The invention relates to a method and a device for monitoring the quality of gaseous media, in particular hydrogen, which can be dispensed at a filling station.
WO 2013/139462 A1 discloses a test device for determining the particle load of pressurized hydrogen, having a housing which contains a sampling chamber, in which a filter receptacle for a test filter is provided, through which a sample amount of hydrogen can flow during a test procedure and which, after the test procedure has been completed, can be removed from the sampling chamber for evaluating the depositions of particles, wherein an adjustable throttle element is provided which allows a different degree of throttling of the flow entering the sampling chamber.
When initiating a test procedure with the known device, in which the initially unpressurized sampling chamber is connected to the source of pressurized hydrogen, for example at a hydrogen fueling pump, the restrictor element can be used to set an initial restriction of the flow to prevent the test filter from being exposed to a harmful pressure surge. While thus avoiding the risk of damage to the test filter due to an initial pressure surge, the throttling effect can be reduced for the further actual test procedure such that during refueling the flow through the test filter is an optimum flow rate for the test result, which may for example be in the range of 60 g/sec, i.e. in a range that is suitable for refueling a vehicle.
As stated, such devices are primarily for use in hydrogen refueling systems or filling stations, i.e., especially in engine applications where hydrogen is used as gaseous fuel or for supplying fuel cells with hydrogen. For the failure-free operation of hydrogen-powered internal combustion engines as well as of fuel cells, the hydrogen has to be completely free of particulate foreign matter, which can be detected using such testing devices.
Although the known solution is very well suited for the detection of particulate contaminants in the hydrogen stream, gaseous impurities of hydrogen, which can also have a damaging effect on a hydrogen drive, in particular in the form of a fuel cell cannot be determined in this way.
Based on this prior art, the invention therefore addresses the problem of providing a method and a device for monitoring the quality of gaseous media, in particular hydrogen, dispensed at a filling station, which can also detect gaseous impurities. A method having the features of patent claim 1 in its entirety and a device having the features of claim 8 solve this problem.
In the method according to the invention, an infrared (IR) measuring device is used, which is connected in the dispensing path of the gaseous medium, in particular of hydrogen, from the filling station to a consumer and which measures the transmission of infrared radiation or infrared light at different wavelengths and pressures, computes the concentration of contaminants affecting the quality and displays the latter at least if pre-definable quality parameters are exceeded.
Gaseous impurities in hydrogen, as they regularly result from the previous treatment (reforming) or from compressor damage, cause damage to the sensitive fuel cells of a motor drive amongst other things. Therefore, standards such as SAE J2719 or ISO/DIS 14647-2 specify purity requirements for hydrogen at hydrogen filling stations. Regularly occurring impurities of hydrogen besides water are hydrocarbons. Furthermore, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide occur as gaseous pollutants. Furthermore, formaldehyde, formic acid and ammonia, each also in their gaseous forms, are present in the hydrogen gas as impurities. Further impurities can be formed by the gases oxygen, helium, nitrogen, argon and halogens and sulfur gas. All the above-mentioned gaseous impurities of hydrogen including water can be detected in the laboratory, wherein due to the variety of compounds and the low limit values, such a laboratory analysis is a major challenge and requires the use of several measurement methods, such as different methods of gas chromatography and ion chromatography. A direct transfer of these laboratory measurement methods to a sensor device for the online measurement of the hydrogen quality at a filling station is not possible.
The method of analysis having the greatest coverage of the particularly critical gaseous impurities in terms of the solution according to the invention is infrared spectroscopy. Infrared spectroscopy makes use of the fact that the substances to be detected absorb light in the range of the infrared spectrum. The absorption in every case occurs at substance-specific wavelengths. Not all substances being infrared active, not all absorb infrared light; rather, infra-active substances must generally have a dipole moment. Symmetric molecules, such as the abovementioned oxygen, helium, nitrogen, argon and halogens, cannot be detected by the measuring method according to the invention because they lack a dipole moment. All other gaseous impurities in hydrogen mentioned, however, can be detected based on infrared spectroscopy using the infrared measuring device according to the invention on site and online at a hydrogen filling station during refueling.
It has also turned out to be particularly advantageous to be able to perform the method according to the invention using the infrared measuring device online in spite of the high pressures during the dispensing of hydrogen at the filling station, without the refueling process being impaired by the quality assessment. In this way, a measuring log can be created online at the filling station, which is provided to the filling station user as proof of the purity of the released hydrogen to warrant the continued functioning the fuel cell of his vehicle using the hydrogen of this refueling. A device according to the invention is used to perform the pertinent infrared measuring method using a high-pressure resistant infrared cuvette, consisting of a pressure-resistant pipe section, in which a preferably galvanically gold-plated inner pipe is inserted as an infrared tube conductor and attached there. Preferably closable ports as sampling inlet and outlet are used to supply hydrogen into or remove it from the pressure-resistant pipe section for an infrared measurement process by means of a suitable emitter and a suitable detector. The determined values can then be input into a control and processing unit, for example, for the creation of a measurement protocol or for the output of an alarm, which unit can also perform signal processing including pressure and/or temperature values of the hydrogen in online operation.
Further advantageous embodiments of the solution according to the invention are subject to the other dependent claims.
Below, the method according to the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to a device according to the invention for performing this method. In the schematic figures, which are not to scale.
The device according to the invention according to
Flange parts assigned in pairs 20, 22 and 24, 26 adjoin at the opposite free ends of the pipe section 12. The first flange 20 arranged at the top in
The flange part 24 terminating the tubular piece 12 at the bottom in turn has a central recess, into which a further infrared transmissive window 36 is inserted frontally on the upper side, which window ensures the sealing of the interior of the pipe section 12 towards the environment based on a soldered connection 38. An infrared detector 40 is then inserted in a central recess of the flange portion 26 beneath for the evaluation of the received infrared spectrum. Consequently, the infrared emitter 28 or the infrared detector 40 is located in the unpressurized area behind the respective windows 30, 36.
In the high-pressure resistant cuvette 10, the volume concentration of the gaseous impurities increases in proportion to the pressure, such that e.g. for an inlet pressure of the hydrogen of 500 bar, the infrared absorption in the measuring cell is 500 times that of an inlet pressure of 1 bar. This measuring effect of the illustrated robust and cost-effective IR infrared measuring technology is based on this multiplication.
The measuring arrangement or measuring device shown in
As the embodiment of
In this case, both the infrared emitter 28 and the infrared detector 40 are connected to signal processing electronics via respective electrical connecting lines 48 and 50, which electronics are shown in
The embodiment of
The proposed solution according to the invention is used to perform a method for monitoring the hydrogen quality at a hydrogen filling station not shown in detail, having an overall measuring device 44 according to the exemplary embodiment of
Preferably, the control and computing unit 52 performs transmission measurements at different densities, buffers them and then subtracts them from each other. As already stated, a pressure sensor P can perform the pressure measurement to determine the density, wherein the pressure measurement can be supplemented by a temperature measurement by means of a temperature sensor T.
The use of an infrared emitter 28, preferably a hotplate emitter, which emits a broadband infrared beam, has been found to be particularly advantageous for performing the method according to the invention. Furthermore, it is advantageous if the infrared detector 40 is a multi-channel detector having filters in the range between 1000 and 4000 wavenumbers. Advantageously, the infrared detector 40 is a spectrometer. If, as shown in
As will be explained in more detail below, the distribution of the detected infrared-active bands of the individual contaminants, plotted against the wave number, indicates the type of the individual impurity. For instance, ammonia gas is found as an impurity for wave numbers around 1000 and, the contaminants formic acid, water, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide occur in the range of 2000 wave numbers. Wave numbers around 3000 [indicate] formaldehyde and hydrocarbons and wave numbers just below 4000 again indicate water. As stated above, the relevant measurement range is between 1000 and 4000 wavenumbers, i.e. at wavelengths between 2.5 μm and 10 μm of the infrared radiation. The position of the absorption bands can therefore be used to identify a substance as such, and the attenuation of the infrared radiation as it passes through the hydrogen sample yields the concentration from Lambert-Beers law as follows:
A=Ig(I0/I1,)=Ig(I/T)=ϵ (λ) c·d
where:
The dependence of the absorption on the wavelength is reflected in the dependence of the molar absorption coefficient on the wavelength in Lambert-Beers law.
Lambert-Beers law outlines the standard approach for measuring small concentrations. At low concentrations, the length of travel d of the infrared light beam through the sample is increased. This can be effected by extending the measuring cell in the form of the cuvette 10 or by repeatedly irradiating the cuvette 10 using a mirror device with the mirror 56 as shown in
Furthermore, it is necessary to consider the concentration c, which constitutes yet another controllable quantity on the right-hand side of the above Lambert-Beer equation; c, as stated, denotes the concentration of the substance to be detected in the infrared cuvette 10 in mol/l. This parameter c can easily be increased significantly by an increase in pressure, which is particularly advantageous in the case of the hydrogen filling station, as the gas to be analyzed is already at very high pressure, for example of the order of 700 to 800 bar. The infrared spectra according to
The absorbance of the IR spectrum measured in
As
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 007 825.1 | Jun 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/000682 | 6/12/2017 | WO | 00 |