The invention relates generally to devices that mixes or conditions, or both, media flowing within a conduit, and more particularly, to devices to be used upstream from flow meters, pumps, compressors, reactors, or other critical equipment requiring a uniformly mixed, swirl-free, symmetric, reproducible, and destratified velocity profile regardless of upstream stratification flow distortions, disturbances, or anomalies.
Disturbances in media flowing within a conduit adversely affect flow meter performance and pump protection by creating, for example, swirl and irregular flow profiles. The resulting errors often exceed the flow meter manufacturer's published accuracy specifications and can lead to cavitation and excessive pump component degradation. Flow conditioning, such as may be accomplished by tube bundles or perforated plates, among others, is known within the prior art to remove swirl and create symmetric and reproducible velocity profiles for media such as liquids, steam, gases, air, vapors, or slurries, and the like, flowing within a conduit. Flow conditioning should also destratify non-uniform media. Velocity profiles that can benefit from flow conditioning include those that are irregular due to disturbances caused by passing through or near obstacles, such as variable valves, bends, blockages, or junctions that create arbitrarily varying flow characteristics. Examples of prior art flow conditioners are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,929,088 and 4,981,368. Additional prior art flow conditioners may have tube bundles, perforated plates, or other baffle arrangements.
There are numerous types of flow distorting devices that can create a plane of flow disturbance 15 including, but not limited to, elbows, bends, junctions, or areas not having a common plane with the conduit. Flowing media needs to travel a distance of several diameters of conduit as shown by distance 13, for the anti-swirl action, vortex generation and annihilation, or settling to take place. This distance is required for the settling to occur downstream of a flow conditioner to insure proper conditioning of the flowing media. Flowing media needs to be properly conditioned before reaching a pump, flow meter, or any other device that requires mixing or destratification. As used herein, “destratification” is the process of mixing either gaseous or liquid substances, or the like, together to eliminate stratified layers of any kind be it temperature, density, concentration, chemical, or diverse media, for example. Further, minimum distorted and uniform flow profiles are very important in pumps where destructive cavitation is a problem, or where stratified or asymmetrical flow rate profiles are present.
Flow conditioning devices, such as shown in
Additionally, “floor space” is extremely valuable in particular implementations, such as offshore oil platforms for example. Volume as well as area are important on board ships or aircraft, or inside the containment building in nuclear power plants, all of which have a strong need to minimize straight runs of conduits (“floor space/volume”). In response to this need, the device 20 of
Other flow conditioning devices include tube bundles, which do not correct the velocity profile distortion, and perforated plates, which are useful but tend to cause excessive pressure drop, do little mixing, and are not particularly useful in pump protection.
Various embodiments discussed herein address the shortcomings of the prior art. These embodiments provide improvements over the prior art by reducing, and some instances even eliminating distorted or asymmetric velocity flow profiles and other variable disturbances in flowing media to enable flow meters to have improved accuracy, enhance mixing, and extend the life span of critical process equipment, such as pumps and compressors. These embodiments also improve velocity flow profiles by reducing swirl, reducing stratification, eliminating random vortices, reducing the cost of ownership, and improving overall performance, thereby improving the accuracy of turbine, orifice plate, sonic, thermal, ultrasonic, magnetic, vortex shedding, pitot tube, annular, sonar, differential pressure, and other flow metering technology. Additionally, pumps are protected by mixing and destratifying the flowing media. The term, “meter,” will occasionally be employed herein to include each and all of the devices or instruments already enumerated.
Flow disturbances of all sorts can adversely affect flow meter performance by creating asymmetric, unknown, random, or distorted velocity profiles and swirl, or all of these. Embodiments for a flow conditioner in accordance with the invention are disclosed herein that can provide flow meters, pumps, compressors, and other critical equipment a swirl-free, symmetric, and reproducible velocity profile regardless of upstream flow distortions, disturbances, or anomalies. These improvements in flow meter accuracy are accomplished economically and with negligible, or acceptable and minimized pressure drops. The flow conditioner embodiments herein disclosed function well when positioned approximately three pipe diameters in length upstream of the meter to condition the flow stream and can be coupled near elbows, valves, tees, and other disturbances typically seen in industrial plants, for example.
The flow conditioner embodiments disclosed herein are simpler and more effective than flow conditioning devices previously available in conditioning the flow upstream from flow meters and eliminate the need for outside fabrication and weld shops. They also use less raw material, enable flange mounted installation, require less fabrication time, fewer and lower cost shipping requirements, are more acceptable internationally, provide a greater selection of materials, allow for manipulation of design to alter the shape of the velocity profile of flowing media, are more appealing in larger pipe sizes, and eliminate non-destructive testing requirements typically applied to pressure holding vessels or weld seams.
In comparison with some prior art devices, embodiments of flow conditioners disclosed herein may only require one sheet of material, typically round, to conform to the inside topography of the conduit with the outline of the tab design laser cut into it. These flow conditioners/mixers require no constructional welds. The outline of the flow profile conditioning tabs are laser cut onto the sheet then bent to position. Because there are no welding requirements, the embodiments disclosed herein can be completely fabricated in a single work center. Depending on the final design, only one to three profile tab punching tools will be required to bend all the internal profile conditioning tabs. An additional punch may be required to bend the circumferential tabs, as will become clear below.
Embodiments of the present flow conditioner utilize tabs bent into the flow stream to create vortices, which cross-mix as they propagate downstream. Altering the degree of pitch on any of the tabs will produce changes in the velocity profile and its effectiveness. This could allow the possibility to “tailor make” the actual shape of the velocity profile by altering the pitch, shape, location, and number of individual tabs, combinations of tabs, or all the tabs.
The embodiments disclosed herein require no welding and therefore are not subject to radiograph, ultrasonic, liquid dye penetrant, or any other non-destructive examinations typically used in weld zones. Since these flow conditioning devices are not a pressure holding device, hydrostatic pressure checking of the finished product is not required.
Embodiments discussed herein comprise a plate with outlines cut into the plate to delineate tabs that can be bent away from the plate. The tabs are then bent to be sloped or inclined with respect to the plate so that the trailing edges of the preferred shape of each tab or pair of tabs are inclined to diverge in a downstream direction with respect to the plate. The plate can then be used as a flow conditioner for media flowing within the conduit. A simple plate could also be constructed to have some tabs bent upstream as well as downstream, or all the tabs could be bent in the upstream direction.
Flow conditioners having tabs formed in a plate so that they diverge in the flow stream direction provide more effective and more easily implemented flow conditioning for isolating flow disturbances and creating an optimal and repeatable velocity profile at the flow metering location and tend to be self cleaning.
Embodiments according to the invention for flow conditioner plates having tabs projecting in the flowing media can be fabricated using less material, with less fabrication time, and eliminating the need for all welding that would be required using prior art flow conditioners. Furthermore, these embodiments weigh less and are smaller in size resulting in lower shipping costs.
Flow conditioners made from plates with diverging tabs are more acceptable to alternative materials of construction including plastics and resin encased fibrous combinations such as fiberglass and fiber re-enforced plastics.
Altering the degree of pitch on any of the tabs will produce changes within the shape of the velocity profile immediately following the tabs and continuing as the velocity profile propagates downstream.
By providing plate-like elements that are processed by, for example, a laser to cut a series of tabs, the tabs being bent into the flow stream, embodiments of the invention have resulted in an improved flow conditioner and mixer. In one particular embodiment, tabs are formed so that several pairs of tabs diverge in the downstream direction.
Improved performance and protection in flow measurement instrumentation, pumps, compressors, protection devices, sampling devices, and other critical process components can be achieved by installing as few as one of the plate-like elements described herein, typically upstream, but occasionally downstream, from critical process components.
The terms, “plate,” or “plate-like elements,” as used herein, refers generally to an element that is flat, concave, convex, uneven, or any combination thereof, having a surface in which a plurality or a multiplicity of tabs are formed and bent into the flow stream. The outer defining boundary of such “plate” may be round, oval, rectangular, or multi-angular, or any other shape that is appropriate to accomplish the intended purpose within a conduit.
The embodiments of the invention described herein perform as well as or better than the prior art devices in terms of mixing, conditioning, destratification, or pressure drop, or all of the preceding. These embodiments are less costly to make and own than either the
Some embodiments described herein provide for a reduction in size of vortex generating tabs that is possible by using an increased number of tabs. The tabs are plate mounted and can be arranged to provide a cross section within a conduit having tabs distributed across the cross section that the media must flow through.
Differing embodiments may vary the angles with which the tabs diverge. Varying embodiments can adjust the area of the support structure on the plate from which the tabs are formed to reduce pressure drop in the flowing media.
Embodiments are disclosed for maximizing the open areas between tabs, and for altering the shape of tabs, so that pressure drop can be reduced. It should be noted that pressure drop is a performance feature in flow conditioners and mixers that must be taken into account. The cost associated with energy used in a conditioner or mixer must be considered and can easily exceed the cost of a flow conditioner in a one-year period of time by the power needed to overcome the pressure drop.
Additional embodiments may have rounded the edges of the support structure on the upstream side or unneeded supports may be reduced to reduce pressure drop.
Embodiments discussed herein combine the compact nature of perforated plates with the effectiveness of both the
Some embodiments discussed herein also provide additional advantages over the prior art by employing a flat plate requiring no welded construction, and generating vortices that mix media to eliminate stratification and reduce or erase the effects of upstream causes of instrument flow rate measuring errors. These embodiments are superior to some prior art devices in protecting pumps from cavitation and stratification due to the shorter distance of as little as three diameters between pump inlet and flow disturbances.
By requiring no welding to form the structure of the plate, embodiments of the invention increase international marketing potential because welding protocols pertinent to individual countries will not apply. This includes welder's certifications, welding procedures, weld maps, boiler code requirements, and others.
The flow conditioning device illustrated in
Materials used in construction of flow conditioners have typically included stainless steel and carbon steel. The embodiments of the present invention disclosed herein can be comprised of these, as well as other metallic materials, plastics, fiber re-enforced plastics (FRP), and other non-metallic materials, again at substantial savings in shipping and material costs.
The purposes, advantages and features of the invention will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing wherein:
With reference now to the drawing, and more particularly to
It is contemplated that plate 30 will be generally arranged perpendicular to the direction of media flow, but there is no requirement that it be so oriented. Normally instrument 35 extends through wall 36a into the center of media flow conduit 36. However, sensing elements 35a and 35b may be positioned other than in the center of the conduit, as appropriate for the flow conditions at that location.
Various embodiments are envisioned for rotating the orientation of the tabs 33a, 33b and 39 with the intention of benefiting downstream instrumentation or other critical process equipment. Furthermore, the thickness of the flow conditioning plate can be modified to support alternative effectiveness and to meet otherwise unforeseen situations.
In
In an embodiment, the shape, size, and placement of tabs 43a, 43b, and 49 can be proportional to fluctuations within the receiving conduits such that the ratio of the size of tabs to the size of the conduit remains consistent. This can be accomplished regardless of the receiving conduit size. Further, that ratio can be varied as desired.
In another embodiment, the degree of inclination or angle of bending of tabs 43a, 43b, and 49 can be varied between about 0° and about 80° with respect to plate 40, depending on the desired results. The tabs can be configured to all have the same inclination or each of the individual tabs can have its own specific inclination. Specified combinations of tabs 43a, 43b and 49 can maintain a specific inclination while others of the tabs can have different degrees of inclination.
Embodiments as described herein have numerous advantages over prior art flow conditioning devices. Forming tabs in a plate so that they diverge in the flow stream direction results in a mixing of the flow stream by creating streamwise vortices of sufficient strength, spacing, and orientation to enhance the flow mixing process. This is a static mixing process that promotes the efficient circulation of fluid, both toward and away from the bounding surface (that is, the conduit), which enhances not only fluid mixing, but also increases momentum and energy transport within the media as well as increasing the transfer of heat to or from the bounding surface by the flowing media. Embodiments with tabs that diverge in the downstream direction also encourage mixing of the velocities (momentum), the kinetic energies, the fluid temperatures, pressure gradients, densities, and the transported species. In other words, the embodiments described herein are effective in destratifying the media for any and all mixing purposes.
High stress concentration areas 52 in
Examples of alternate embodiments include, but are not limited to, symmetrical configurations such as those shown in
Once the tab pairs are bent in any of the flow conditioner 30, 40, 50, 50A, and 55 embodiments, there is a grid formed with grid members 45 remaining from where laser cuts were made to form the tab pairs. These grid members provide strength and structural integrity to the flow conditioners. Grid members 45 also provide for vortex generation. These grid members may be made of various widths, with narrower members providing a reduced pressure loss and vortex generation variations.
Various manufacturing methods are envisioned for laser cutting of plates to produce previously discussed flow conditioners 30, 40, 50, 50A, and 55, as well as other embodiments for flow conditioners. Optional methods are shown in
The flowing media will flow through spaces 65 from which the tab pairs were cut. The flowing media traverses through spaces 65 and onto the tabs which forces the flowing media into divergent streams. The edges and corners of tab pair 63a, 63b will create vortices within the flowing media that force mixing of the media, thereby reducing stratification. There is a direct blockage to flow of the media by area 64 that remains in a plane parallel to plate 60. This is essentially a grid member 45 as previously described. In general, each opening will have an associated tab, but there can be some openings without a tab.
In another embodiment, as shown in
An alternative shape-forming process for the tabs is shown in
Referring to
In other embodiments, the edges of the tabs themselves can be slightly rounded to effect reduced pressure loss. Here again, there is a trade-off with vortex generation. In applications requiring more through pressure and that require less destratification, this trade-off may be worthwhile.
The tabs, which are shown in pairs, can be made to have any desired shape. For example, in
It must also be noted the tabs do not necessarily have to be bent from the parent plate but can be affixed by way of welding processes or other adhesion processes that would bond tabs to the parent plate regardless of material. This would include but not be limited to epoxies, resins, glues, riveting, resistance welding, laser welding, or welding either manually or automatically by ways of Metal Inert Gas (MIG), Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG), Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW), Gas Metal Arc Welding (GMAW), Flux core, wire, and stick welding processes. Also noted should be that other appendages not necessarily resembling a tab can be affixed to the parent plate. This would include secondary plates or individual components. It should also be noted that the tabs being affixed could exceed the size of the tabs which would normally be cut from and bent into position on the parent plate. In addition, extensions, wings, or other appendages, can be affixed to any part of the tabs to enhance or alter the size or shape of the tabs, which would have been bent from the parent plate. In other embodiments, backing plates, grid member supports, or other structural additions can be used in conjunction with, or can be affixed to, any part of the flow conditioning plate to enhance structural integrity
It is possible, also, to form embodiments which incorporate different shapes onto grid members 45 and edges 74 that define orifices 79 (see
In
Although five-star and six-star patterns are illustrated, any number of tabs bent from a single orifice can be accommodated. In addition, tabs can be bent into orifices 79 other than pentagonal (
As stated previously, the tabs can be bent in either the upstream or the downstream direction, or may be a mixture, as shown in
While many examples for different embodiments have been shown, they are examples only, to suggest the variety of tab, opening, and grid shapes that are within the scope of this invention and may take the shape and form of any combination of the forms shown that are intended to be exemplary and the tabs can have any conceivable form, shape, angle, or curvature. Accordingly, the invention should be interpreted only with respect to the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 12/691,567, filed 21 Jan. 2010. The patent application identified above is incorporated here by reference in its entirety to provide continuity of disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12691567 | Jan 2010 | US |
Child | 13786333 | US |