The present invention relates to a method for controlling the speed of a compressor as a function of the available gas flow originating from a source and a controller and compressor thereby applied.
More specifically, the invention is intended for screw compressors, but it is not limited to them.
Due to their high reliability, screw compressors are often used in sectors of industry where gases are produced or extracted such as in the sectors of biogas production, natural gas extraction, CNG applications, CO2 supplies for the food industry and fertiliser industry, hydrogen supplies and similar.
The available flow of gas originating from the source is often highly variable and must be compressed for supply to a downstream network of users, typically up to 18 bars in the event of biogas production.
Of course it must be the intention to be able to supply the maximum available flow from the source to the downstream network, but compressors have their limitations with regard to the permissible pressure in the inlet, which by design is limited to between 1 and 4 bars for example.
Various methods are already known for controlling compressors in such applications in which the available gas flow to be compressed varies.
For example, a first method is known for compressors with a fixed speed whereby the compressor is switched on and off when the available flow falls below an expected nominal value or rises above an expected value. For compressors with a fixed speed it is also known to bring a bypass into operation in order to bypass the compressor when the available flow is too low. The frequent switching on and off has a negative impact on the lifetime of the compressor.
It goes without saying that with such a limited control it does not have the possibilities to set up the most energy-efficient control in all circumstances.
Moreover, with such a control with a fixed speed when the available gas flow rises above the aforementioned nominal value, the inlet pressure will rise until the inlet pressure has reached its maximum permissible value. If in that case the available flow increases further, measures have to be taken with this control to stop the inlet pressure rising further, whereby these measures always come with energy losses. Moreover, as a result the production capacity of the gas source is restricted by the compressor.
A second known method makes use of a compressor with a controllable variable speed, also known as a VSD (Variable Speed Drive) compressor.
This second method comprises the following steps:
With this method, when the available gas flow increases at a certain speed of the compressor, the inlet pressure at the inlet of the compressor also increases. The aforementioned control of the speed as a function of the inlet pressure will ensure that the speed increases until the inlet pressure recovers to the level of the set desired value. Due to the increase of the speed, the increased available gas flow will be fully compressed by the compressor and supplied to the network. The same logic can be followed in reverse in the event of a decrease of the available gas flow.
This known method provides the advantage that it ensures that, within imposed minimum and maximum limits of the compressor speed, the entire available flow can always be supplied/sold to the network such that maximum productivity of the gas source can always be ensured.
An additional advantage of this second method with control of the speed is that with an available gas flow that is low, the power supplied to the compressor corresponds to the compression capacity of the gas flow, such that all energy supplied to the compressor is usefully utilised for the compression and thus no valuable energy is lost.
Another advantage is that the continuous control of the speed prevents the compressor from having to be switched on and off frequently, which is beneficial for the lifetime of the compressor.
However, a disadvantage is that the controller will always endeavour to control the speed as a function of the set inlet pressure and to maintain the inlet pressure at the set value, without the controller taking account of a maximum efficiency of the compressor consumption that can be expressed in terms of the compressor efficiency or in terms of the ‘SER’ (Specific Energy Requirement), which is the ratio of the power supplied to the compressor to the compressed gas flow supplied, and is expressed in Joules/normal litre for, example.
Especially when the maximum permissible speed of the compressor is reached with the control for a set inlet pressure, the compressor will operate very inefficiently as in this case an increase of the available gas flow will result in the compressor continuing to run at this maximum speed and the inlet pressure will rise to its maximum permissible value.
The purpose of the present invention is to provide a solution to one or more of the aforementioned and other disadvantages.
To this end the invention concerns a method corresponding to the second method described above, but whereby the method according to the invention comprises the following additional steps:
This method according to the invention thus combines the advantages of the known method with regard to the full utilisation of the available gas flow for the supply to the network, combined with the continuous aim for the most efficient energy consumption for the drive of the compressor for compressing this entire available gas flow.
For the application of the method according to the invention, the aforementioned characteristic data of the compressor concerned can preferably be determined beforehand, for example during production or already during the design, and then loaded in the memory of the controller.
In the case of a compressor whereby the characteristic data are not known beforehand, it is possible to determine these data experimentally on an ad hoc basis by determining the efficiency and/or the SER for successive steady operating points during the use of the compressor, and storing them in the memory as a function of the speed and the inlet pressure.
This can be done during the normal use of the compressor by determining the SER whenever it reaches a steady situation with a certain inlet pressure and speed, and then loading it in the memory for each new steady state or to update existing data.
In this way a graph or table of the characteristic data of the compressor is built up point by point and is continually updated.
The controller is thus self-learning such that the data in the memory automatically take account of any signs of wear and other phenomena that affect the efficiency and the SER.
Preferably at least during the commissioning of the compressor, the characteristic data of the compressor concerned are determined over the entire operating region of the compressor and are stored in the memory.
According to a preferred aspect, to determine the characteristic data of the compressor concerned over the entire operating region, the controller is provided with a program to have the compressor operate successively at different discrete operating points within the aforementioned operating region by setting the corresponding desired value of the inlet pressure and the speed for each operating point, for example in incremental steps.
Industrial processes where gas is produced often have to contend with harsh and changeable conditions. In these applications, preference is often given to reliable compressors such as screw compressors, rather than being concerned with efficient energy consumption. Thanks to the invention it is now also possible to choose this type of compressor, not only for its reliability, but also for its efficient application possibilities.
The invention also relates to a controller for controlling the speed of a compressor as a function of the available gas flow originating from a gas source that enables the method according to the invention to proceed autonomously.
To this end the invention concerns a controller that is provided with:
Preferably the controller is also provided with an algorithm to automatically determine the aforementioned characteristic data of the compressor concerned during the use of the compressor and to store them in the memory of the controller point by point.
This provides the advantage that the controller can be applied to any compressor, even without knowing the characteristic data of the compressor concerned or without these characteristics first having to be determined experimentally.
To this end the controller is provided with an additional input for a signal that is representative of the power supplied to the compressor, whereby this signal can be used by the algorithm to determine the efficiency and/or the SER and to store them in the memory with the characteristic data as a function of the speed and the inlet pressure.
Optionally the controller can be provided with a program to allow the compressor to operate autonomously at different successive operating points within the operating region of the compressor by setting the corresponding desired value of the inlet pressure and the speed for each operating point, for example in incremental steps.
For the commissioning of a compressor whose characteristics are not known, this enables these characteristics to be mapped out for the application of the method according to the invention.
Of course the invention also relates to a compressor that is provided with such a controller according to the invention and to the use of such a compressor for the supply of gas originating from a source with a variable available flow with the aim, within certain limits, of being able to supply the entire available gas flow from the source to a downstream network of users with the highest possible efficiency and/or the lowest possible SER.
With the intention of better showing the characteristics of the invention, a few preferred applications of the method according to the invention for controlling the speed of a compressor as a function of the available gas flow and a controller and compressor thereby applied are described hereinafter, by way of an example without any limiting nature, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
By way of an example,
It is typical for such an installation that the available produced quantity of gas varies over time and thus also the available flow Q for the supply of the biogas to a network 2 of consumers 3.
It is of course the intention of the producer of the biogas to be able to sell the entire available flow Q to the consumers 3 to a maximum.
For the supply of the biogas, this first pressure of this biogas has to be increased, in this case by making use of a compressor 4 with a compressor element 5 driven by a motor 6 with variable speed and provided with a controller 7 according to the invention for controlling the speed n.
The compressor element 5 is a screw compressor for example, whose characteristics are shown very schematically in the graphs of
This operating region is bounded by a minimum and a maximum permissible speed, nmin and mmax respectively, and a minimum and maximum permissible inlet pressure pin at the inlet 8 of the compressor element 5, pinmin and pinmax respectively, for which the compressor element 5 has been designed.
It follows from this that at a certain speed n the flow Q increases with the inlet pressure pin and that at a certain imposed inlet pressure pset the flow Q increases with the speed n.
For the same compressor element 5,
The SER is expressed as being the required power P to be supplied by the motor 6 to compress a flow Q at an inlet pressure pin and is expressed in Joules/normal litre, for example.
It goes without saying that the SER is inversely proportional to the efficiency of the compressor element 5.
In
With known controllers the speed n of the compressor element 5 is controlled as a function of the available gas flow Q originating from the source 1 by:
In this way it can be ensured that the available flow Q is also fully supplied to the network 2.
Indeed, if when starting from the operating point I in
In this case, according to the aforementioned known controller the speed n will increase to n2 such that a new steady operating point II is reached at a higher flow Q2 that is equal to the available flow.
For a given available flow Q1, by setting pset an operating region can be overlapped that is defined in
In practice, with known screw compressors two desired values are set for the inlet pressure pin, for example, for example pset1 and pset2 in
It is clear that with these desired values the corresponding SER in
The invention presents a comparable control as described above, but with the difference that the desired value of the inlet pressure pset is adjusted on the basis of the aforementioned characteristic data and in such a way that after the aforementioned control of the speed at the adjusted desired value pset of the inlet pressure, the efficiency of the compressor is a maximum, or in other words the SER is a minimum.
In the case of
In order to enable this control, the controller 7 is provided with:
In this way the producer of the gas is assured that the entire available flow of gas can always be supplied to the network 2 and this with the lowest specific consumption.
Instead of the SER the efficiency can also form part of the aforementioned characteristic data of the compressor element 5.
Instead of determining or calculating the characteristic data experimentally beforehand, a self-learning intelligent controller 7 can be used that determines these characteristic data, of
To this end the controller 7 can also be equipped with a second additional algorithm 21, as shown in
In this respect the intelligent controller 7 can be provided with an additional input 22 for a signal that is representative of the power P supplied to the compressor element 5 that originates from a transducer 23 for example, whereby this signal is used by the additional algorithm 21 to determine the SER and to store it in the memory 19 with the characteristic data as a function of the speed n and the inlet pressure pin.
To this end, in the second additional algorithm 21 a program can be integrated to allow the compressor 4 to successively operate at different operating points within the operating region of the compressor by setting the corresponding desired value of the inlet pressure and speed for each operating point, for example in incremental steps.
It goes without saying that the algorithm 21 can be used once when commissioning a compressor 4, after which the transducer 23 can be removed, but this algorithm 21 can also be used continually or occasionally during the lifetime of the compressor 4 to continuously update the characteristic data in the memory 19 in order to take account of the effect of wear on the SER for example.
Although the invention is primarily applicable to screw compressors, the method described and the intelligent controller 7 thereby applied can also be used with other types of compressors.
The present invention is by no means limited to the embodiments described as an example and shown in the drawings, but such a method according to the invention for controlling the speed of a compressor as a function of the available gas flow and a controller and compressor thereby applied can be realised according to different variants without departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2015/5555 | Aug 2015 | BE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/BE2016/000039 | 8/11/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2017/035609 | 3/9/2017 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4526513 | Bogel | Jul 1985 | A |
4608833 | Kountz | Sep 1986 | A |
5203179 | Powell | Apr 1993 | A |
6516622 | Wilson | Feb 2003 | B1 |
20010054294 | Tsuboi | Dec 2001 | A1 |
20020051709 | Nishimura | May 2002 | A1 |
20080085180 | MacKenzie | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20100095670 | Grzonkowski et al. | Apr 2010 | A1 |
20100115800 | Sakai | May 2010 | A1 |
20120134866 | Tsuboi | May 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
104421142 | Mar 2015 | CN |
102009017887 | Oct 2010 | DE |
102011079732 | Jan 2013 | DE |
2792083 | Oct 2000 | FR |
2502134 | Nov 2013 | GB |
H0742957 | May 1995 | JP |
2007177670 | Jul 2007 | JP |
10-2008-0106972 | Dec 2008 | KR |
Entry |
---|
International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Nov. 17, 2017 on PCT/BE2016/000039. |
Belgian Search Report dated Apr. 22, 2016 on 2015/05555. |
International Search Report dated Feb. 28, 2017 on PCT/BE2016/000039. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20180283379 A1 | Oct 2018 | US |