1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an apparatus for, with regard to a liquid contained in a vessel such as a tank, detecting a position of a liquid surface in the vessel and determining a liquid volume in the vessel. In particular, the present invention relates to an apparatus capable of determining a remaining amount of liquid fuel in a fuel tank mounted to an artificial satellite or the like, with a high degree of accuracy.
2. Description of the Background Art
An artificial satellite and other advanced spacecrafts are equipped with a tank containing therein liquid fuel or liquid oxidant. In view of ensuring adequate navigation and attitude control of an artificial satellite or the like, it is critical to accurately figure out a remaining amount of the liquid fuel or liquid oxidant in the tank.
Under a general environment on the Earth, i.e., under normal gravity, a surface of a liquid contained in a tank is maintained horizontally (i.e., on a level) according to a hydrostatic pressure. Thus, a position of the liquid surface in the tank can be detected without significant difficulty, and an amount of the liquid in the tank can also be readily figured out by detecting the position of the liquid surface in the tank, in some way
In contrast, the liquid fuel or liquid oxidant tank mounted to the artificial satellite or the like is used under a microgravity environment. Under the microgravity environment, a shape of a surface of a liquid contained in a tank is largely dominated by a surface tension. Specifically, irrespective of a vertical position of the tank, the liquid surface is deformed into a shape which allows a surface tension to be balanced. Consequently, differently from the horizontal shape in the Earth's gravitational environment, the liquid surface has a curved shape. This precludes a possibility of readily detecting a position of the liquid surface in the tank to figure out an amount of the liquid as in the case under normal gravity.
With this point in view, in a liquid fuel tank for a blow-down system, where no supply of gas is performed during discharge of a liquid from the tank, a pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) method has been employed which is designed to measure a pressure and a temperature of a gas phase in the tank and calculate a volume of the gas phase according to the Boyle-Charle's law. However, it is considered that this method has difficulty in accurately determining an amount of the liquid when the amount of the liquid is relatively small.
As a technique of determining a volume of a liquid contained in a vessel under a microgravity environment, there has been proposed a method using an acoustic signal (see JP 2006-308565A). In the JP 2006-308565A, it is described that this method can accurately determine a volume of the liquid in the vessel even if an amount of the liquid is relatively small. However, this method cannot be implemented without a design task for a new tank having difficulty in design change or without a complicate measurement system comprising an acoustic generation device and a signal processing device.
As above, until now, it has not been achieved to obtain an apparatus capable of, under a microgravity environment, accurately determining a remaining amount of a liquid, such as liquid fuel, contained in a tank, with a simple structure.
A shape of a surface of a liquid contained in a tank mounted to an artificial satellite or the like is changed depending on gravitational environments.
Thus, there exists a need for a technique which allows an amount of a liquid, such as liquid fuel, to be determined based on information about a position of a surface of the liquid, with a high degree of accuracy, even under a condition that a remaining amount of the liquid in the tank is relatively small, wherein the conventional technique has difficulty in accurately determining the amount of the liquid under such a condition due to an error in detection of the position of the liquid surface. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus capable of, even under a microgravity environment, detecting a position of a surface of a liquid, such as liquid fuel, contained in a tank housing various tank components, and determining a volume of the liquid, in a simple and accurate manner.
Through various researches, the inventor of this application found that, when a liquid contained in a tank is heated from outside the tank, and a temperature rise of a peripheral wall of the tank which occurs due to the heating is measured, a temperature rise rate is dependent on an amount of liquid in contact with a temperature measurement portion of the wall, wherein, even though the liquid is heated at each of a plurality of positions of the wall with the same heat energy, a wall portion in contact with a relatively large amount of liquid has a relatively low temperature rise rate, whereas a wall portion in contact with a relatively small amount of liquid or in contact with only a gas without contacting the liquid has a relatively high temperature rise rate. Based on this knowledge, the inventor has reached the present invention.
Specifically, according to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided an apparatus which comprises a vessel adapted to contain therein a liquid, heating means provided on a wall surface of the vessel to heat the liquid contained in the vessel, temperature measuring means provided adjacent to the heating means to measure a temperature change occurring due to the heating by the heating means, and processing means operable, based on the temperature change measured by the temperature measuring means, to calculate a volume of the liquid contained in the vessel, whereby the apparatus can determine a volume of the liquid contained in the vessel.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided an apparatus which comprises a vessel adapted to contain therein a liquid, a plurality of heating means each provided on a wall surface of the vessel to heat the liquid contained in the vessel, a plurality of temperature measuring means each provided adjacent to a respective one of the plurality of heating means in at least one-to-one correspondence therewith to measure a temperature change occurring due to the heating by a corresponding one of the plurality of heating means, and processing means operable, based on the temperature change measured by a respective at least one of the plurality of temperature measuring means, to calculate a position of a surface of the liquid located adjacent to the respective at least one of the plurality of the temperature measuring means, whereby the apparatus can detect a position of a surface of the liquid contained in the vessel.
Preferably, in the apparatus according to the second aspect of the present invention, the plurality of temperature measuring means are arranged at even intervals on a part or an entirety of an arc which extends along the wall surface of the vessel to connect a top and a bottom of the vessel.
Preferably, in the apparatus according to the second aspect of the present invention, the processing means is further operable, based on the calculated positions of the liquid surfaces, to calculate a volume of the liquid contained in the vessel.
As above, the present invention allows for a high-accuracy determination of a liquid volume with a simple system. In addition, the present invention makes it possible to figure out a remaining amount of liquid in a tank, with a high degree of accuracy, so as to accurately estimate an operating life of an artificial satellite.
a) and 8(b) are graphs showing respective detection position dependences of a temporal temperature change (
A heater 4 is provided between the outer wall surface of the tank 1 and an inner surface of the MLI 3, to heat the liquid contained in the tank 1. In this manner, the heater 4 is arranged on an inner side of the MLI 3, so that power consumption due to the heater 4 can be effectively reduced. Further, a temperature sensor 5 is provided adjacent to the heater 4, to measure a change in temperature of the wall of the tank 1 which occurs due to the heating by the heater 4. The temperature sensor 5 is also arranged on the inner side of the MLI 3, so that an influence of an external thermal environment on the temperature sensor 5 can be suppressed to measure the temperature of the wall of the tank 1 with a higher degree of accuracy. Each of the heater 4 and the temperature sensor 6 is electrically connected to a processing unit 7 via a temperature controller 6 operable to control the heater 4 while monitoring the temperature thereof the wall of the tank 1. The processing unit 7 is connected to a storage device 8 which pre-stores therein data about a correlation between a temperature change and a liquid volume. The temperature change measured by the temperature sensor 5 is input into the processing unit 7, and the correlation data is read into the processing unit 7. Then, the processing unit 7 is operable, based on the input temperature change and the read correlation data, to calculate a volume of the liquid contained in the tank 1 and output an obtained calculation result.
An actual tank for use in cosmic environments is equipped with an internal component as shown in
A plurality of heating/temperature measurement devices 13 are arranged at given intervals in a region of the tank 11 where the liquid L is held by the liquid holding mechanism 12, i.e., on an arc which extends along an outer wall surface of the tank 11 to connect a top and a bottom of the tank 11 (in
The following preliminary experimental test was carried out to verify a possibility to estimate a position of a surface of a liquid contained in a vessel, based on a difference in temporal temperature change at respective positions of a wall of the vessel, which is monitored when the wall is heated at each of the positions with the same heat energy.
As shown in
a) shows a temporal temperature change in the sidewall of the tank 21 monitored by the temperature sensors, in a wall region in contact with the liquid L and a wall region without any contact with the liquid L. As seen in
b) shows respective temperatures at the monitor positions, which were monitored after heating for a given time by the temperature sensors 25 arranged at even intervals in a region extending from a bottom to a top of the tank 21. On the horizontal axis of the graph illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-68336 | Mar 2008 | JP | national |