The present invention relates to an apparatus and method of measuring a gas mixture composition, including mixtures having more than two components.
A thermal conductivity based sensor can be used as a binary gas mixture analyzer. For example, because hydrogen has a larger thermal conductivity than nitrogen, a thermal conductivity analyzer can be used to measure the composition of nitrogen-hydrogen gas mixture.
Infrared or laser measurement techniques, or gas chromatography, can be used to measure gas composition of gas mixture that contains more than two components. But these methods are expensive and most of time a pump and/or sampling system is needed to get the gas sample for analysis. And, the equipment usually needs a large floor area or special protection and maintenance.
Sometimes, to measure the composition of gas mixture that has more than two components, various technologies can be combined into one analysis unit to measure concentration of each component.
Long-time reliability, expensive equipment, frequent maintenance, and safety considerations are the main issues in the measurement of composition of gas mixture. Also, if the pump or sampling system is needed, usually the response time is relatively long and cannot meet the requirements in some applications.
Gas density sensors are used to measure composition of binary gas mixture. In one example, a gas density sensor to continuously measure the gas density of natural gas to predict the potential heating value of the specific natural gas flow, but not to determine the composition.
At present, use of a gas density sensor to measure gas composition is limited to binary gas mixture, and not to measure the composition of a gas mixture that contains more than two components. For example, density, pressure, and temperature sensors are currently being used in the heat treating industry to measure the furnace atmosphere (N2—H2 mixture) in sintering furnaces. However, this application, using the gas density sensor to measure the composition of the already-mixed gas mixtures, can only be possible for binary gas mixture.
Systems and methods are described herein for measure, and controlling, the composition of a gaseous mixture having three or more components, using sensor configured to measure density, and preferably also pressure and temperature. By measuring pressure, temperature, and gas density together, the molecular weight of gas can be accurately calculated. (This calculation is also possible by measuring density only, if a reasonable estimate of temperature and pressure can be made.) If the components of a binary, tertiary, or beyond gas mixture are known, and in particular if the molecular weight of each of the components is known, then the gas composition (i.e., the relative proportion of each component) can be measured with by a system using such a sensor. Because gas density sensors are inexpensive and can be constructed to be reliable, this type of sensor is advantageous over present methods of measuring gas mixture composition, particularly in gas mixtures with more than two components.
The present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended figures wherein like numerals denote like elements:
A system and method are described herein for using one or more gas density sensors to measure the composition of a gas mixture made from component gases each with a known or knowable molecular weight. Preferably, the temperature and the pressure of each gas mixture are also measured at the same time as the gas density, to improve accuracy of the molecular weight calculation. Using this system and method, the composition of gas mixtures having two, three, or more components can be measured accurately and inexpensively.
An embodiment of a gas composition measurement system 10 for measuring a mixture of n known gaseous components (or at least n components of known molecular weight) is shown in
Component-1 and Component-2 are mixed at a junction 25 to form a first gas mixture, and a first density sensor 82 measures the density of the first gas mixture. Component-3 and the first gas mixture are mixed at a junction 35 to form a second gas mixture, and a second gas density sensor 84 measures the density of the second gas mixture. Component-4 and the second gas mixture are mixed at a junction 45 to form a third gas mixture, and a third gas density sensor (not shown) measures the density of the third gas mixture. Eventually, an n-2 gas mixture, whose density is measured by an n-2 gas density sensor 86, is mixed with Component-n at a junction 55, and an n-1 gas density sensor 88 measures the density of the n-1 gas mixture.
Each of the sensors 82, 84, 86, and 88 can be a combination sensor that determines not only gas density but also temperature and pressure of the gas. Pressure and temperature can be used to accurately calculate molecular weight, and can also be used to apply correction factors to the density measurement to improve accuracy, particular at high pressure or for certain gases that may deviate from the ideal gas law. With the measured pressure, temperature, and gas density, the molecular weight of a mixture can be calculated, and from that the relative amount of each of the components that went into the mixture (i.e., gas composition) can be calculated.
Information from each of the sensors 82, 84, 86, and 88 is supplied to a processor, which maybe a PLC or controller or computer or any kind of data-processer that can collect the signal from the sensors 82, 84, 86, and 88 and run mathematical calculations to determine the composition of each gas mixture. By processing the calculations in series, the processor repeatedly solves one equation for one unknown, in sequence, to determine the compositions of the intermediate and final mixtures. Thus, for a gas mixture containing n components, n-1 sensors are needed and n-1 molecular weight calculations are performed.
The system will show the calculated composition of each gas mixture on a screen or will record it to a file, or will make the information available through another data access method. For example, each gas density sensor may send its measurement results to a central computer (or data logger machine) through wired or wireless communication and the central computer (or data logger machine) then runs calculations and shows the gas composition information that is needed for process control or monitoring.
In a further embodiment as shown in
While the principles of the invention have been described above in connection with preferred embodiments, it is to be clearly understood that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation of the scope of the invention.
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20200049605 A1 | Feb 2020 | US |