High Integrity Pressure Protection System (HIPPS)

A high integrity pressure protection system (HIPPS) is a safety instrumented function (SIF) whose job is to stop overpressure at its source by rapidly closing dedicated valves, instead of relieving the excess pressure to a flare or vent. It is applied where conventional pressure relief is impractical, undersized, or environmentally unacceptable, for example on high-pressure wellhead and pipeline systems that feed into lower-rated downstream equipment.

HIPPS is a generic industry term for this type of safety function, not a brand or a specific manufacturer’s product. Many vendors supply HIPPS packages, but the name refers to the engineered function and its design approach, not any one company’s equipment. Because a HIPPS is often the last line of defense against a rupture, it almost always carries a high integrity target (commonly SIL 3), which is why real designs lean on heavy redundancy such as voted pressure transmitters tripping redundant final valves.

Key Points

  • HIPPS is a generic industry term for an engineered safety function, not a particular vendor’s product.
  • It closes in the source to prevent overpressure, rather than relieving it to flare or vent, and is typically engineered to SIL 3 with redundant sensors and final elements.
  • HIPPS is most attractive where a relief system would be impractical, undersized, or environmentally unacceptable.

Example

A wellhead HIPPS protects a lower-rated production manifold. Three pressure transmitters vote 2oo3 to trip two HIPPS valves arranged 1oo2, so the function still closes on a genuine high-pressure demand even if one transmitter and one valve happen to be unavailable.

See Also: SIF, final element, safety integrity level (SIL)

Cited Sources

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