The given invention refers to the field of purification of stream gases, in particular, to gas purifiers with a purity indicator.
Gas purifiers are widely used in the production of high purity gases. Generally, these are flow tubes with porous sorbent, which captures impurities in the gas. While impurities are collected in the sorbent, the capturing rate decreases, which leads to monotonous decrease of the purity of the gas coming out of the gas purifier.
None of the known types of gas purifiers renders a service of defining an impurity concentration in the product of purification. However, the users of high purity gases need to know the purity level of the gas they use and for many of them this is vitally important. The latter case covers those process systems, where the quality of the end product directly depends on the purity of the used gas. At the same time the existing methods of measuring the purity of stream gases are practically unavailable for the majority of the users due to high costs of the precision analytical equipment and its operation.
Accordingly, there is a need for modernization of gas purifiers, for example gas purifiers with activationless getter powders based on reactive metals and alloys [U.S. Pat. No. 9,586,173]. The present invention targets the solution of said problem of quality control of the end gas product with regard to gas purifiers.
The modified gas purifier according to the present invention has a number of improvements of both design and functional character.
First, in one embodiment a vacuum charging of the vessel with reactive powder, which required special pressing and welding equipment, is replaced for an easier and more convenient method of filling/sealing in the flow of argon at the small excess of the pressure over the atmospheric pressure.
In a second embodiment, the known vessel having a filling tube welded to it is replaced with an extended metallic pipe, which can be coiled into a spiral coil. This reduces production costs and also increases the lifetime of the getter powder.
In a third embodiment, an improved gas purifier as distinct from the prior art provides the users with the information about the current purity of the end gas product. According to the given embodiment, a flow meter, the readings of which are calibrated in the units of purity of the gas coming out from the gas purifier, serves as a purity indicator.
In addition, the gas purifier of the present invention may be provided by modification of known gas purifiers with low costs and effort. Thus, the techniques disclosed herein are applicable to a broad field of gas purification applications.
A gas purifier, e.g. one using reactive powder for gas purification, has a gas tight vessel, an inlet and an outlet with a filter and a valve each, and a charging port, which has to be tightly closed after filling. The procedure of charging the vessel with powder and the further operations for sealing the vessel are shown in
According to the prior art the vessel is filled with powder coming from the vacuum mill [U.S. Pat. No. 9,586,173] along the metallic pipe (see filling line in
The improved gas purifier according to one embodiment of the present disclosure is charged (filled) with powder under argon and is then tightened already in the flow of argon (
Before milling the ingot, the vacuum mill is filled with argon through valve 1 (while valve 3 is closed) till the pressure of ˜1 bar. Then, the powder is produced and pours along the metallic pipe and Tee 2 into the vessel. As soon as the vessel is filled with the powder, argon is fed into the system gas purifier/mill through valve 1 creating a small gas stream towards the mill.
Then the metallic pipe leading to the mill is disconnected from Tee 2 and closed in a standard way, e.g. with the help of a plug or a cap in the flow of exiting argon coming from line of valve 1. If the gas to be purified is argon, then the gas purifier is ready to work; if it is another gas, then it is necessary to clean the vessel with the gas to be purified using valves 1 and 3.
So, compared with the prior art [U.S. Pat. No. 9,586,173, see
Second, due to the employment of a Tee it is now possible to operate in the flow of argon (which is a less expensive method) instead of using the vacuum filling/sealing of the vessel. Besides, now a layer by layer filling of the vessel with materials of different composition is also possible. With the appearance of a Tee the geometry of the gas stream also changes, which turns the modernized gas purifier from the sorption column of an in-line type into an elbow type column. One of the examples of the modernized elbow type gas purifier with a powder reactant is given in
Finally, one more advantage of elbow gas purifiers is the developed in application to it method of defining the purity of the end gas product. The problem of detecting impurities of the gas stream needs here a different engineering solution and a different theoretical basis than in the case of, e.g. reactive sorbers.
The authors found that the best instrumental basis for monitoring the quality of the purified gas will be a gas flow meter installed in the gas line with the gas purifier as will be set forth in the disclosure of one preferred embodiment below. As it follows from the equation of material balance for the sorption process in a flow tube with reactive powder Me, concentration c of impurity Y in the exit of the tube grows with the amount of flown through it gas (
The dependence presented in
For the creation of a program for translating the values obtained by measuring the amount of gas Δmt passing through the gas purifier into the values c of the concentration of gas impurity in the exit of the gas purifier it is necessary to build up an experimental curve c=c(Δmt). These curves appear as a result of calibration tests with participation of precision analytical equipment, e.g. like Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometer. So, analyzing the gas sample taken at the value (Δmt)′ we obtain the value of the concentration (c/c0)′, then analyzing the gas sample taken at the value (Δmt)″ we obtain the value of the concentration (c/c0)″; repeating this procedure at (Δmt)′″ we find the corresponding to it value (c/c0)′″. Proceeding in this way we find the position of the entire curve (
The said procedure limits the role of the complex and expensive analytical equipment like mentioned mass spectrometer as a temporary participant in working out an algorithm for a simple purity indicator on the basis of a flow meter.
Integration of this kind of indicator with an elbow type gas purifier (
Summarizing the above said, we see that the presented in
(a) filling in the atmosphere of argon (the new method):
1—a valve, 2—Tee, 3−a valve; the reference to “filling line” should be understood only as an indication of the position of the metallic pipe, along which the powder is fed from the mill to the vessel; after charging the powder into the vessel the pressure of argon is increased through valve 1 till the small excess over the outside pressure , metallic pipe is disconnected from Tee 2 and the latter is closed by a plug or a cap under the conditions of argon coming out from 2.
(b) filling under vacuum (prior art):
1—a valve, 2—place of formation of a hermetical seam, 3—a valve.
1—an outlet valve, 2—a Tee, 3—an inlet valve, 4—a filter, 5—a connector, 6—a vessel in a form of a coil pipe, 7—a metallic pipe.
Depending on the character of the application vessel 6 can be made of stainless steel or other metallic material, glass, polymers, etc.
c—the concentration of the impurity in the end product, c0—the initial concentration of the impurity while the amount of Δmt passed through the gas purifier is the value Δmt=kpvt, where p—gas pressure, v—gas rate, t—time, and k is a coefficient, which depends on c0 and on the length of the powder column.
The most economical method of building up the curve c/c0=f(Δmt) is the theoretical solution of the problem on gas concentration in the exit of the gas purifier and correction of the obtained curve using experimental data.
1—an outlet valve, 2—a Tee, 3—an inlet valve, 4—a cap.
Sequential connection of the elbow type gas purifier with powder reactant Me and a purity indicator on the basis of a flow meter leads to the appearance of gas purification equipment of a new class, with high sorption efficiency and continuous estimation of the impurity concentration in the products of purification.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2017/053325 | Jun 2017 | IB | international |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2017/053518 | 6/14/2017 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62601957 | Apr 2017 | US | |
62514936 | Jun 2017 | US |