The present invention relates to an electronic measuring device for detecting a process variable connectable to a two-wire line, for which purpose a two-wire terminal is present in particular. Through said two-wire line the supply energy and the digital communication is made available by means of a process control system. Such measuring devices usually present a sensor means for measuring the process variable, and a control means for controlling components of the sensor means. It is to be noted that the term sensor means here includes in the widest sense all components participating in the generation and processing of signals, as well as all associated peripheral equipment.
Such electronic measuring devices connected exclusively through a two-wire line, are in general well known in prior art, and are, for example used as a radar or ultrasonic filling level measuring device. An ultrasonic filling level measuring device emits sound waves by means of a sensor device in the form of an ultrasonic sensor towards a surface of a filling product present in a receptacle. After reception of the signal portion reflected by the filling product surface, the filling level within the receptacle can be calculated through an evaluation of the signal transit time. A controlling means within the measuring device thereby co-ordinates the interaction of all participating circuit parts and measuring device components, respectively. In a radar filling level measuring device, radar pulses are generated and emitted instead of ultrasonic wave pulses.
In a measuring device of the mentioned type, a two-wire line, which is usually used on the hierarchy level of field bus systems, furnishes, for one, the supply energy required for operating the measuring device, and, apart from that, also serves the digital communication with an overriding process control system meant for the further processing of the measuring results delivered by the measuring device.
In practice, it has been shown that with a connection through a two-wire line, the energy input of the measuring device—insofar as no other measures are implemented—varies in a very strong manner. For one, the power input is constant during periods of measurement preparation or performance, for another, less power is taken from the two-wire line by the measuring device in the remaining time, a fact by which the power input and, consequently, the current consumption greatly decreases. These current fluctuations can interfere with the digital communication running on the same two-wire line. Rapid current fluctuations, in particular, i.e. current fluctuations taking place in a short space of time, have turned out to be disturbing.
In order to guarantee an undisturbed communication between the measuring device and the process control despite the double function of the two-wire line, it is hence necessary to keep the current consumption of the measuring device constant within determined limits, and to suppress, in particular, rapid current fluctuations. In time intervals of high power requirements arising, for example, during the performance of a measurement cycle, the measuring device will require a high current in order to meet the energy demand at a low supply voltage since the result of the power, as is generally known, is a product of voltage and current. If the current is now kept constant over the entire supply voltage range in order not to impair the digital communication by the energy supply, this measure will, however, lead to a multiplication of the power input at high supply voltages, entailing an unnecessarily high energy consumption and a strong heat development.
For this reason, measuring devices of the above-described kind were hitherto rather realized in multiple-wire technology. In this alternative likewise generally known in prior art, a line pair is provided for feeding the supply energy, whereas a second, separate line pair is meant for the digital communication. In said second line pair, the low constant current is allowed to flow as required for the reliable digital communication between the measuring device and the process control without the possibility of the energy supply causing any impairment to the communication. This solution, however, leads to a disadvantageous additional expenditure in the wiring for the measuring device.
It is therefore the technical problem on which the present invention is based to further improve an electronic measuring device in the two-wire technology in order to make possible a reliable digital communication at a minimum power input. Moreover, the invention is based on the further technical problem of providing a method for operating an electronic measuring device in the two-wire technology permitting a reliable digital communication.
These technical problems are solved by an electronic measuring device having the features of claim 1 or 4, and by a method having the features of claim 13 or 15, respectively.
The invention is based on the idea of controlling the current for the measuring device as a function of the measured input voltage for the first time, in such a manner that undesired, hence current fluctuations arising within a short space of time are prevented, and a current adaptation ensues within a space of time which is not detrimental to the communication. Current fluctuations disturbing the communication are, for example, then given when they are greater than 1 mA/ms. The advantage of the inventive solution resides in that current fluctuations disturbing the communication are allowed to be rapidly levelled. Thus, in a rapid power requirement change of the measuring device (e.g. a change from a transmitting operation to an evaluation operation and vice versa), the current flowing through the two-wire terminal will be kept constant, and this total current will be divided into a useful current and a loss current. The useful current here is the current portion used by the components of the measuring device for a perfect operation of the measuring device, and the loss current is the current portion which is not necessary for a perfect operation of the measuring device. If it is, for example, assessed that the power loss is too high—hence the loss current is too high—then the total current composed by the useful and the loss current can be reduced correspondingly, and namely in such a slow manner that no current fluctuations disturbing the communication will arise. Hereby, transient arising current fluctuations can be levelled, for one, so that substantially no interferences can be detected in the communication or are kept within acceptable limits, and, for another, the total power demand of the measuring device can be adapted to the instantaneous operational condition in appropriate spaces of time.
The measuring device attempts to minimize the power loss, i.e. the portion of the input power exceeding the power demand, and therewith to adapt the input power to the power demand. By means of controlling the spaces of time which are not detrimental to the communication, the power to be input can always be preset so that operation-contingent current fluctuations can be kept within acceptable limits.
An advantageous embodiment of the invention comprises a device for assessing the instantaneous power loss which is not necessary for maintaining the instantaneous operational condition of the measuring device. If this assessed power loss is too high as compared to a (memorized) reference value, then a corresponding new desired value can be sent to the current control unit through the controlling means, whereby the input current is slowly reduced, i.e. without causing the current fluctuations disturbing the communication at the two-wire line to occur. When a measuring device hence recognizes that the input power is too high because too much power loss is generated, this power demand excess can be minimized by reducing the power input to an extent that in the ideal case the input power is just sufficient for appropriately carrying out the measuring cycles. If more useful current is required in a new operational condition of the measuring device, then the desired current value will be slowly increased correspondingly.
According to an advantageous further development of the invention, the device is connected with a capacitor for determining an instantaneous power loss so as to measure the variation in time of the voltage at the capacitor and to therewith determine in an indirect manner whether a power loss has occurred. This configuration is in particular purposeful in an ultrasonic filling level measuring device, since there, the variation in voltage of a capacitor connected upstream of the ultrasonic transmitter is expressive with respect to a power loss.
As a further alternative for determining an instantaneous power loss, a device is suited by means of which the frequency of occurring sensor excitements can be determined without carrying out a measurement. The more often the sensor means is excited without a measurement being carried out, the higher is the power loss, and the current can be reduced correspondingly (slowly, substantially without current fluctuations disturbing the communication). In the event of the measuring device requiring less power for its defined task, the power loss can therewith be transformed in an efficient manner. Alternatively hereto, it is likewise possible to transform in a known manner the power loss into heat and to dissipate same to the outside.
It is likewise imaginable that the power loss is determined through a current sensing resistor or in any other suitable manner.
The measuring device can preferably be equipped with an A/D converter. Through the applied supply voltage, the input power can be calculated with a known current consumption. Should the supply voltage rise, the current will be reduced in such a manner that there does not ensue an excess in power demand. Should the supply voltage decrease, the current will be increased so that it is still possible to operate the measuring device.
An alternative solution provides for the power loss to be minimized in the current control unit. The corresponding electronic measuring device for detecting a process variable connectable to a two-wire line for providing the supply energy and the digital communication with a process control system, is equipped with a sensor means for measuring the process variable, a controlling means for controlling components of the sensor means, and a current control unit by means of which the current drawn through the two-wire line can be appropriately adjusted depending on the current drawn through the sensor means. With the adjustability of the current drawn through the two-wire line, a constant as possible current input can be guaranteed. In this variation, a measurement of the supply voltage is not necessary for achieving a current input without interfering fluctuations as compared to the above described solution.
Here, two controls are preferably present in the current control unit. One control provides for the total current remaining constant. The other control furnishes a desired current value for the first control and provides for the fact that a little current is flowing through a shunt arm at all times. This interleaved control hence provides for the total current being adapted to the sensor current, yet it is thereby ascertained that the loss current in the shunt arm is kept at a minimum.
For a better understanding and further explanation, several embodiments of the invention are described in detail in the following with reference to the attached drawings. Therein shows:
The electronic measuring device 100 as per
For the inventive control of the power put in by the measuring device 100, the supply voltage, i.e. the voltage applied to two-wire line 101, is measured by the A/D converter 116 connected in parallel to two-wire line 101. Micro-controller 117 sets the current through a current control unit 122 as a function of the supply voltage so that the input current is slowly adapted corresponding to the actual power demand.
According to the detailed representation as per
In
Measuring device 300 comprises as before a two-wire terminal 101a for being connected to a two-wire line 101 and via same to a field bus system. The communication as well as the energy supply both exclusively use two-wire line 101. A power supply unit 312 thereby gains the necessary supply voltage (UV) from the power drawn from the bus system. As the controlling means, a micro-controller 317 is provided, which is in communication with several memory units in the form of a program memory 318, a RAM 319 and an EEPROM 320. Micro-controller 317 drives an ultrasonic transmitting means 312 when the transmitting voltage measured through an A/D converter 316 has reached a predetermined level. Through a sound transducer 324, ultrasonic pulses of transmitting means 314 are emitted, which are then reflected from a filling product surface (not shown in detail), and are received again in the reverse direction and transformed into electric pulses. The time from the transmission of the sonic pulse to the reception of the reflected signal is a dimension figure for the filling level. Micro-controller 317 reads in the signals received from a receiving means 315 through an A/D converter 323, and evaluates same. By means of a process control system (not shown in detail, either) connected through two-wire line 101, micro-controller 317 communicates via a digital communication unit 311, which insofar represents the interface to the outside. To said ultrasonic transmitting means 314, a buffer capacitor 321 is connected, making available the energy necessary for exciting ultrasonic transmitting means 314. A current limiting means 313 is present between buffer capacitor 321 and power supply unit 312.
For the inventive control of the power put in by the measuring device 300, the supply voltage, i.e. the voltage applied to two-wire line 101, is measured by the A/D converter 316 connected in parallel to two-wire line 101. Micro-controller 317 sets the current through a current control unit 322 so that the power input is approximately kept constant or is slowly adapted to the actual power demand, or that the current remains substantially constant with an abruptly changing power demand, and is then slowly reduced or increased depending on whether a lower or higher power demand is given.
Current limiting means 313 provides for a constant charging current in buffer capacitor or transmitting capacitor 312. Current limiting means 322 can here be set through current control unit 322 via a control line 2 to an arbitrary value, yet, it is also imaginable to set current limiting means 313 to a fixed value, hence not to subject it to a control. When transmitting capacitor 321 is being charged and transmitting means 314 is not active, then the input power lowers in toto. So that the current input remains constant in spite of that, the current control unit 322 on the input side can either transform the differential current into heat, or a short excitement of transmitting means 314 can ensue without deriving a measurement therefrom. This takes place when micro-controller 317 recognizes that the transmitting voltage applied to transmitting capacitor 321 has reached a critical level as of which current limiting means 313 can no longer maintain the current through transmitting capacitor 321. The thereby initiated short discharge phase is sufficient for subsequently charging transmitting capacitor 321 again with constant current. The supply voltage of the measuring device 300 is measured with A/D converter 316. The micro-controller adjusts the measuring device current through current control unit 322 depending on the required power input and the input voltage.
The current control is shown in detail in
The different time constants can, for example, be realized by a circuit according to
In
The electronic measuring device according to the embodiment shown in
The electronic measuring device 900 according to the embodiment shown in
Current control unit 922 contains two cascade control circuits. The second control (control 2) provides for the total current remaining constant as in the previous configurations. So as to allow the control means to correctly compensate the fluctuations of the useful current, a certain current has to flow via the shunt arm through resistor R103 at all times. The control means compares its desired value with the instantaneous value of the total current determined through the voltage drop across resistor R102, and adjusts the current source in the shunt arm according to the difference in the currents. The output of control means 1 furnishes the desired value for control means 2. Control means 1 is responsible for ensuring that a little current flows at all times across the shunt arm. Control means 1 gets its desired value e.g. through a reference diode (D101), and compares this value with the instantaneous value, which, for example, can be determined through the voltage drop at resistor R103. The interleaved control unit provides for the total current being adapted to the sensor current, whereby attention is paid to the fact that the loss current is kept at a minimum in the shunt arm.
The present invention is not restricted in its realization to the embodiments given above as being merely preferred. On the contrary, modifications thereof are likewise imaginable, which, in spite of other configuration, fall into the scope of protection of the present invention. The invention is in particular not restricted to electronic measuring devices used within the framework of an ultrasonic filling level measuring device. In the specific case of a filling level measuring device, instead of an ultrasonic sensor unit, another sensor unit working on another suitable measurement principle—such as a radar sensor unit, a sensor unit working on the guided microwave principle—can likewise be used. It is still to be noted that in the shown embodiments, the current control is arranged between the two-wire terminal and the digital communication unit. Of course, it is also possible to provide the communication unit between the two-wire terminal and the current control unit.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
100 59 815.3 | Jan 2000 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60274712 | Mar 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09998000 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 11580349 | Oct 2006 | US |