Publication | Open Access
Model checking reveals design issues leading to spurious actuation of nuclear instrumentation and control systems
28
Citations
36
References
2020
Year
EngineeringVerificationSoftware SystemsComputer-aided VerificationSystem-level DesignModel CheckingModel VerificationHardware SystemsSoftware AnalysisFormal VerificationControl SystemsSafety-critical SystemReliability EngineeringSystems EngineeringModeling And SimulationFunctional VerificationComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceReveals Design IssuesNuclear EngineeringSoftware DesignProgram AnalysisSoftware TestingNuclear SafetyNuclear InstrumentationProcess ControlFormal MethodsSpurious ActuationReal-time SystemsSpurious FailuresFault Injection
A spurious actuation of an industrial instrumentation and control (I&C) system is a failure mode where the system or its component inadvertently produces an operation without a justified reason to do so. Design issues leading to spurious failures are difficult to analyse, but pose a high risk for safety. Model checking is a formal verification method that can be used for exhaustive analysis of I&C systems. In this paper, we explain how formal properties that address spurious failures can be specified, and how model checking can then be used to verify I&C application logic designs based on vendor-specific function block diagrams. Based on over ten years of successful practical projects in the Finnish nuclear industry, we present 21 real-world design issues (representing 37% of all detected issues), each involving a systemic failure that could lead to spurious actuation of nuclear safety I&C. We then describe how random failures of the underlying hardware architecture—another cause for spurious actuation—can also be included in the models. With an experimental evaluation based on real-world nuclear industry models, we demonstrate that our method can be effectively used for the verification of single failure tolerance.
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