The present invention relates to gas sensors in general and to alcohol fermentation gas sensors in particular.
Fermentation requires monitoring of several parameters. For industrial applications, it is desirable to monitor a number of different properties of the gasses within the fermenter. Such properties can include determining levels of carbon dioxide, ethyl alcohol, hydrogen sulfide, and water vapor. In addition, it is also desirable to monitor static and dynamic pressures and gas temperature. Depending on the desired product of the fermentation process, measuring methane and acetic acid levels may also desirable. Optionally, the detection of Butanoic Acid, Diacetyl Acid and Propionic acid may also be desired. Therefore, there is need within the fermentation industry for a modular system using customized sensor technology and metadata to accurately measure and provide properties of a wide variety of gasses in a repeatable manner. In contrast, currently available (or traditional) sensors have readings that drift over time resulting in quality control staff making taking multiple manual measurements to acquire and manage the data for maximizing the fermentation process for their specific needs. Lastly, it is also important that any fermentation data collection process does not itself contaminate or physically interfere with the gas it is measuring. As such, when measuring gasses that are passing through pipes or tubes, it is desirable that the gas sensor(s) be as small as possible so as not to disrupt the flow of the gas.
As will be shown, the present sensor system provides user specific measurements of the entire fermentation process by collecting volumes of data from multiple sensors that are used to calculate real-time properties of multiple parameters of the fermenting material (gas, liquid, and solids). These sensed parameters can then be further processed to estimate other values including Specific Gravity, rate of fermentation, and the detection of fermentation problems.
The present gas sensor system is comprised of module(s) that are located on the fermenter exhaust gas tube (or other gas tubes). In its various embodiments, the present sensor system is ideally suited for use with any type of fermenter including but not limited to beer, wine, alcohol, ethanol, waste treatment, composting, etc.
In preferred aspects, data from the present sensor system can be stored locally, or on a server or in the Cloud and be manipulated by various algorithms to monitor the fermentation process (or any other process being monitored by the present sensor system). In various embodiments of the present system, some of the data may optionally be processed on a computer system remote from the server. However, it is to be understood that the present system is not limited to requiring external processing.
In preferred aspects, the present sensor system comprises a gas sensor system that may include two separate sensor assemblies, comprising: (a) a first optical sensor assembly comprising: first and second light sources, first and second light receivers; and (b) a second optical sensor assembly comprising: first and second light sources and first and second light receivers. Preferably, the first and second optical sensor assemblies are positioned across from one another within the exhaust gas tube. In optional embodiments, various gas sensor assemblies can be added, and these can also be positioned in the exhaust gas tube.
Additionally, either or both of the optical sensors can comprise a mirror or reflective surface thereon, permitting light to be reflected off of either of the two optical sensors. In addition, a separate mirror (that is not part of a sensor assembly) can optionally be used to bounce light back towards a single optical sensor. In such embodiments, the mirror can be positioned across an exhaust gas tube from the single optical sensor.
In preferred embodiments, the first and second light sources in the first optical sensor assembly direct light to the first and second light receivers in the second optical sensor assembly, and the first and second light sources in the second optical sensor assembly direct light to the first and second light receivers in the first optical sensor assembly. As a result, at least four sets of optical measurements are generated.
Preferably, each of the separate sensor assemblies are mounted on separate printed circuit boards and have their own dedicated microcontroller, power supply and wired or wireless data transmitter configured to transmit the measured data to the Cloud. These sensor assemblies are preferably positioned in an exhaust gas tube such that the two optical sensor assemblies are positioned directly across from one another on the inner sides of the exhaust tube. Optionally, a gas sensor may be positioned mid-way between the two optical sensors on the inner side of the exhaust tube. In optional embodiments, this gas sensor (or sensors) can be used to detect ethanol, O2, CO2, H2S, and humidity.
In various alternate embodiments, the present system may comprise only two optical sensor assemblies (with the optional gas sensor removed). In further alternate embodiments, the present system may comprise additional optical sensor assemblies, preferably added in pairs such that the present system may comprise one, two, four, six, eight, etc. optical sensor assemblies.
The light sources used may be one or more of broadband white light sources, multi-spectral light sources, infra-red sensors, near infra-red sensors, etc. The light receivers used may optionally be multi-spectral sensors, ultraviolet sensors, visible light sensors, infra-red sensors, near infra-red sensors, etc. As such, the present system encompasses any and all wavelengths of light both in its emitters/sources and in it receivers.
Any of the preferred sensor assemblies may also optionally include static or dynamic pressure sensors and temperature sensors.
The present system also includes a method of sensing exhaust gasses, comprising: (a) positioning two or more separate optical sensor assemblies within an exhaust gas tube, wherein the first and second optical sensor assemblies are positioned across from one another within the exhaust gas tube, and wherein the first and second optical sensor assemblies each comprise a pair of light sources and a pair of light receivers such that light from each of the four light sources is received by each of the four light receivers, thereby generating four sets of optical measurements; (b) measuring gas properties with each of the sensor assemblies; and (c) correlating the data received from each of the separate sensor subassemblies by comparing the four sets of optical measurements.
Correlating the data received from each of the separate sensor subassemblies by comparing the four or more sets of optical measurements can comprise averaging the four sets of optical measurements into a single optical measurement. As a result, several simultaneous readings of the same gas property can be taken and compared to one another for accuracy. Specifically, the four or more sets of optical measurements from the sensor assemblies can be transmitted to a database resident on a server or in the Cloud. Cloud based software can then be used to analyze properties of the gas, and optionally determine the identities of various gasses in the exhaust gas tube.
The present system is ideally suited for use within the exhaust gas tube of a fermenter. A further advantage of the present system is that the sensor assemblies are not placed within the fermenter itself. Thus, unlike existing sensors, they do not penetrate the pressurized tank itself.
In further aspects, the present system covers various embodiments of gas sensors positioned on exhaust pipes (where gasses in a vessel exit the vessel). Thus, the present system encompasses optional gas sensors positioned on gas exhaust lines that connect to sealed vessels above the fluid line in a vessel.
The present gas sensor system preferably comprises separate sensor assemblies, with each sensor assembly being mounted on a separate printed circuit board. As seen in
Optical sensors S1 and S2 (as seen in
It is also to be understood that sensor assembles that detect different gas properties than those illustrated by the sensors of
As illustrated in
Referring next to
In addition, light from the second light source 8B on the first optical sensor assembly S1 is directed to the first light receiver 10 on the second optical sensor assembly S2, thereby generating a third optical measurement M3. Lastly, light from the second light source 8B on the first optical sensor S1 assembly is also directed to the second light receiver 10 on the second optical sensor assembly S2, thereby generating a second optical measurement M4.
Next, as seen in
In addition, light from the second light source 8B on the second optical sensor assembly S2 is directed to the first light receiver 9 on the first optical sensor assembly S2, thereby generating a seventh optical measurement M7. Lastly, light from the second light source 8B on the second optical sensor S2 assembly is also directed to the second light receiver 10 on the first optical sensor assembly S1, thereby generating an eighth optical measurement M8.
The light paths and resulting data measurements shown in
It is to be understood that in accordance with the present system, additional sensors and light paths may be added (or removed). Rather, the advantage of the present system is that any measurement (from a light source on S1 to a sensor on S2) can itself be replicated (with light passing from a light source on S2 to a sensor on S1).
For example,
Additional sensing components (not shown in
It is to be understood that the light sources used by assemblies S1 and S2, etc. may comprise broadband white light sources and sensors, ultraviolet light sources and sensors, infra-red light sources and sensors, near infra-red and sensors, etc. Thus, the present system encompasses any and all wavelengths of light both in its emitters/sources and in it receivers.
Multi-spectral sensors 116 and 118 can operate to detect spectral absorption in the 440 nm to 860 nm range; and ultraviolet sensor 120 can operate to detect spectral absorption in the 220 nm-260 nm and 280 nm ranges. It is to be understood that these ranges are merely exemplary, and that the presently claimed system will work with any preferred spectral range detector operating at any wavelength.
The present system also provides a method of sensing exhaust gasses, by: (a) positioning separate sensor assemblies S1 and S2 within an exhaust gas tube, wherein sensor assemblies S1 and S2 are optical sensor assemblies. The first and second optical sensor assemblies S1 and S2 are positioned across from one another within the exhaust gas tube. Assemblies S1 and S2 each comprise a pair of light sources 8 (including sources 114, 120, 122) and a pair of light receivers 9 such that light from each of the four light sources is received by each of the four light receivers. This generates four sets of optical measurements. Next, gas properties are measured with each of the three separate sensor assemblies S1, S2 and S3 (with S1 and S2 working together). Finally, the data received from each of the three separate sensor subassemblies is correlated by comparing the four sets of optical measurements. This can be done using Cloud based software to analyze properties of the gas, and determine the identities of various gasses in the exhaust gas tube.
In still further embodiments, the present system comprises various numbers of gas (i.e.: non-optical) sensor assemblies including carbon dioxide sensors, ethyl alcohol sensors, hydrogen sulfide sensors, oxygen sensors, water vapor sensors, and may also optionally employ sensor systems that heat a gas and then detect the ions from the heated gas, or membrane sensors where the resistance of the membrane changes in the presence of an ionized gas.
The present invention claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/544,390 of same title, filed Aug. 11, 2017, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62544390 | Aug 2017 | US |