The present invention relates to a method for controlling the feed of a combustible gas to a burner apparatus, according to the features stated in the preamble of claim 1 which is the principal claim. The invention also relates to a valve device operating by the aforesaid method.
The invention is particularly, but not exclusively, applicable to the field of valve devices designed to feed a flow of gas which can be regulated in a particularly accurate and precise way, where there is a requirement to provide rather extensive modulation of the range of feed flow rates. An example of a typical application of this type is a heat and power generating system based on the use of fuel cells. In these systems, heat is generated by processes of combustion of combustible mixtures, and the gas is also converted directly to electrical energy by electrochemical processes in the fuel cells. In these processes, the flow rate of the combustible gas (such as natural or liquid gas) has to be regulated accurately, especially at the minimum flow rates required in the desired modulation range. Known solutions provide for the use of gas feed lines of the “open circuit” type, in which the feed flow rate is directly correlated with the inlet pressure of the gas from the gas supply mains. However, this gas inlet pressure is difficult to keep under control, since it is subject to fluctuations caused by conditions in the mains. Consequently, the supply system along the line becomes unstable and inaccurate, especially at pressures close to the minimum feed pressure (and flow rate).
Moreover, the outlet pressure can also be subject to fluctuations which are difficult to control. For example, if the outlet cross section is made to communicate with the restricted section of a Venturi tube, provided to mix the gas fed by the valve with air or other air-like substances, the feed pressure of the valve device may be subject to fluctuations which can have a significant effect on the feed flow rate.
The fundamental problem of the present invention is that of providing a method and a device whose structural and functional design is such that the limitations of the aforementioned prior art can be overcome.
This problem is resolved by the invention by means of a method of controlling the feed of a combustible gas, according to the claims below, and by means of a valve device operating by this method.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become clear from the following detailed description of a preferred example of embodiment thereof, illustrated, for the purpose of illustration and in a non-limiting way, in the attached drawings, in which:
With initial reference to
The device comprises a feed passage 2 for conveying the gas from a feed element to a burner apparatus (neither of which is shown), this passage extending between a gas inlet section 3 and a gas outlet section 4. At the outlet 4, the passage has a narrowed cross section, for example in the form of a nozzle 4a. In a preferred application, the nozzle 4a is made to be connected to the restricted cross section 5 of a Venturi tube system 6 along which a flow of an air-like medium, for example vapour, is provided, in order to mix these fluids and create a suitable mixture for supplying a fuel cell unit 7, only shown schematically, in which electrical energy is generated directly by an electrochemical process. This system can be integrated into heating apparatus such as boilers, including those for domestic use, which have combined systems for producing heat by conventional gas combustion processes and for producing electrical energy by electrochemical processes of the aforementioned type.
In the pipe 2 there is formed a valve seat 8, interacting with a plug 9 whose operating rod 10 is connected rigidly to a membrane 11 for operating the valve. Downstream of the valve 8 with respect to the direction of flow, the pipe 2 has a constriction 12 or other similar narrowing of the cross section of the pipe, with a predetermined width, such that a pressure drop is created across the constriction. Pu indicates the pressure upstream of the constriction, corresponding to the pressure downstream of the plug 9. Pe indicates the pressure downstream of the constriction 12, the pressure difference across the constriction, indicated by Dp, being equal to Pu—Pe. Additionally, Pi indicates the pressure of the gas at the inlet of the pipe 2, which depends on the mains supply conditions.
One side of the membrane 11, indicated by 11a, is also subjected to the pressure Pu downstream of the plug 9, while the other side, indicated by 11b, is subjected to the pressure Pe, the signal formed by this pressure being communicated through a connecting pipe 13 extending between a section of the pipe 2 downstream of the constriction (in the region between the constriction and the nozzle) and a chamber 14 which is partly delimited by the membrane 11, as clearly shown in
The side 11b of the membrane is also subjected to an resilient load F created by a spring 15, whose opposite axial ends 15a and 15b are connected, respectively, to the membrane 11 and to a fixed wall 14a of the chamber 14.
The valve device described above can also comprise means for returning the plug 9 to the condition in which the valve seat 8 is closed, for example resilient means such as a spring (not shown in
In operation, the method of controlling the gas feed according to the invention requires the selection of a predetermined width of the constriction 12, which creates a corresponding pressure difference Dp across the constriction. Since the pressures Pu and Pe are made to act on the opposite sides of the membrane 11, the balance of forces on the operating membrane 10 causes the difference Dp to be substantially dependent, in a proportional way, on the load F (if S denotes the surface area of the membrane 10, then Dp=F/S). Consequently, since the flow rate Q of gas fed to the outlet section 4 is known to vary as a function of the square root of the difference Dp, the feed flow rate Q, which is regulated by adjusting the resilient load F, can advantageously be controlled independently of the absolute pressure levels present in the inlet section (Pi) and in the outlet section (Pu) of the pipe 2. Since, in particular, the inlet pressure Pi, determined by the mains supply conditions, may be subject to fluctuations which may be significant and not easily controllable, the method enables the flow rate Q to be regulated accurately and independently of the pressure Pi.
This example differs from that described above in that the valve device is made in the form of a servo valve, and a control circuit branched from the pipe 2 is provided for the servo-assisted operation of the main valve (the plug 9).
The side 11b of the membrane delimits a control chamber 14 which communicates with the main pipe 2, upstream of the valve seat 8, through a control pipe 16. The section of the pipe 16 which connects this pipe to the chamber 14 is selectively opened or closed by the plug of a solenoid valve 17, designed for the servo-assisted operation of the main valve 8.
The number 18 indicates a constriction in the pipe 16.
The control chamber 14 is connected to the outlet section 4 of the pipe 2, downstream of the constriction 12, through a discharge pipe 19 on which a pressure regulator device, indicated as a whole by 20, is provided. This is a membrane-type pressure regulator 21, of a conventional type, in which one side of a membrane delimits a control chamber 22 which communicates, through part 19a of the pipe 19, with the outlet section 4, and which can also shut off the outlet section of the other part 19b of the pipe 19 communicating with the control chamber 14. The opposite side of the membrane is biased by a calibration spring 23 housed in a chamber 24, which is connected through a pipe 25 to a section of the pipe 2 upstream of the constriction 12. The regulator 20 is designed to react to the variations in the feed pressure and to compensate for these, and also to return the pressure to a calibrated value predetermined by regulating the load F′ of the spring 23.
In operation, the opening and closing of the main valve seat 8 is controlled by means of the servo-assistance circuit operated by the solenoid valve 17.
In a similar way to the previous example, the method of controlling the gas feed according to the invention requires the selection of a predetermined width of the constriction 12, which creates a corresponding pressure difference Dp across the constriction. Since the pressures Pu and Pe are made to act on the opposite sides of the membrane 21, the balance of forces on the operating membrane 21 causes the difference Dp to be substantially dependent, in a proportional way, on the load F′ (if S′ denotes the surface area of the membrane 21, then Dp=F′/S′). Consequently, since the flow rate Q of gas fed to the outlet section 4 is known to vary as a function of the square root of the difference Dp, the feed flow rate Q, which is regulated by adjusting the resilient load F′, can advantageously be controlled independently of the absolute pressure levels present in the inlet section (Pi) and in the outlet section (Pu) of the pipe 2. It should also be noted that, in both of the examples described above, provision can be made to modulate the load F, F′ applied to the corresponding membranes over a predetermined modulation range, by using actuators which act on the membrane itself. Examples of such actuators are electromagnetic actuators having movable magnetic operating rods, or motors which can impart a controlled translational movement to actuator rods acting on the membrane. In all these applications, the modulation of the load F, F′ can be used to modulate the feed flow rate with predetermined modulation ranges defined between specified minimum and maximum flow rates (and hence minimum and maximum pressures).
Thus the invention resolves the initial problem and achieves its objects while having the stated advantages over the known solutions.
In particular, it should be noted that, by using the method and the device according to the invention, the feed flow rate is controlled in such a way that it is substantially a function of the pressure difference across the predetermined constriction.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PD2008A0088 | Mar 2008 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/052550 | 3/4/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/10/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/115411 | 9/24/2009 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110003260 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |