Further to what charlierod wrote:
"Maximum frequency for operation" is commonly part of the turbine speed governor; the steam turbine units I worked with some years ago had a separate overspeed governor with a fixed setting such that it would bleed pilot [ sometimes called "sensitive" ] oil from the governor hydraulic control system piping [ thus closing throttles, reducing steam flow, and checking rise in speed ] whenever the turbine had any degree of overspeed > 1%.
Minimum speed controls might be much more crucial, given how close to a critical speed steam turbines often operate at, often not very far below synchronous.
In my experience working with larger grids, I would highly doubt that you will ever see a grid ROCOF that even approaches 2.5 Hz/s, which you indicate you want to use to operate the grid tie breaker to island the plant from the grid. If the overall size and inertia characteristics of your grid are not that extensive, perhaps possibly you might see that ROCOF depending upon that system's most severe single contingency, but at first blush it seems unlikely to me.
I therefore submit it would make better sense to have a discrete frequency trip relay to separate the plant from the grid when the grid frequency deviates > +/- 1% from nominal, using experience moving forward to warrant any tightening or relaxing of this setting.
CR
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." [Proverbs 27:17, NIV]