1. Field of the Invention
Embodiments of the present invention relate to energizing a coil of a solenoid of a directional control valve.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Well production fluid control valves in subsea hydrocarbon production control systems are typically operated by hydraulic actuators. The control of the hydraulic fluid to the valve actuator is typically effected by a directional control valve (DCV), which is a small hydraulic valve, operated by the armature of an electrically operated solenoid. Well complex control systems have a substantial number of DCVs, each requiring electrical power, typically derived from a surface power source via an umbilical. In order to minimize the cost of the umbilical, minimizing the power consumption of the complex is important. The electrical power supplied to DCVs in current systems is intentionally more than enough to operate the DCVs and hold them in their operational positions, mainly as an insurance that the valve will perform reliably. However this results in a considerable waste of power.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of energizing a coil of a solenoid of a directional control valve, wherein an armature of the solenoid moves between a first position in which the solenoid is operating and a second position in which the solenoid is not operating, the method comprising energizing the coil with a voltage, controlling the voltage, detecting a current in the coil at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position, and using the current at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position increased by a margin as an operating current for energizing the coil of the solenoid.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of energizing a coil of a solenoid of a directional control valve, wherein an armature of the solenoid moves between a first position in which the solenoid is operating and a second position in which the solenoid is not operating, the method comprising energizing the coil with a voltage, controlling the voltage, detecting the current in the coil at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position, and using the current at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position increased by a margin as an operating current for energizing the coil of the solenoid, wherein controlling the voltage comprises increasing the voltage, detecting the movement of the armature from the second position to the first position, decreasing the voltage when the armature has moved from the second position to the first position, and detecting the movement of the armature from the first position to the second position, increasing the voltage when the armature has moved from the first position to the second position, and detecting the movement of the armature from the second position to the first position, and decreasing the voltage to a level at which the current in the coil is the operating current when the armature has moved from the second position to the first position, wherein detecting the current in the coil at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position comprises detecting a perturbation in the current through the coil due to a change in the inductance of the coil due to the movement of the armature of the solenoid, and wherein controlling the voltage comprises pulse width modulation of voltage applied by drive circuitry for the solenoid.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a system for energizing a coil of a solenoid of a directional control valve, the system comprising a DC power supply configured to energize the coil with a voltage, and a processor configured to control the voltage, detect a current in the coil at which an armature of the solenoid moves between a first position in which the solenoid is operating and a second position in which the solenoid is not operating, and use the current at which the armature of the solenoid moves between the first position and the second position increased by a margin as an operating current for energizing the coil of the solenoid.
The above and other aspects, features, and advantages of the embodiments of the present invention will become more apparent in light of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
a is a block diagram showing items for energizing the coil of a DCV solenoid in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
b is a block diagram showing items for energizing the coil of a DCV solenoid in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
Embodiments of the present invention minimize the waste of power and reduce thermal stress in the control system due to the reduced power consumption.
a illustrates an arrangement for the operation and control of a DCV in the production control system of a subsea hydrocarbon well. The well control system may include a number of processors, typically housed in a subsea electronics module (SEM), at least one of which will control all of the DCVs on the well, which are housed, along with the SEM, in a subsea control module (SCM) mounted on a well tree. Typically, a DCV is operated by energizing the coil of its solenoid 1 from a DC power supply switched on by a power driver 2 from a control signal (on/off) from a processor 3.
As shown in
When the DCV is required to operate, the full operating voltage 6 is applied to the solenoid coil, resulting in an exponential rise of current, because of the inductance of the coil up to the maximum 7, as determined by the resistance of the coil. During the rise of current, the solenoid operates the DCV (its solenoid moving from a first position in which the solenoid is not operated to a second position in which the solenoid is operated), resulting in a perturbation 8 in the current, due to the change of inductance of the solenoid coil when the solenoid coil's armature moves. When the maximum current 7 is reached and the processor 3 knows that the solenoid has operated, that is from the current perturbation 8 and the current, both of which were sensed by the current sensor 4 of
Thus, substantial power saving is achieved, since the minimum “hold-in” current is typically 70% less than the normal current at full voltage. The use of PWM of voltage as a method of current control is not essential, but generally more power efficient than analogue power control such as simple series transistor circuits with an analogue output from the processor, and is also easier to generate from a processor, since it is inherently digital.
Referring to
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the SEM 13 includes a processor 3 for determining minimum “hold-in” currents for the DCVs D1-Dn, current sensors 4 and drivers 2 having been omitted for clarity.
Power saving with operated solenoids is normally achieved by inserting a resistor in series with the solenoid coil with a pair of contacts shorting the resistor, wherein the contacts are opened by the solenoid when it is energized. Thus the solenoid is energized with full voltage and current and then the current is reduced to a level greater than the “drop out” current, thus saving power. However, solenoid operated DCVs on subsea wells have to be highly reliable, and there is an inherent problem with using a shorted resistor method of power saving, wherein a failure of the one of the contacts would leave the resistor in the solenoid circuit and there would then be insufficient voltage and current to operate the solenoid initially. Thus, this simple technique is not reliable enough to be employed on subsea well DCVs. According to an embodiment of the present invention, a method of energizing a coil of a solenoid of a directional control valve uses existing hardware with software to affect the function with only an additional small highly reliable solid state current sensing device, and saves typically 70% of the power requirements of the multiplicity of DCVs on a typical well.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11155398.8 | Feb 2011 | EP | regional |