1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is a sampling method and a device for obtaining real time, accurate measurements of the fluid composition and mass flow rates in conduits having uniform or non-uniform fluid composition, velocity and temperature profiles. The present invention includes the sampling of all fluids, including gases, aerosols, particulates, liquids and combinations of the same.
2. Description of Related Art
The problem of obtaining real-time accurate measurements of aerosol and gas in processes in conduits with uniform or non-uniform gas velocity, composition, temperature profiles, swirl and turbulence is a common one. Simply inserting a single-point gas sampling probe into a conduit of unknown characteristics only samples the fluid composition in one location which is not representative of the entire flow field in the conduit. The largest error is generally due to the velocity which can easily vary by a factor of five, the composition by a factor of three and temperature by 50% in combustion applications such as in a large coal-fired boiler, for example. In this example, measurement of the excess oxygen and carbon monoxide is a vital parameter to control combustion and improve plant efficiency. Measurement of the emission of particulates from all processes is very important for pollution control. The present invention can also be used to measure particulates as well.
The applicant is aware of the following references which relate to sampling and measurement of fluid flowing in a conduit.
Russell et al disclose an apparatus for analyzing gaseous fuel before it is delivered into the heating chamber. A sample is collected and burned under controlled conditions. The combustion products are analyzed.
Carbone discloses the measurement of fluid flow through a conduit across the cross-sectional area of the conduit. The mean total differential between the impact pressure and the static pressure actuates a measuring and recording metering mechanism.
Capone discloses a gas analyzer for analysis of explosive mixtures. A correction loop flow circuit is used to bring a sample past a gas sensing element and back to a common inlet-outlet chamber.
Gröberg discloses an apparatus for determining the differential pressure and the volumetric fluid flow in a conduit. There is a pipe loop provided with a series of ports for sensing pressure.
Dimeff discloses an air flow measuring device which present a restricted orifice to the air flow and measure the pressure drop to determine the flow rate.
Maylotte et al disclose a wireless sensor assembly for measuring selected properties of a gas stream.
Busch discloses a system for measuring gaseous constituents in a flowing gas mixture. A mixing device in a flow homogenizes the gas mixture before it is detected by the sensor which detects individual gas constituents.
Staphanoes et al disclose a combustion gas analyzer for measuring the concentration of a gas constituent in an exhaust gas stream.
Orieskie et al disclose a process flow device which has a self-averaging orifice plate. The volumetric rate of flow is measured by a differential pressure process.
None of these references disclose a method of using one or more sampling nozzles which direct the fluid sample flow into a manifold wherein the flow rate and composition of the conduit fluid may be analyzed from a small sample stream of fluid having the same properties of the fluid in the conduit, nor a method in which the sample streams are collected independent of each other and collect a sample that represents the product of the fluid composition and the conduit mass flow rate at each nozzle or hole in the probe.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a multi-point self-averaging mass velocity and flow area-weighted sampling method for measurement of fluid composition in conduits and the mass flow rate in the conduit.
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention there is disclosed a sampling device for measuring fluid and particulate composition and flow rates in a conduit having a uniform or a non-uniform composition, velocity, and temperature profiles. The sampling device has a sampling loop having at least one probe mounted on a wall of the conduit with at least one nozzle mounted on the at least one probe and extending outwardly from the at least one probe. At least one sampling nozzle is oriented within the conduit facing into the flow wherein the pressure in the conduit forces a sample through the at least one nozzle into a sample collection manifold connected to the at least one sampling nozzle. Means are provided to adjust the static pressure within the sample collection manifold to be equal to the static pressure within the conduit. A composition measurement chamber is connected to the sample collection manifold. A fluid composition analyzer is connected to the composition measurement chamber wherein a sample is analyzed for each desired constituent, thereby providing a fluid composition representative of the flow in the conduit. A mass flow meter is connected to the composition measurement chamber wherein the flow rate in the composition measurement chamber is measured. Further, the mass flow meter is connected to the conduit through a static pressure port. The product of the flow rate times the fluid composition for each desired constituent provides a mass velocity weighted fluid composition.
Further in accordance with the teachings of the present invention, there is disclosed a sampling device for measuring fluid composition and flow rates in a conduit having a uniform or a non-uniform composition, velocity, and temperature profiles. The sampling device has a plurality of sampling nozzles disposed across a cross-sectional area of the conduit. Each sampling nozzle communicates with a sample collection manifold. A pressure adjusting means is in communication with the sample collection manifold. A composition measurement chamber is connected to the sample collection manifold. A gas analyzer is connected to the composition measurement chamber. A means for measuring flow rate is connected to the sample collection manifold. In this manner fluid from the conduit is collected in the sampling nozzles and directed into the sample collection manifold. The static pressure in the sample collection manifold is adjusted to be equal to the static pressure in the conduit. The fluid in the composition measurement chamber is analyzed for composition and for flow rate.
Still further in accordance with the teachings of the present invention, there is disclosed a method for taking a sample of a fluid flowing in a conduit, the fluid having a uniform or a non-uniform fluid composition, velocity, and temperature profile. At least one probe is mounted in the conduit. At least one sampling nozzle is mounted on the at least one probe and extends outwardly from said probe. The at least one sampling nozzle is placed in the conduit facing into the flow at a sampling point, thereby generating a flow of fluid having a mass velocity within the at least one sampling nozzle. Said flow of fluid is linearly proportional to a mass velocity in the conduit at the sampling point. The flow of fluid is directed into a sample collection manifold wherein a sample stream at a static pressure is formed having gas composition properties the same as the fluid in the conduit. The static pressure within the sample collection manifold is adjusted to be equal to the static pressure in the conduit. The flow of fluid is directed from the sample collection manifold into a composition measurement chamber. The composition of the fluid in the composition measurement chamber is measured using a gas analyzer. The flow rate of the fluid in the composition measurement chamber is measured using a mass flow rate meter. The fluid from the flow rate meter is directed back into the conduit through a static pressure point.
These and other objects of the present invention will become apparent from a reading of the following specification taken in conjunction with the enclosed drawings.
A simplified drawing of the internal structure of the Sampling Probe 12 is shown in
The available pressure difference to drive the sample flow into the sample nozzle and sample manifold is:
If VA2=0 then no flow can occur and the device functions as a Pitot Tube and responds to the average pressure in the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold 16.
For sampling purposes, it is desired that the nozzle velocity VA2 be proportional to the local conduit mass velocity VA1. The sample flow through the nozzles and into the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold 16 is dependent on the pressure of the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold Static Pressure (PSM). Therefore, the following equation applies:
The maximum sample flow rate occurs when the sample loop is “short-circuited”. If PSA2−PSM is forced to be equal to 0 then it is obvious that VA1=VA2 and the system is a self-driven linearly proportional sampler; however, there is a pressure drop caused by the sample nozzle. This pressure drop ΔPn is shown in Equation 4:
where CD is the nozzle pressure drop coefficient.
This pressure drop must be accounted for by subtracting it from the right-hand side of Equation 3 as shown below:
Equation 6 demonstrates that the method provides a sample nozzle velocity directly proportional to the local conduit velocity. Therefore, if the static pressure in the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold is maintained equal to the Conduit Static Pressure the sample nozzle velocity VA2 will be proportional to the local conduit velocity (VA1). In practice VA2 is about 90% of VA1, for gases, for example.
Additional sample loop pressure drop caused by friction, bends, fittings, valves, Particulate Filter, Gas Composition Analyzers, Mass Flow Meter and will greatly affect the performance of the invention as the Sample Nozzle Manifold Static Pressure will rise above the conduit static pressure and cause the sample rate to decrease; and the nozzle velocity will not be proportional to the local conduit velocity, therefore, not meeting the desired average fluid concentration nor total duct mass flow rate. The solution to this problem and the essence of the present invention is to use a Vacuum Pump 24 or other suitable device to offset any sample loop pressure drops in order to obtain the same result as given in Equation 6. The other devices may be a jet eductor, a fan, a blower or other devices known to persons skilled in the art. By meeting the criteria the operators of each nozzle is independent of the other nozzles, which is a required condition for mass-velocity weighted composition measurements.
This is accomplished by using an Active Control System 30 in which the Differential Pressure Transmitter 42 measures the difference between the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold Static Pressure Port 26 and the Conduit Static Pressure Ports 28 and controls the Vacuum Pump 24 (or other device) to increase or decrease the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold Static pressure whereby offsetting any pressure drop in the Sample Loop.
Using Equation 5 and incorporating any additional sample loop pressure drop, ΔP, it can be shown that this invention solves the pressure drop interference problem:
ΔP=PSM−PSA1=The difference between the Sample Nozzle Collection Static Pressure Manifold and the Conduit Static Pressure, as defined previously.
So that:
This gives the same result as Equation 5 which verifies that the Active Static Pressure Controller feature is essential to obtain a truly mass-velocity weighted fluid composition and mass flow rate measurement, and is the preferred embodiment of this invention.
There are four operating modes for the present invention:
1) Mass-Velocity Proportional Sampling Mode
2) Under-Sampling Mode
3) Over-Sampling Mode
4) Pitot Tube Velocity Mode
The total mass flow rate for the conduit can be determined from the mass flow rate of one or more sampling assemblies that are appropriately located in the conduit and use the preferred embodiment. The ratio of the sample nozzle velocity to the conduit velocity is a function of the sample nozzle pressure drop coefficient (CD) as shown in Equation 6. The total mass flow of the conduit for one sampling assembly as depicted for the two-nozzle sampling example of
CD=is experimentally determined nozzle pressure drop coefficient
MA=Mass Flow Rate through Nozzle A
MB=Mass Flow Rate through Nozzle B
AN=Area of each nozzle
Several nozzle designs have been tested to find the best shape to produce the largest sample flow rate for the lowest nozzle pressure drop and have good pitch and yaw behavior. The ideal response is for the nozzle to have a “cosine” response to pitch and yaw angles of the velocity vector. Many nozzle shapes have been tested including rounded inlets, sharp-edge nozzle inlets, inside and/or outside tapered nozzle inlets and holes in the probe instead of nozzles. The preferred embodiment is a constant diameter nozzle having a rounded inlet at the nozzle tip protruding into the flow stream. The preferred embodiment is a good compromise between a having high sample nozzle velocity and pitch and yaw characteristics and dirt accumulations. When a protruding nozzle is used, it has been found that by having the nozzle tip extend from the probe surface one or two diameters better pitch and yaw performance are obtained. This is due to the fact that the pressure distribution around a circular tube probe structure changes very rapidly with angle, and when a nozzle with an extended tip is used, it is less affected by the probe structure.
The only accurate sampling mode is the Mass-Velocity Proportional Sampling Mode as described above although the present invention includes other modes of operation. It produces an independent sample rate at each nozzle, compensates for all pressure drops in the sample loop, has good off-axis velocity response characteristics and pneumatically performs the provides a mathematically correct fluid composition equations for the average fluid composition and the conduit mass flow rate over a wide range of fluid velocities, fluid composition, temperature, pressure, and dirty fluids.
A diagram showing the system of the present invention is shown in
i is the mass-velocity and area average concentration in the conduit of fluid component i, ρ(x, y) is the fluid density, V(x, y) is the fluid velocity and C(x, y), is the concentration of Component i.
As shown in
Thus, there is a least one Sampling Nozzle 14 placed at equal areas within the conduit facing the flow, each of which has a mass velocity that is linearly proportional to the local mass velocity of the fluid in the conduit such that the resulting flow rate from all the nozzles represents a truly representative sample of the aerosol and gases in the conduit. This sample flows through the Particulate Analyzer 38 (if used) the Particulate Filter 18 (if used) the Fluid Composition Measurement Chamber 20, the In-Line Mass Flow Meter 22, through the Vacuum Pump 24 (or other suitable device) and is exhausted back to the Conduit 10, thus completing the Sample Loop.
The mass rate of the Sample Loop is proportional to the mass flow rate for the area of the conduit being measured. One or more such multi-point sampling probe assemblies may be used to obtain the average fluid concentration and the mass flow rate of the entire conduit. The sum of the product of the mass flow rate and the concentration fluid constituent for each sampling probe assemblies divided by the number of sampling probe assemblies provides the mass-velocity weighted average concentration for each constituent that is being measured. The average mass flow rate of all the systems times the total area of the conduit times the nozzle velocity compared to the local conduit velocity provides an accurate and repeatable mass flow rate in the conduit as previously described in the Principle of Operation Section of the disclosure.
It is well known that elbows, obstructions and area changes in conduits cause swirl, turbulences and non-axial fluid velocity vectors. The shape of the sampling nozzles 14 for the preferred embodiment provide a good response to pitch and yaw angles of the velocity in the conduit compared to the ideal cosine response
An important application for the present invention is for measuring and controlling the combustion process in fossil-fueled power plants. Accurate measurement of the excess Oxygen and Carbon Monoxide are required to optimize the efficiency. It is well known that fly ash is a major problem in coal-fired power plants. For such dirty applications, the preferred embodiment includes a Particulate Filter 18 in the Sample Loop. The filter cleans the sample fluid before it enters the Fluid Composition Measurement Chamber 20 and the Mass Flow Meter 22. All Sample Loop Pressure Drops are canceled by the Active Static Pressure Control 30 Embodiment.
The concentration of particulates in the Conduit 10 is measured by the Particulate Analyzer 38 which is placed in series with the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold 16 and upstream of the Particulate Filter 18. Detection of any other fluid properties can be made by placing the appropriate analyzer in series with the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold 16 either upstream or downstream of the Particulate Filter 18, as required.
The active Static Pressure Control System 30 uses a Differential Pressure Transmitter 42 to measure the difference between the Sample Nozzle Collection Manifold Pressure Port 26 and the Conduit Static Pressure Port 28 and controls the Vacuum Pump 24 (or other suitable device) to make this difference equal to zero. The active Static Pressure Control System 30 constitutes the essence of the present invention.
The Mass Flow Meter 22 is located at the Sample Loop shown in
Another preferred embodiment of the present invention shown in
The preferred embodiment utilizes a Fluid Analyzer Measurement Chamber 20 which is essentially a pipe in which the sample gas flows in at one end and out of the other end into the Mass Flow Meter 22. The Fluid Composition Analyzers 32, 34 are in-situ instruments that are usually inserted into a conduit. It is also possible to use extractive gas analyze similar to those used for US EPA CEM Stack Monitors by extracting the samples from the sample loop directly.
Obviously, many modifications may be made without departing from the basic spirit of the present invention. Accordingly, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced other than has been specifically described herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US06/24133 | 6/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 12/19/2007 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60692724 | Jun 2005 | US |