EMC Testing to Achieve Functional Safety

Similar documents
The IET's Guide on EMC for Functional Safety

Discovering EMC s Role IN FUNCTIONAL SAFETY by David Schramm, Intertek

Electromagnetic Compatibility for Functional Safety

Electromagnetic Compatibility for Functional Safety.

EMC for Functional Safety:

EMC for the Functional Safety of Automobiles Why EMC Testing is Insufficient, and What is Necessary

Good RF bonding techniques for cabinets

Earthing for EMC in Installations

The Dark Art and Safety Related Systems

How to Manage Risks with Regard to Electromagnetic Disturbances

IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility Standards (Active & Archive) Collection: VuSpec

Immunity Testing for the CE Mark

Managing functional safety (and other) risks caused by EMI needs much more than immunity testing

Electromagnetic and Radio Frequency Interference (EMI/RFI) Considerations For Nuclear Power Plant Upgrades

Harmonizing the ANSI-C12.1(2008) EMC Tests. Harmonizing the ANSI-C12.1(2008) EMC Tests

Test and Measurement for EMC

Future In Radiated Immunity Testing

6 Measuring radiated and conducted RF emissions

10 Safety earthing/grounding does not help EMC at RF

BIODEX MULTI- JOINT SYSTEM

Electromagnetic Compliance: Pre-Compliance Test Basics October 19, 2017

EMC Amplifiers Going Beyond the Basics to Ensure Successful Immunity Tests

Its EMC Jim but not as we know it, InCompliance magazine July 2015

USER MANUAL MHS-2500I. Please take time to read these instructions before starting to use the scale. Version /17

An Introduction to EMC Testing (what can be done with scopes) Vincent Lascoste EMC Product Manager - RSF

Biological Safety. Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Observe the following precautions related to biological safety.

EMI Installation Guidelines

MDW-45 Converter RS RS-422/485

CHAPTER 6 EMI EMC MEASUREMENTS AND STANDARDS FOR TRACKED VEHICLES (MIL APPLICATION)

ANCOM s Laboratory for Electromagnetic Compatibility and Radio Equipment Testing

TETRIS 1000 High Impedance Active Probe. Instruction Manual

NUP2105LT3G. Dual Line CAN Bus Protector SOT 23 DUAL BIDIRECTIONAL VOLTAGE SUPPRESSOR 350 W PEAK POWER

2620 Modular Measurement and Control System

Digital Panel Meter K3TE. Model Number Structure. Model Number Legend. Easy-to-use, Low-cost Digital Panel Meter that Accepts DC Input K3TE

This annex is valid from: to Replaces annex dated: Locations where activities are performed under accreditation

DRAFT REGULATORY GUIDE DG-1029

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

Bulk Current Injection Probe Test Procedure

32mm Glass Transponder. Read Only, Read/Write. Reference Guide

Reverberation Chambers Design and Construction Considerations for Aerospace and Military Test Requirements

Analogue circuit design for RF immunity

EMC-Related Functional Safety (An Update)

EMC Test Report. Report Number: M030826

Model 5100F. Advanced Test Equipment Rentals ATEC (2832) OWNER S MANUAL RF POWER AMPLIFIER

AFSEC WORKSHOP. Nairobi, 5-9 Septembre 2011 IEC TC 77. Hervé ROCHEREAU. EDF R&D, Clamart France

Introduction EMC. Filter parameters. Definition of EMC / EMI. X-Capacitor. Sources of EMI. Coupling mechanism. Y-Capacitor.

COMBILOG ANTENNA MODEL AC MHz. rev: 0202

EMC standards. Presented by: Karim Loukil & Kaïs Siala

Guidance and Declaration - Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) for the Delfi PTS ii Portable Tourniquet System

CE Testing Results and Explanation

EMC Seminar Series All about EMC Testing and Measurement Seminar 1

Nursing Beds with Dewert drive system

This annex is valid from: to Replaces annex dated: Location(s) where activities are performed under accreditation

Appendix A: Specifications

Bulk Current Injection instead of Radiated immunity testing, in the range from 1 MHz upto 1 GHz: Measuring results

WirelessUSB LS Radio Module FCC Testing & Verification - AN4006

EMC/EMI MEASURING INSTRUMENTS & ACCESSORIES SHORT-FORM CATALOG 2009

One-day Conference 18 March Power Supply, EMC and Signalling, in Railway Systems

Recent Trends of TC 77 and its Subcommittees FR-PM-1-3

Current Probe Fixture Instruction Manual

VT1586A Rack Mount Terminal Panel Installation and User s Manual

SOM i.mx6. Regulation Information. Simple. Robust. Computing Solutions. Rev 1.1

G70R-SOC08 CSM_G70R-SOC08_DS_E_2_1

Characterization of medical devices electromagnetic immunity to environmental RF fields.

Protection from electromagnetic environment effects

Standardisation and Immunity Tests regarding IEMI

Introduction to Medical EMC

A Comparison Between MIL-STD and Commercial EMC Requirements Part 2. By Vincent W. Greb President, EMC Integrity, Inc.

EMC/EMI MEASURING INSTRUMENTS & ACCESSORIES SHORT-FORM CATALOG 2011

OPEN TEM CELLS FOR EMC PRE-COMPLIANCE TESTING

MG MW S-Band Magnetron

Recent Trends of TC 77 and its Subcommittees

RED Compliance Association REDCA TGN 01 Version 1.0 November 2018 Page 1 of 14

NI PXIe-5601 Specifications

Use optocouplers for safe and reliable electrical systems

How EMC/EMI Filters Can Aid in the Design and Troubleshooting Phases of Product Development

Certificate of Test AND KEEPS ALL REQUIREMENTS ACCORDING THE FOLLOWING REGULATIONS IEC :2001 IEC :2007

An Introduction to FFT EMI Receivers

Old Company Name in Catalogs and Other Documents

Ordering Information. Ratchet Relay G4Q. Plug-in Models. Model Number Legend

CHAPTER ELECTROMAGNETIC COMPATIBILITY. Contents of this Chapter...

EMC / FIELD STRENGTH Test receivers. Fast and straightforward: diagnostic and precompliance measurements with the R&S ESRP

Electromagnetic Compatibility

HAMEG EMI measurement tools

White Paper: Electrical Ground Rules

Phase-sequence Phase-loss Relay

This is a preview - click here to buy the full publication

OPEN TEM CELLS FOR EMC PRE-COMPLIANCE TESTING

TEST REPORT... 1 CONTENT...

Overview of the ATLAS Electromagnetic Compatibility Policy

High-Performance Electronic Design: Predicting Electromagnetic Interference

V1.3. TBLC08 50mH AC-LISN TBLC08

Field Hub Installation Guide. P/N Rev. C 05/15

Switch-on-to-Fault Schemes in the Context of Line Relay Loadability

EMC Pulse Measurements

DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE INTERFACE STANDARD

GTEM For emission and immunity testing according to IEC/EN Introduction

Output Voltage Range. Max. Output Power

Installation & Operation Manual SAGA1-K Series Industrial Radio Remote Control

Cost effective method to locate the vulnerable nodes of circuits against the electrical fast transients

Transcription:

Another EMC resource from EMC Standards EMC Testing to Achieve Functional Safety Helping you solve your EMC problems 9 Bracken View, Brocton, Stafford ST17 0TF T:+44 (0) 1785 660247 E:info@emcstandards.co.uk

Page 1 of 4 January 2010 Issue Home Evaluation Engineering LXI ConneXion EE-news Article Archives Buyers Guides Resources EMC TEST EMC Testing to Achieve Functional Safety The IET s New Guide by Eur Ing Keith Armstrong, Cherry Clough Consultants Where functional safety risks need to be controlled, relying solely on EMC testing is inadequate, no matter how high the test levels are cranked up. Further, many engineers and project managers are unaware of the functional safety and financial risks they incur by relying solely on EMC testing. On its own, no amount of EMC testing can ever provide sufficient confidence in immunity to EMI for the control of functional safety risks. This is because EMC tests: Ignore foreseeable faults, misoperation, and misuse. Ignore simultaneous EM disturbances that can occur in real life. Fail to take into account the effects of the physical and climatic environments, wear, and aging on EMC. Disregard emergent behavior, resulting in a system having poor EMC performance even when every unit in the system passes EMC tests individually. Use test chambers that do not represent all real-life EM environments. Use over-simplified test methods that only cover a fraction of the possible EM threats. Do not check whether the EMC design allows for the tolerances and variability that can occur in production, even though a sample once passed its EMC tests. Ignore assembly errors. Mostly assume that the maximum test level is the worst-case. Some industries, such as avionics, automotive, and military, apply test methods that at least partially address a few of these issues, such as using reverberation chambers instead of anechoic and testing with pulse and square wave modulations. But a comprehensive test program that covers them all would be expensive and take years to complete. To control functional safety risks, we must apply risk management techniques to EMC, which is the subject of EMC for Functional Safety, a new practical guide for managers and engineers from the Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET). 1 The guide describes practical and cost-effective procedures for management and engineering. When properly applied, these procedures can help save lives and reduce injuries wherever electronic technologies are used in a product, equipment, system, or installation in which a malfunction or failure of electrotechnology could increase functional safety (EFS) risks. Figure 1 (Click here to view.) shows the nine basic steps recommended by the guide for a simple EFS risk. The guide also outlines how to apply its process to complex EFS risks of any size or scale having any number of subcontractors. Helpful annexes and a comprehensive set of checklists also are provided in the guide. These are useful aids for project management, design, and compliance assessment. Why EMC Testing Alone Is Insufficient Many EMC and safety engineers still think to control EMI for safety reasons is to pass the normal EMC immunity tests. Some engineers go further by increasing the test levels, believing that doing so provides a safety margin. Reference 2 explains why this approach doesn t work. But relying only on EMC testing is too simplistic an approach for modern electronic control systems. EMC testing alone ignores most of the issues that arise over the product s life cycle that can affect how EMI increases safety risks. For example, let s look at the case of simultaneous EM disturbances. Traditional EMC testing applies a limited number of types of EM disturbance one at a time. But in real-life operation, equipment typically is exposed to multiple and simultaneous EM disturbances; for example, a radiated field plus a conducted transient on the AC lines or ESD from an operator. Experiments have shown that equipment that passes such tests individually can be extremely susceptible to low levels of those same disturbances when they are applied simultaneously. Another example is two or more RF fields at different frequencies, which can cause EMI through

Page 2 of 4 intermodulation (IM). IM, like demodulation, occurs naturally in nonlinear devices such as semiconductors. Figure 2 shows a simple example of two frequencies that can cause EMI by: Direct interference from each frequency independently. Demodulation of the amplitude envelopes of either frequency or both mixed together. IM in which new frequencies are created. Figure 2. An Example of Demodulation and IM Imagine that conventional single-frequency testing over the 150-kHz to 6-GHz frequency range discovers that the equipment is susceptible to frequencies in the range of 10 MHz to 200 MHz. The usual approach is to add shielding and filtering over the susceptible frequency range until the equipment passes the test. No protection is added for the rest of the frequency range because it is not needed and it adds unnecessary costs. But in real life, simultaneous noises in the 200-MHz to 6-GHz frequency range can and do occur. Noises will enter the equipment where they will intermodulate, likely creating internal noises in the 10-MHz to 200-MHz range and causing EMI problems that the original test would never have discovered. In fact, in some operational environments, having two or more EM fields present at different frequencies and significant levels at the same time is the norm rather than the exception. The Importance of Risk Management To demonstrate that the design of a product, system, or installation will be safe despite reasonably foreseeable EMI during its life cycle, we must now apply risk-management methods as described in Edition 2 of IEC/TS 61000-1-2. 3 It uses the terminology and life-cycle concept of IEC 61508, the IEC s basic standard on functional safety so that it can be applied as that standard s missing EMC Annex. There are other standards on functional safety, such as ISO 14971 (medical) and draft ISO 26262 (automotive), that describe the same basic functional safety principles. But these standards use different terminologies, making it difficult to apply IEC/TS 61000-1-2 directly to them. For this reason, the IET guide has been written in a way that is universally applicable, regardless of which functional safety standard is being used. Interestingly, manufacturers who follow this new guide could benefit from lower financial risks because improved immunity to EMI should significantly reduce the number of warranty returns and repairs as well as product liability lawsuits. And because the guide s procedures require the use of EMC expertise from the start of a project, following them also will help manufacturers get their new products to market more quickly and with lower overall manufacturing costs. The Steps to Achieving Functional Safety Here is a brief overview of the steps in the guide s EMC for functional safety process: Step 0. Overall EM Safety Planning This step identifies the person(s) with overall responsibility for the project, the aims of the project, the physical boundaries of the EFS risk to be managed, budgets, time scales, and the personnel with their responsibilities and authorities. With these parameters in place, the designated parties then manage Steps 1-9. Step 1. Determine the Intersystem EM and Physical Phenomena Before the EFS risk can be designed, it is necessary to determine the worst-case external EM disturbances to which the product could be exposed over its anticipated life cycle (Figure 3). So too should the physical, climatic, and user environments be defined because they can cause EM characteristics to be degraded during operation.

Page 3 of 4 Figure 3. Some EM Threats to be Addressed For example, exposure to liquids will hasten corrosion of EMC gaskets and ground bonds, and users might leave shielding doors open or remove shielding panels. Functional safety has to take reasonably possible misuse into account. Step 2. Determine Intrasystem EM and Physical Phenomena This is exactly the same as Step 1 except that it deals with the effects on the EM, physical, climatic, and user environments due to the EFS risk itself. For example, a motor used in the EFS risk might cause problems due to vibration or its magnetic fields. Because Step 2 depends on the design of the EFS risk, it is necessary to start out with a rough idea of the design and refine the anticipated effects later as the other steps proceed. Step 3. Specify EM/Physical Phenomena vs. Functional Performance This step combines inputs from Steps 1 and 2 and uses hazard identification and risk assessment techniques that take EMI possibilities into account. The output is a specification that guides the design, manufacture, and verification/validation of the EFS risk to ensure that EMI will not cause safety risks to exceed tolerable levels over the product s life cycle. Step 4. Study and Design EFS Risk This step applies EM and safety design techniques along with mitigation techniques to reduce the effects of the EM, physical, climatic, and user environments such as filters, surge suppressers, shock absorbers, or anticondensation heaters to the EFS risk or standard products incorporated within it. It also creates user instructions that specify necessary maintenance. The goal of Step 4 is for the finished EFS risk to comply with the EM, physical, and performance specifications noted in Step 3 over the anticipated life cycle. Risk assessment techniques are applied to the design as it develops. The final risk assessment is available only at the end of the project, part of verifying compliance with the specifications identified in Step 3. Step 5. Create EM and Physical Verification/Validation Plans Because cost-effective and time-effective verification and validation depend on the design, this step occurs in parallel with Step 4. Some of the verification activities are applied to elements of the EFS risk during Step 4, such as calculations, simulations, experiments, and design reviews. Step 6. Select the Volume-Manufactured Standard Products to be Used These are selected so that their EM, physical, and performance specifications, in conjunction with the EM/safety design of the EFS risk from Step 4, will meet the EM, physical, and performance specifications for the finished EFS risk found in Step 3. The required EM and physical specifications should be spelled out in the products purchasing contracts. It is important to remember that CE Marking or Declarations or Certificates of Conformity should not be taken as evidence of actual performance. Step 7. Assemble/Install/Commission and Verify the EFS Risk During the manufacture, installation, and commissioning of the EFS risk, this step requires that quality control techniques be used to ensure that no problems are caused by errors or poor quality materials, goods, services, or workmanship. Also, the remaining verification plans in Step 5 are applied to confirm that the EM and physical performance of the elements of the EFS risk and of any necessary EM and physical mitigation measures not incorporated within it are consistent with specifications for the final EFS risk found in Step 3. Step 8. Validate the EFS Risk The validation plans created in Step 5 are applied to the EFS risk at its highest practical level of assembly. This must demonstrate that the EM, physical, climatic, and use/misuse performance of the finished EFS risk, including any necessary EM and physical mitigation measures that are not incorporated within the EFS risk itself, complies with specifications in Step 3. Step 9. Maintain the EM/Physical/Performance Characteristics of the EFS Risk Over Its Life Cycle The users follow instructions in Step 4 to maintain the EFS risk characteristics necessary for the

Page 4 of 4 achievement of safety risks specified in Step 3 during operation, maintenance, repair, refurbishment, upgrade, modification, decommissioning, and disposal. References 1. EMC for Functional Safety, Institute of Engineering and Technology, free download from www.theiet.org/factfiles/emc/index.cfm 2. Armstrong, K., "Why Increasing Immunity Test Levels Is Not Sufficient for High-Reliability and Critical Equipment," 2009 IEEE International EMC Symposium. 3. IEC TS 61000-1-2 Edition 2: EMC Part 1-2: General Methodology for the Achievement of Functional Safety of Electrical and Electronic Systems Including Equipment With Regard to Electromagnetic Phenomena, December 2008. About the Author Eur Ing Keith Armstrong is a principal with Cherry Clough Consultants. e-mail: keith.armstrong@cherryclough.com All contents 2010 Nelson Publishing, Inc. - Privacy Statement