As is well-known, the clamp-on Doppler ultrasonic flow velocity profile meter measures a flow velocity profile or a flow rate of fluid by measuring the velocities of suspended particles or bubbles contained in the fluid, on the assumption that the suspended particles or bubbles move at the same velocity as that of the fluid. Referring to
fd=(2·Vf·sin θf·fO)/Cf (1),
where Vf is the flow velocity of the fluid 22, θf is an angle of refraction of the ultrasonic wave at the boundary plane between the pipe 21 and the fluid 22, and Cf is the sound velocity in the fluid 22.
Therefore, the flow velocity V of the fluid 22 can be obtained by the following expression (2). The flow velocity Vf and the Doppler shift frequency fd, each being a function of a position x along the radial direction, are expressed as Vf(x) and fd(x), respectively:
Vf(x)=(Cf·fd(x))/(2·sin θf·fO). (2).
Referring to
Q=∫Vf·dA (3).
According to the above-explained principle, it is possible for the flow velocity Vf and the flow rate Q of the fluid 22 to be actually calculated with the expressions (2) and (3) without depending on the transmission frequency fO of the ultrasonic wave pulse. The present inventors, however, found that the difference in transmission frequency fO of an ultrasonic wave changes the obtained flow velocity Vf and the flow rate Q. In particular, such frequency dependence becomes remarkable when the pipe 21 is made of thin metallic material, while the frequency dependence becomes small when the pipe 21 is made of plastic.
Moreover, in an ultrasonic flow velocity profile meter disclosed in Japanese Patent Application No. 2003-396755, an ultrasonic wave transducer is secured to a wedge to position it at an angle relative to the pipe by taking an angle of incidence of an ultrasonic wave incident on the pipe from the wedge as being no less than the critical angle for a longitudinal wave in the pipe and no more than the critical angle for a shear wave in the pipe. This is provided so that only a shear wave is propagated in the pipe when the sound velocity of the shear wave of an ultrasonic wave propagating in the pipe is equal to or greater than the sound velocity of the longitudinal wave in the wedge (when a metallic pipe is used). According to the flow velocity profile meter, the echo from the reflectors in the fluid to be measured becomes a wave due to only the shear wave propagating in the pipe before being incident on the fluid. Thus, the echo due to the longitudinal wave is not received by the transducer to reduce acoustic noises. However, the problem of frequency dependence of the above-described flow velocity Vf and the flow rate Q is left unsolved.
Accordingly, there still remains a need to solve the above problem and provide an apparatus and method for measuring a flow velocity profile that has a small frequency dependence, while capable of measuring the flow velocity and the flow rate with a higher accuracy. The present invention addresses this need.
The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for measuring a flow velocity profile of fluid flowing in a tubular member, such as a conduit or tube, using the Doppler principle.
One aspect of the invention is an apparatus for measuring a flow velocity profile of fluid flowing in a tubular member made of material that allows an acoustic wave to propagate therethrough, based on the frequency of ultrasonic wave reflected off reflectors existing in the fluid changing depending on the fluid flow velocity due to Doppler effect. The apparatus can include a wedge and an ultrasonic wave transducer. The wedge externally mounts to the tubular member and is made of material that allows an acoustic wave to propagate therethrough. The ultrasonic wave transducer emits an ultrasonic wave and is mounted to the wedge at an inclination relative to the direction in which the fluid travels through the tubular member.
The frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave emitted by the ultrasonic wave transducer can be set at a frequency other than the frequency at which an angle of refraction of a wave in each mode of Lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90°. The frequency at which the wave angle of refraction in each mode of lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90° can be calculated from an angle of incidence of the ultrasonic wave made incident onto the tubular member from the wedge, a sound velocity in the wedge, sound velocities of a shear wave and a longitudinal wave in the tubular member, and a wall thickness of the tubular member.
The frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave can be around the central frequency between two frequencies at each of which an angle of refraction of a wave in each of two successive modes of Lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90°. Again, each of the two frequencies can be calculated as mentioned previously.
The frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave can be set lower than the frequency at which an angle of refraction of a wave in a first order mode of antisymmetric Lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90°. Again, the frequency at which the wave angle of refraction in the first order mode of antisymmetric Lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90° can be calculated as mentioned previously.
The frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave can be set at a frequency lower than a cutoff frequency of a wave in a first order mode of antisymmetric Lamb wave, the cutoff frequency being determined from a dispersion curve of the Lamb wave.
The ultrasonic wave can be made incident from the wedge onto the tubular member at an angle of incidence larger than the angle of incidence at which an angle of refraction of a wave in a first order mode of antisymmetric Lamb wave in the tubular member becomes 90°.
An asymptotic solution of a characteristic equation of Lamb wave can be used as a phase velocity of the Lamb wave for determining the frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave.
Another aspect of the invention is a method of measuring the flow velocity profile as described above. The method includes mounting externally on the tubular member, the wedge, mounting the ultrasound transducer on the wedge as previously described, and setting the frequency of the transmitted ultrasonic wave emitted by the ultrasonic wave transducer at the frequency or the angle of incidence as described above.
The method can further include deriving an actual flow calibration constant for calibrating the flow rate derived from a measured flow velocity profile by calculating the flow rate from the flow velocity profile measured with the ultrasonic wave transducer mounted on a reference tubular member at a reference flow rate and comparing the calculated flow rate to a reference flow rate as measured by a reference flow rate measuring device. The actual flow calibration constant can be held as a calibration constant characteristic of each ultrasonic wave transducer. The measured flow velocity profile can be corrected on the basis of the result of calculation of measurement error due to Lamb wave.
The preferred embodiments of the invention will be explained with reference to drawings. First, according to the studies carried out by the inventors, the above frequency dependence is caused by a dispersion phenomenon (a phenomenon of sound velocity variation depending on the frequency) occurring in a tubular member or body, e.g., a conduit or pipe. The dispersion phenomenon is, when the pipe is deemed to be a plate having the same wall thickness as that of the pipe, considered to be caused by normal modes of waves propagating in the plate with the plate taken as a waveguide. Here, each of the normal modes of waves in the plate is a sound wave having a specified frequency and a specified wavelength satisfying a boundary condition and propagating along an infinitely extending flat plate having a finite thickness. The occurrence of the normal modes of waves in the plate depends on the material and the thickness of the plate.
The normal modes of waves in the plate are presented as an SH wave (a horizontally-polarized shear wave) and a Lamb wave. Here, the Lamb wave is, as is well known, a wave in which the longitudinal wave and the SV wave (vertically-polarized shear wave) are combined with each other while causing mode conversion on the upper face of a flat plate. Of the normal modes of waves in a plate, the SH wave, causing no longitudinal wave at the boundary between the flat plate and fluid, is considered not to propagate in the fluid. Therefore, it is the Lamb wave that causes the dispersion phenomenon, and the behavior of the Lamb wave is considered the cause of the previously described frequency dependence.
According to the studies carried out by the present inventors, a plurality of Lamb waves are deemed to be induced in the pipe with their frequencies kept at a constant frequency due to the difference in phase velocities (ω/k, where ω is the angular frequency and k is the wave number) when an ultrasonic wave is incident onto the wedge and to the pipe. With the angle of incidence θw less than or equal to the critical angle for a longitudinal wave in the pipe as shown in
According to the reference, Cho-onpa Benran Henshu lin-kai (Ultrasonics Handbook Editorial Committee), Ed., Cho-onpa Benran (Ultrasonics Handbook), pp. 63-65, Maruzen Co., Ltd. (in Japanese), the characteristic equations of Lamb waves are expressed by the following expressions (4)-(7):
β12=(−β2)2=(ω/Vl)2−k2 (4)
β32=(−β4)2=(ω/Vs)2−k2 (5)
tan(β1d/2)/tan(β3d/2)=−(k2−β32)2/(4k2β1β3): antisymmetric mode (6)
tan(β3d/2)/tan(β1d/2)=−(k2−β32)2/(4k2β1β3): antisymmetric mode (7),
where β1 to β4 are sound propagation coefficients, d is the wall or plate thickness, ω is the angular frequency, Vl is the sound velocity of the longitudinal wave, Vs is the sound velocity of the shear wave, and k is the wave number.
By the above characteristic equations, about each mode m (mth order) of the symmetric Lamb waves and the antisymmetric Lamb waves, relations between their frequencies and their wavelengths can be calculated. Moreover, the phase velocity Vp and the group velocity Vg as an actual propagation velocity of a wave packet (in general, Vg≠Vp, and without presence of a dispersion phenomenon, Vg=Vp) can be obtained by the following expressions (8) and (9):
Vp=ω/k (8)
Vg=∂ω/∂k (9).
Furthermore, from the above phase velocity and Snell's law, an angle of refraction θp of each mode of the Lamb wave at the pipe can be calculated.
The exact solutions about the frequency and the wavelength in each mode of Lamb wave are obtained by solving the previously explained characteristic equations. However, when a product kd of a wave number k and a wall thickness d is large, the calculation can be practically simplified by substituting asymptotic solutions for exact solutions. Namely, a phase velocity Vp asymptotically approaches the phase velocity VR of Rayleigh wave for the zero order mode (m=0) as is expressed in the following expression (10). While, for the higher order modes (m=1, 2, . . . ), the velocity Vp asymptotically approaches each solution (a sound velocity Vs of the shear wave) of the characteristic equations of the shear waves of the corresponding modes as are expressed in the following expressions (11):
Vp(AO)=Vp(SO)=VR(m=0) (10)
Vp(Am)=ω/{(ω/Vs)2−(2mπ/d)2}1/2
Vp(Sm)=ω/{(ω/Vs)2−((2m+1)π/d)2}1/2(m=1, 2, . . . ) (11),
where superscripts Am and Bm represent an mth order mode of the antisymmetric Lamb wave and that of the symmetric Lamb wave, respectively. Moreover, because of presence of an approximate solution in the equation about the phase velocity of the Rayleigh wave, in applying the above expression (10), the approximate solution is practically substituted for the exact solution to simplify the calculation.
The reference Katsuo Negishi et al., Cho-onpa Gijutsu (Ultrasonics Technology), pp. 173-174, Tokyo Daigaku Shuppan-kai (Publication Association of University of Tokyo) (in Japanese) describes that the exact solution for the phase velocity VR of Rayleigh wave can be obtained as the solution of the following expression (12) by setting L and S as follows:
L={1−(VR/Vl)2}1/2, S={1−(VR/Vs)2}1/2.
Furthermore, it describes that the approximate solution is expressed by the following expression (13) by letting Poisson ratio be σ:
4LS−(1+S2)2=0 (12)
VR=VS(0.87+1.12σ)/(1+σ) (13).
θp(Am)=sin−1(Vp(Am)/Cw·sin θw)
θp(Sm)=sin−1(Vp(Sm)/Cw·sin θw) (14),
where Cw is the sound velocity in the wedge 31.
fcritical(Am)=m/{(1/Vs)2−(sin θw/Cw)2}1/2/d(m=1, 2, . . . )
fcritical(Sm)=(2m+1)/{(1/Vs)2−(sin θw/Cw)2}1/2/d/2(m=1, 2, . . . ) (15).
Setting the transmitted frequency of the ultrasonic wave at a frequency other than the above frequency fcritical prevents the flow-rate measurement error from reaching around the maximum.
In
Each mode of Lamb wave has a different propagation time τ in the pipe due to difference in angle of refraction θp in the pipe caused by difference in phase velocity, and due to difference in group velocity Vg. Here, group velocities Vg as asymptotic solutions for various modes of Lamb wave are shown in the following expressions (16). Moreover, the propagation time τ in the pipe becomes different depending on the group velocity Vg as expressed in the following expressions (17):
Vg(AO)=Vg(SO)=VR
Vg(Am)=Vs2/Vp(Am)
Vg(Sm)=Vs2/Vp(Sm) (16)
τ(Am)=d/cos θp(Am)/Vg(Am)
τ(Sm)=d/cos θp(Sm)/Vg(Sm) (17).
Therefore, the echo is received in a form in which, on the echo of the ultrasonic wave following the primary principle expression (for example, the SV wave of the shear wave and the L wave of the longitudinal wave), echoes of other Lamb waves (interference waves) are superposed with their respective timings shifted. Thus, the obtained flow velocity profile has current profiles derived from various modes of Lamb waves superposed on the original flow velocity profile. This causes a flow-velocity profile measurement error, resulting in a flow-rate measurement error.
The following expression (18) expresses a propagation time T of Lamb wave in fluid (in water), where D is the inner diameter of a pipe. Due to the propagation time T in fluid and propagation times τ in a pipe, each mode of Lamb wave causes a positional difference in the radial direction as is expressed in each of the following expressions (19):
T=D/cos θf/Vf (18)
r(Am)/R=2(τ(Am)−τ(Vs))/T
r(Sm)/R=2(τ(Sm)−τ(Vs))/T (19),
where R is the radius (=D/2) of the pipe having the inner diameter D, and r is the distance (r≦R) along the radius R from the center of the pipe.
Furthermore, the following expressions (20) are for calculating the flow velocity profile of a turbulent flow for obtaining the flow velocity profiles shown in
V(r)=Vmax{1−(r−r(Am))/R}1/n,
or
V(r)=Vmax{1−(r−r(Sm))/R}1/n
n=2.1 log Re−1.9
Re=VavD/ν (20),
where, Re is Reynolds number, Vmax is the maximum flow velocity, Vav is an averaged flow velocity, and ν is a kinematic viscous coefficient:
where N is the number of modes.
In addition, by using three kinds of pipes made of stainless steel each with a different thickness, the relationship between the wall thickness and the flow rate error was measured. In the measurement, as a transmitted frequency, the frequency was set at around the intermediate point between two frequencies. At each of the two frequencies, the angle of refraction θp of Lamb wave in each of two successive modes, such as the previously described modes A1 and S1 of Lamb wave, reaches 90°. The results are shown in
Furthermore, as another way of suppressing frequency dependence besides as explained above, a transmitted frequency is made lower than the frequency at which an angle of refraction θp of an antisymmetric Lamb wave in a first order mode A1 reaches 90°. At a frequency lower than the frequency at which the angle of refraction θp reaches 90°, no mode A1 is generated. Further, only the SV wave and zero order modes of AO and SO of Lamb wave are generated, by which the frequency dependence can be considerably suppressed.
Moreover, as another way of suppressing frequency dependence, an angle of incidence of an ultrasonic wave onto the pipe is be made larger than the critical angle for an antisymmetric Lamb wave of the first order mode A1. As the order of the mode of Lamb wave becomes higher, the phase velocity of Lamb wave becomes faster and the critical angle becomes smaller. Therefore, an ultrasonic wave, made incident at an angle of incidence larger than the critical angle for the antisymmetric Lamb wave of the first order mode A1, causes no generation of Lamb waves with modes of first order and above to considerably suppress frequency dependence.
Furthermore, a way of lowering the transmitted frequency lower than the cut-off frequency of the antisymmetric Lamb wave of the first order mode A1 can be also considered. The cut-off frequency is a frequency at which the phase velocity becomes infinity and the group velocity becomes zero (the value at kd=0 in the diagram in
Incidentally, as shown in previously presented
The ultrasonic wave transducer 11 is mounted on and secured to the reference pipe 21A. The reference converter 51 is connected to the ultrasonic wave transducer 11 to calculate the flow velocity and the flow rate. The measurements are made with a known (true) flow rate Qs accurately set by the reference flow meter 41 and the flow control valve 42. On the basis of the flow rate Qf measured and the known flow rate Qs, an actual flow calibration constant α of the ultrasonic wave transducer 11 is calculated as α=Qs/Qf. The calibration constant α is stored in an ultrasonic flow meter using the transducer 11 as the constant characteristic of the transducer 11 for carrying out calibration of the measured flow rate.
According to the previously-mentioned Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-50998, the angle of refraction θf at the boundary plane between the pipe and the fluid and the sound velocity Cf in the fluid in the previously presented expression (2) are substituted with the angle of incidence θw onto the pipe and the sound velocity Cw in the wedge according to Snell's law presented as the following expression (22). Thus, the expression (2) becomes the following expression (23):
Cf/sin θf=Cp/sin θp=Cw/sin θw (22)
Vf(x)=(Cw·fd(x))/(2·sin θw·fO) (23).
In Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-50998, for obtaining the fluid flow velocity Vf(x) given by the expression (23) with high accuracy, θw and Cw are corrected with the calibration with the actual flow. In the present invention, not only θw and Cw, but also the offset error is corrected together with the calibration with the actual flow using the reference flow meter 41 or the reference tank 43. With the measured flow rate by using the reference flow meter 41 taken as Qs, the ratio of Qs to the flow rate Qf, based on the flow velocity profile measured by the ultrasonic wave transducer 11, is taken as an actual flow calibration constant α. At this time, Qs can be expressed by the following expression (24):
Qs=α·Qf=∫{α(Cw·fd(x))/(2·sin θw·fO)}·dA (24).
In
Moreover, as another way of correcting the offset error, calculated values of errors shown in
The present invention can be also applied to the previously explained ultrasonic wave flow velocity profile meter disclosed in Japanese Patent Application No. 2003-396755. In the ultrasonic flow velocity profile meter, as already explained, the ultrasonic wave transducer is secured to the wedge while being inclined to the pipe by taking the angle of incidence of the ultrasonic wave incident on the pipe from the wedge as being no less than the critical angle for a longitudinal wave in the pipe and no more than the critical angle for the shear wave in the pipe. This is provided so that only the shear wave is propagated in the pipe when the sound velocity of the shear wave of an ultrasonic wave propagated in a pipe is equal to or more than the sound velocity of the longitudinal wave in a wedge. Also in this case, the frequency dependence in measured flow velocity and flow rate caused by Lamb wave can be reduced.
Adequately setting of the transmitted frequency of an ultrasonic wave and the angle of incidence of the ultrasonic wave to the pipe enables realization of a clamp-on Doppler ultrasonic flow velocity profile meter can reduce the frequency dependence of a measured value due to Lamb wave, to reduce the measurement error. Moreover, the actual flow calibration of the ultrasonic wave transducer allows the offset error to be cancelled, allowing interchangeability between transducers to be ensured, by which a high accuracy can be maintained even when the combination with a converter is changed.
Given the disclosure of the present invention, one versed in the art would appreciate that there may be other embodiments and modifications within the scope and spirit of the present invention. Accordingly, all modifications and equivalents attainable by one versed in the art from the present disclosure within the scope and spirit of the present invention are to be included as further embodiments of the present invention. The scope of the present invention accordingly is to be defined as set forth in the appended claims.
This application is based on, and claims priority to, Japanese Application No. 2004-210965, and the disclosure of the priority application, in its entirety, including the drawings, claims, and the specifications thereof, is incorporated herein by reference.
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