,
the simple installation of structural lightning protection does NOT eliminate the risk to electronics.
4.2 Site Equipotential bonding.
The obvious solution to this 97kV problem is to provide a continuous bond between all of the parts of the plant
(grid rebar system) [4].
In fact most plants will be constructed using an equipotential earth grid of some type. So does bonding across
the plant eliminate this problem?
Not quite. While bonding has a positive effect on the installation, due to the inductance of the bonding and the
stack itself, a voltage will still develop. This is due to the nature of the lightning impulses. The lightning surges
have extremely fast edges and high amplitudes up to 200kV or more , and as such inductance dominates.
Based on the simple formula , V = L di/dt where L is the inductance measured in micro-henry per meter and di/
dt is the rate of change of the lightning impulses ; a resultant 60kV exists between the control room and the
transmitter mounted on the stack. As can be seen in the Fig. 3, the transient voltage peak has been reduced
from 97kV to 60kV. Certainly equipotential bonding makes an improvement but the resulting surge voltage is
still orders of magnitude higher than the susceptibility of the plant equipment.
4.3 Uninteruptible Power Supplies
Another piece of equipment commonly considered as providing surge protection is a UPS. An Uninterruptible
Power Supply is an investment in a large plant, installed to provide continuous power for a defined period of
time after loss of the utility supply.
Typically this allows time for generator start up.
Few realize that this back-up system is itself vulnerable to large magnitude surges, specifically in three ways.
1. The automatic transfer switch is a sophisticated microprocessor controlled device, which is itself vulner-
able to surge. Damage here may prevent changeover to the generator or auxiliary supply.
2. The control lines run from the automatic transfer switch to the generator. These lines tell the generator to
start prior to operation of the changeover switch. Surge damage to this connection (either at the generator
end or the transfer switch) means no back up supply when the UPS batteries run out.
3. Finally the front end of the UPS is basically a rectifier which can be damaged by severe surges as can the
automatic bypass. So while a UPS system provides a valuable function to the site and a modest amount of
protection against surge, its surge protective function should not be overstated. Indeed in many cases the
UPS is a valuable asset whose function should be adequately surge protected.
To summarize there are many techniques currently in use that do indeed have a mitigation effect on lightning
and surge voltages, however we must be very careful not to overstate their efficacy.
5. Financial justification
The desirability of operating electronics in a controlled transient environment is obvious. Will electronic systems
operate longer in environments where surge voltages are controlled to tens of volts as compared to kilovolts?
Of course!
Based on experiences and statistics, less than 5% of equipment and instruments systems failures are due
to catastrophic causes such as lightning strikes, transmission faults, or brownouts. The remaining 95% of
failures are due to repeated degradation of the equipment from transients that fall into a category between
safe or normal and catastrophic operation of a microprocessor or an IC. Visualize the relative effects of
destructive surges riding on sample waveforms on the pin of an IC or microprocessor of the typical plant
instrumentation systems . The result of repeated attack on solid state devices by transients shown at the
degradation level are unexplained “clear blue day” failures of the instruments such as level transmitters,
tempearture transmitters and its asscociated I/O sub-systems. Such effects significantly reduce mean-
time-between-failures (MBTF) of the system.
Control and instrumentation systems are significant assets with design life of 20 years or more. An uncontrolled
surge environment can reduce the useful life of these assets significantly.
Surge Protection devices provide that controlled surge environment [5], thereby removing one of the most
significant causes of premature electronics failure. The problem for those who have not witnessed a cata-
strophic problem is how to justify the expenditure.
6. Return on Assets
A common question, once the plant manager understands that equipment is indeed failing prematurely, is how
to justify the expenditure on surge. The finance team will immediately question the Return on investment (ROI)
in surge. Unfortunately ROI is a ineffective tool for evaluating whether or not surge protection should be de-
ployed, since the calculation does not take into account the consequences of a sudden breakdown or failure. A
better measure would be Return on Assets (ROA) [6].
Return on Assets is defined as operating income divided by total assets. The higher the value the more effi-
ciently the plant is using its assets. Clearly plant assets that are not contributing to income can impact ROA, or
worse non functioning assets, that are contributing to a loss of income, have a negative impact on ROA. With
this in mind we can evaluate the effect of surge voltages on plant operation.
Review the “electronic assets” of the plant, what would be the improvement in availability (and hence ROA) if
25% of the premature equipment failures could be eliminated?
Review each asset, from individual component (actuators, transmiiters , sensors etc.) through to process
cells and plant control systems and modules, how does failure of this equipment effect plant operations
and hence profit?
By asking questions such as these we can prioritize the application of surge protection to equipment whose
failure would have the biggest negative impact on ROA.
The next dimension to this story is risk. If the risk of a surge problem is extremely small, it will be difficult to
justify surge protection at all but the most critical of applications.
7. Risk.
An intensive Reliability Availability and Maintenance (RAM) [7] program has been shown to reduce mainte-
nance expenditure and increase plant availability. We can use the basic tenant of a RAM analysis, risk manage-
ment, to provide insight into where surge should be applied to achieve the greatest improvement in ROA.
Plant engineers are encouraged to understand the risk of surge related reliability and availability problems.
Perhaps the easiest technique is to develop a risk matrix reflecting the probability of occurrence versus the
consequences. The Risk Matrix as shown below is a good example.
7.1 Explanations of risk.
Very likely
Sensors located on tall structures (>10m), stacks etc. Islands of equipment – located some distance from the
main plant but connected by power and instrumentation lines.
Likely
Long runs of instrumentation cable (greater than 100m). Unprotected power systems, risk increases if the
facility has an overhead power feed.
Possible
Typical plant power and instrumentation topology
Unlikely
Self contained units with short instrumentation cable runs and a protected power supply.
This is a much simplified decision matrix, but it demonstrates the basic concept of installing or specifying surge
protection in areas most likely to have a detrimental effect on operational performance and hence ROA.
8. Conclusions
Experience dictates that plant engineers tend to underestimate the impact of surge voltages, both in terms of
the cost of premature failure of electronics and the impact on plant availability and hence ROA.
Between 25% and 30% of premature hardware failures can be attributed to surge voltage. Current industry
trends suggest that surge related failures are likely to increase as electronics become more sophisticated.
Further the impact of a single surge related problem is likely to have a greater impact on operations in today’s
and future plants.
The old wives tales will provide less and less comfort. “We don’t need to worry, we have a full lightning protec-
tion system and the best earthing system available!”Oh really?
View the control and instrumentation system as an asset whose function provides the operational return
(profit). Which of these assets if disabled or subject to prematurely failure, will have the most significant
impact on plant operations?
Finally review the risk exposure of these assets to surge related damage. Protect the hardware that has the
highest impact on ROA and is at risk to damage from surge.
In today’s ever more complex process environment, a properly designed surge protection plan is a key step in
improving plant reliability, increasing availability and hence maximizing Return on Assets.
9. References:
[1] “Lightning and surge protection for electronic equipment –a practical guide” MTL SurgeTechnologies,
TAN1001
[2] “Lightning and surge protection –basic principles” MTL Surge Technologies, TAN1002
[3] R.H. Golde “Lightning: Vol2 Lightning Protection” Academeic press, 1977
[4] “Earthing Guide for surge protection” MTL Surge Technologies, TAN1003
[5] A. O. Bird, “Specification and installation of effective overvoltage protection”, 20th International Confer-
ence on LightningProtection (ICLP) Sept 24-28 1990
[6] D Woll, “ROA Measure business performance and drives manufacturing strategy”, ARC Insights, vol
2002-16HM&P.
[7] N. Ebrahim and J Watt, “Production excelence at Bapco through reliability, availability and maintenance
improvements”,Hydrocarbon Asia, pp. 52-54, Oct 2004

More Related Content

RAMS Tech Paper

  • 1. Reliability, Availability, Maintainability & Safety [ RAMS ] Conference & Workshop 2006 25 – 27 April 2006 Crowne Plaza Mutiara Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia The Impact of Surge Protection on Reliability, Availability, Maintenance and Return on Assets Alvin Chin MTL Instruments Pte Ltd
  • 2. The Impact of Surge Protection on Reliability, Availability, Maintenance and Return on Assets Abstract : There’s a lot of pressure on process plants these days to invest in order to maximize efficiency. However, addressing a much overlooked and underestimated problem can have a significant positive effect, at a minimal cost. Transient voltages (or surges) are the root cause of up to 30% of premature hardware failures and can be the cause of catastrophic plant failure. Conversely, controlling surge voltages by the strategic application of surge protection devices has been shown to improve the return achieved on plant assets and mitigate the undesirable consequences of a catastrophic event. Keywords Surge protection, reliability, availability and lightning protection. Acknowledgement : The assistance given by Mr. Anthony Bird ( MTL Surge Technologies Business Unit ) in the preparation of this paper is gratefully acknowledged. 1. Introduction For many years process plant managers have installed surge protection devices as a precaution against cata- strophic damage due to lightning. The most keen are those whose memory of serious trouble is fresh. However, studies have shown that the obvious surge related damage ( blackened hardware) is only the tip of a very large iceberg. A recent study by a major European insurance company indicated that lightning and surge are the single most significant cause for control equipment failure. A close second is lack of maintenance. Together surge and maintenance account for over 50% of premature electronic equipment failures. This paper postulates that there is an appropriate level of surge protection, that when applied to a plant, re- duces equipment failure directly, increases plant availability and indirectly frees the maintenance team up to perform a more proactive role and tackles the issues of lacking maintenance . Improvements can be measured in terms of Return on Assets (ROA) – a key measure of operational performance. Surge protection can lead to improvements in ROA in three areas. 1. Direct savings in hardware - reduction in premature equipment / instrument failures - elimination of catastrophic failure
  • 3. 2. Increased plant availability 3. Indirect savings as a result of a better deployed maintenance crew 2. Underestimating the problem Surge overvoltages are simply short duration, high magnitude impulses that exist on all electrical (power and signal) lines for a very short microsecond duration. Common causes can range from lightning strikes to switch- ing of electrical loads [1]. The common belief among plant managers and finance gurus is that their plant does not experience surge-related problems. This belief guarantees that preventative action (such as surge protec- tion) will not be taken. However a closer inspection reveals that a wide range of electronic devices are failing well short of their design life. These failures are just not associated with surge overvoltage by the plant mainte- nance team and are being overlooked as equipment ‘s wear and tear. A study by a major European insurance company illustrates the problem. Over 7700 items of industrial electron- ics were evaluated. The most significant cause of premature failure was Surge overvoltage. In fact surge damage contributed to 28% of failures. Just as interesting is the next most significant category; lack of maintenance which contributed 25% of failures. The intriguing prospect is that much effort and “focus” is devoted to maintenance. However, surge protection could eliminate a substantial number of failures, maximize the design life of hardware and potentially freeing up time for the maintenance team , hence improving the efficiency and availability of the maintenance team. 3. Why are surge voltages a problem now? Few would argue with the relentless increase in sophistication of 21st century control and instrumentation architecture. Trends that have been in place for the last decade are accelerating. Control (and processing power) has escaped from the control room and is being rapidly deployed all over the plant in remote I/O, sensors and actuators. Due to the increase miniaturization of electronics , modern day instruments and its associated electronics systems are much more susceptible to the damaging surge overvoltages. Who would argue that a lightning strike to a modern facility poses a much greater threat to operational performance than a strike to an older
  • 4. generation plant deploying pneumatic control. More importantly who would argue that the next generation of instruments will be more sophisticated than the current offering. In a similar vein the current trend toward buses (Fieldbus etc.) has obvious and significant benefits to operational performance and installed cost. However, there is also a dark side. One cable is used to connect many field devices, up to 32 in the case of Fieldbus, back to the control host. One surge related incident now has the potential to affect a whole plant area as compared to the traditional poin to point whereby one device is on a single 4-20mA loop. Now is the time to consider surge protection! 4. Purported mitigation techniques There are many techniques adopted in a process plant that do have a beneficial effect in reducing the magni- tude of the surge threat. Unfortunately the inexperienced often overestimate this beneficial effect. The phrase, “We don’t need to use surge protection because we have……. ..” is a common cry, (fill in the blank with, lightning protection, earthing, bonding, or a UPS etc.). The following paragraphs explain the erroneous nature of such assumptions. A more rigorous evaluation is detailed in the references. 4.1 Structural lightning protection and earthing Structural lightning protection comprises an air terminal, down conductors (or contiguous metal structure) and an earthing system. The purpose of which is to safely route lightning current to ground [2], [3]. In the example shown in Fig 2, lightning hits the air terminal on the stack and, as you would expect, current flows into the earth. The structural lightning protection has indeed done its job - providing a point of attachment for the lightning channel and a safe path to earth. Some would believe that that’s the end of it, but lightning current does not miraculously disappear. Ground has resistance.
  • 5. Let’s assume the facility has a good, low impedance earth of 1 ohm. Close to the point at which the current enters the ground a potential of 100kV ( assuming a 100kA strike ; V = R x I ) will be developed momentarily for a couple of hundreds of micro seconds . This rise in ground voltage is known as earth potential rise ( EPR ) and this voltage will decay as you move further away from the stack . This develops a potential gradient across the ground commonly known as earth potential gradient (EPG). At several hundred meters the voltage will be a few kV. The result of this potential gradient is that 97kV exists between the control room at the Main Control Building and the stack structure. The fact that 97kV appears between the stack and the control room is not actually a problem until you connect an instrumentation cable between a transmitter on the stack and the control room. Once an instrumentation cable links the two points, the shear magnitude of the 97kV will break down the isolation of the transmitter and allow a small portion of the lightning current to flow in the instrument cable. So, the simple installation of structural lightning protection does NOT eliminate the risk to electronics. 4.2 Site Equipotential bonding. The obvious solution to this 97kV problem is to provide a continuous bond between all of the parts of the plant (grid rebar system) [4]. In fact most plants will be constructed using an equipotential earth grid of some type. So does bonding across the plant eliminate this problem? Not quite. While bonding has a positive effect on the installation, due to the inductance of the bonding and the stack itself, a voltage will still develop. This is due to the nature of the lightning impulses. The lightning surges have extremely fast edges and high amplitudes up to 200kV or more , and as such inductance dominates. Based on the simple formula , V = L di/dt where L is the inductance measured in micro-henry per meter and di/ dt is the rate of change of the lightning impulses ; a resultant 60kV exists between the control room and the transmitter mounted on the stack. As can be seen in the Fig. 3, the transient voltage peak has been reduced from 97kV to 60kV. Certainly equipotential bonding makes an improvement but the resulting surge voltage is still orders of magnitude higher than the susceptibility of the plant equipment.
  • 6. 4.3 Uninteruptible Power Supplies Another piece of equipment commonly considered as providing surge protection is a UPS. An Uninterruptible Power Supply is an investment in a large plant, installed to provide continuous power for a defined period of time after loss of the utility supply. Typically this allows time for generator start up. Few realize that this back-up system is itself vulnerable to large magnitude surges, specifically in three ways. 1. The automatic transfer switch is a sophisticated microprocessor controlled device, which is itself vulner- able to surge. Damage here may prevent changeover to the generator or auxiliary supply. 2. The control lines run from the automatic transfer switch to the generator. These lines tell the generator to start prior to operation of the changeover switch. Surge damage to this connection (either at the generator end or the transfer switch) means no back up supply when the UPS batteries run out. 3. Finally the front end of the UPS is basically a rectifier which can be damaged by severe surges as can the automatic bypass. So while a UPS system provides a valuable function to the site and a modest amount of protection against surge, its surge protective function should not be overstated. Indeed in many cases the UPS is a valuable asset whose function should be adequately surge protected. To summarize there are many techniques currently in use that do indeed have a mitigation effect on lightning and surge voltages, however we must be very careful not to overstate their efficacy. 5. Financial justification The desirability of operating electronics in a controlled transient environment is obvious. Will electronic systems operate longer in environments where surge voltages are controlled to tens of volts as compared to kilovolts? Of course!
  • 7. Based on experiences and statistics, less than 5% of equipment and instruments systems failures are due to catastrophic causes such as lightning strikes, transmission faults, or brownouts. The remaining 95% of failures are due to repeated degradation of the equipment from transients that fall into a category between safe or normal and catastrophic operation of a microprocessor or an IC. Visualize the relative effects of destructive surges riding on sample waveforms on the pin of an IC or microprocessor of the typical plant instrumentation systems . The result of repeated attack on solid state devices by transients shown at the degradation level are unexplained “clear blue day” failures of the instruments such as level transmitters, tempearture transmitters and its asscociated I/O sub-systems. Such effects significantly reduce mean- time-between-failures (MBTF) of the system. Control and instrumentation systems are significant assets with design life of 20 years or more. An uncontrolled surge environment can reduce the useful life of these assets significantly. Surge Protection devices provide that controlled surge environment [5], thereby removing one of the most significant causes of premature electronics failure. The problem for those who have not witnessed a cata- strophic problem is how to justify the expenditure. 6. Return on Assets A common question, once the plant manager understands that equipment is indeed failing prematurely, is how to justify the expenditure on surge. The finance team will immediately question the Return on investment (ROI) in surge. Unfortunately ROI is a ineffective tool for evaluating whether or not surge protection should be de- ployed, since the calculation does not take into account the consequences of a sudden breakdown or failure. A better measure would be Return on Assets (ROA) [6]. Return on Assets is defined as operating income divided by total assets. The higher the value the more effi- ciently the plant is using its assets. Clearly plant assets that are not contributing to income can impact ROA, or worse non functioning assets, that are contributing to a loss of income, have a negative impact on ROA. With this in mind we can evaluate the effect of surge voltages on plant operation. Review the “electronic assets” of the plant, what would be the improvement in availability (and hence ROA) if 25% of the premature equipment failures could be eliminated? Review each asset, from individual component (actuators, transmiiters , sensors etc.) through to process cells and plant control systems and modules, how does failure of this equipment effect plant operations and hence profit? By asking questions such as these we can prioritize the application of surge protection to equipment whose failure would have the biggest negative impact on ROA. The next dimension to this story is risk. If the risk of a surge problem is extremely small, it will be difficult to justify surge protection at all but the most critical of applications. 7. Risk. An intensive Reliability Availability and Maintenance (RAM) [7] program has been shown to reduce mainte- nance expenditure and increase plant availability. We can use the basic tenant of a RAM analysis, risk manage- ment, to provide insight into where surge should be applied to achieve the greatest improvement in ROA.
  • 8. Plant engineers are encouraged to understand the risk of surge related reliability and availability problems. Perhaps the easiest technique is to develop a risk matrix reflecting the probability of occurrence versus the consequences. The Risk Matrix as shown below is a good example. 7.1 Explanations of risk. Very likely Sensors located on tall structures (>10m), stacks etc. Islands of equipment – located some distance from the main plant but connected by power and instrumentation lines. Likely Long runs of instrumentation cable (greater than 100m). Unprotected power systems, risk increases if the facility has an overhead power feed. Possible Typical plant power and instrumentation topology Unlikely Self contained units with short instrumentation cable runs and a protected power supply.
  • 9. This is a much simplified decision matrix, but it demonstrates the basic concept of installing or specifying surge protection in areas most likely to have a detrimental effect on operational performance and hence ROA. 8. Conclusions Experience dictates that plant engineers tend to underestimate the impact of surge voltages, both in terms of the cost of premature failure of electronics and the impact on plant availability and hence ROA. Between 25% and 30% of premature hardware failures can be attributed to surge voltage. Current industry trends suggest that surge related failures are likely to increase as electronics become more sophisticated. Further the impact of a single surge related problem is likely to have a greater impact on operations in today’s and future plants. The old wives tales will provide less and less comfort. “We don’t need to worry, we have a full lightning protec- tion system and the best earthing system available!”Oh really? View the control and instrumentation system as an asset whose function provides the operational return (profit). Which of these assets if disabled or subject to prematurely failure, will have the most significant impact on plant operations? Finally review the risk exposure of these assets to surge related damage. Protect the hardware that has the highest impact on ROA and is at risk to damage from surge. In today’s ever more complex process environment, a properly designed surge protection plan is a key step in improving plant reliability, increasing availability and hence maximizing Return on Assets. 9. References: [1] “Lightning and surge protection for electronic equipment –a practical guide” MTL SurgeTechnologies, TAN1001 [2] “Lightning and surge protection –basic principles” MTL Surge Technologies, TAN1002 [3] R.H. Golde “Lightning: Vol2 Lightning Protection” Academeic press, 1977 [4] “Earthing Guide for surge protection” MTL Surge Technologies, TAN1003 [5] A. O. Bird, “Specification and installation of effective overvoltage protection”, 20th International Confer- ence on LightningProtection (ICLP) Sept 24-28 1990 [6] D Woll, “ROA Measure business performance and drives manufacturing strategy”, ARC Insights, vol 2002-16HM&P. [7] N. Ebrahim and J Watt, “Production excelence at Bapco through reliability, availability and maintenance improvements”,Hydrocarbon Asia, pp. 52-54, Oct 2004