The present invention relates to a method of measuring a viscosity and an apparatus thereof, and in particular, relates to temperature correction in the method wherein the viscosity is measured by applying a rotating magnetic field to a rotator.
Measuring a viscosity of a material is an indispensable technique for quality control, performance evaluation, material control, and research and development in manufacturing process of medicines, foods, coatings, inks, cosmetics, chemicals, papers, adhesives, fiber, plastics, beer, detergents, concrete admixture, and silicon or the like.
The methods of measuring viscosity are a method using a capillary tube, a method by contacting an oscillator with a sample, a method using a rotator, and so on.
The method using a rotator, one of the above-mentioned methods, is disclosed in International Publication No. WO 2009/131185 (International Patent Application No. PCT/JP2009/058089).
Specifically, it is configured so as to sink a conductive rotator (sphere) into a container containing a sample liquid, and apply a rotating magnetic field to the rotator from an outside of the container.
Under such configuration, when the rotating magnetic field is applied to the rotator, Lorentz force works between the electric current generated on the rotator and the rotating magnetic field, and the rotator rotates along with the rotating magnetic field. At this time, since the rotating velocity of the rotator delays depending on the viscosity of the sample from the rotating velocity of the rotating magnetic field, the viscosity can be calculated based on this relationship.
The difference between the rotating velocity of the rotator and the rotating velocity of the rotating magnetic field can be expressed by a linear equation having a specific slope. The slope of the linear equation becomes the viscosity.
The invention disclosed in WO 2009/131185 merely relates to the relationship between the rotating velocity of the rotator and the rotating velocity of the rotating magnetic field in a narrow range of temperature. In case of a wide range of temperature, an error is generated between a measured value and a true value, as shown in
The present invention is suggested in view of the above-mentioned conventional problems, and has an object to obtain the true value of viscosity by correcting the measured value of viscosity taking into consideration the change of apparatus property depending on temperature, and in particular, the influence caused by the conductivity change.
To achieve the above-mentioned object, the present invention employs following means. First, the present invention is a method of measuring a viscosity of a sample based on a rotation frequency ΩS of a rotator rotating by applying a rotating magnetic field from outside to the rotator set in a container containing the sample, and a rotation frequency ΩB of the rotating magnetic field.
By a following equation where a viscosity η0 at specific temperature is known,
η0Ωs=k1(ΩB−ΩS)−k2 (k1, k2: constant) (1)
a constant k1 having temperature dependency of an apparatus and a constant k2 are calculated at each temperature in advance. Using the calculated constants k1 and k2 (almost no change by the temperature change), the rotation frequency ΩS of the rotator and the rotation frequency ΩB of the magnetic field, a corrected viscosity η at the specific temperature is calculated by a following equation (2).
Most of the influence upon the constant k1 having temperature dependency of the apparatus is the change of electric conductivity of rotator depending on the temperature change. The other influences, such as circuit, magnetic generator, and etc. can be ignored.
The temperature dependency of the constant k1 well coincides with the temperature dependency of the conductivity of the rotator. Accordingly, a value proportional to the conductivity of metal used to the rotator can be employed as the constant k1.
Therefore, it is understood that the measurement error of the viscosity caused by temperature may be corrected using the temperature dependency of the conductivity of metal used to the rotator.
As described above, the measurement error of the viscosity caused by temperature can be corrected by the temperature dependency of the conductivity of rotator, and the correction process can be simplified.
A sample is contained in a container 1, and a conductive sphere (aluminum), that is a rotator 6, is placed in the container 1. The sphere is applied with a rotating magnetic field from an outside of the container 1. The magnetic filed may be applied under any configuration, however, an example shown in
Under such configuration, when the magnetic field is rotated, a current is induced into the conductive rotator 6 along with the rotation of the magnetic field, and the rotator 6 is rotated by Lorentz force working between the current and the magnetic field. Since the rotation frequency ΩS of the rotator 6 depends on the viscosity of sample, a rotating state is captured by a camera 11, the captured images is processed by an image processing unit 9, and the rotation frequency ΩS of rotator 6 is calculated. A viscosity detecting unit 8 is given the rotation frequency ΩB of the rotating magnetic field applied to the electromagnetic coil by the rotation control unit 7, and also given the rotation frequency ΩS of rotator 6 by the image processing unit 9. The viscosity is calculated based on the two rotation frequencies.
The method of calculating the viscosity is disclosed in the International Publication No. WO 2009/131185, so the details are not explained here. The relationship between “the difference between the rotating speed of the magnetic field and the rotating speed of the rotator” and “the rotating speed of the rotator” becomes a straight line relationship in a limited range of temperatures, and a slope of the straight line becomes a viscosity η.
The apparatus for the above-mentioned measurement has a temperature property. For instance, the magnetic property of coils and cores used to the rotating magnetic field and the circuits for applying the current to the coils are provided with the temperature properties. When the measurement is carried out at the temperature of 40 degrees C., the current flowing to the rotator 6 is different from the current flowing to the rotator 6 measured at the temperature of 200 degrees C. As explained with reference to
Here, where k1 and k2 are constants, the following relationship between the viscosity η0 and each rotation frequency ΩS and ΩB is established.
η0Ωs=k1(ΩB−ΩS)−k2 (1)
When k1 and k2 at each temperature are found regarding a sample of which the viscosity η0 in a wide range of temperatures is known, the constant k2 is obtained as a fixed value wherein the temperature dependency can be almost ignored, and k1 is obtained as a group of straight lines, (the constant k1 is a slope of a straight line at each temperature), wherein k1 gets smaller as temperature T1, T2, . . . become higher, as shown in
It is noted, by verifying the values of the constant k1, that the values of the constant k1 well coincide with the temperature dependency of the electric conductivity (Δ and a solid line in
The constants k1 and k2 do not have the substance dependency of sample, but these are a temperature dependency value (k1) having the temperature dependency of the apparatus (the electric conductivity of the rotator, in particular), and an apparatus property value (k2). Accordingly, the constants k1 and k2 can be found in advance by using the material of which viscosity is known.
The constants k1 and k2 found by using the sample having the known viscosity η0 as described above are stored beforehand in a memory provided to a constant unit 13.
Under such conditions, regarding the sample of which viscosity is unknown, the viscosity detecting unit 8 obtains the rotation frequency ΩS of the rotator 6 and the rotation frequency ΩB of the rotating magnetic field, and concurrently obtains the temperature dependency constant k1 and the constant k2 enough to ignore the temperature dependency. Further, the viscosity detecting unit 8 calculates a following equation modified from the equation (1),
and finds the viscosity η that is subjected to the temperature correction.
The constants k1 corresponding to each temperature and k2 may be stored as a table in the memory provided to the constant unit 13 as described above, but in this method, the memory is required to store limitless value of constant k1 corresponding to limitless temperature, in principle. Accordingly, the constant unit 13 may be configured so that the same metal as the rotator 6 is place on the same thermal environment as the measurement environment, and the electric conductivity of the metal used to the rotator is measured at the same time the rotation frequency ΩB and ΩS are detected, and then a value proportional to the measured electric conductivity value is given to the viscosity detecting unit 8. In this method, it is nevertheless to say that the constant k2 enough to ignore the temperature dependency is stored in the memory provided to the constant unit 13.
As the result of the above measurement, it is possible to obtain the viscosity η of the silicon oil that coincides with the true value , as shown by a mark A in
As described above, in the present invention, when the viscosity is calculated based on the rotation frequency of the rotator in the sample rotating by the rotating magnetic field, it is possible to obtain the true value of the viscosity by correcting the measured value for the error caused by the temperature dependency of the apparatus. In addition, the present invention can easily achieve the object by using the electric conductivity of the metal used to the rotator to the calculation.
The above explanation noted a case the metal used to the rotator 6 is aluminum, however, it is possible to provide the same effect in case of other metals (e.g., titanium).
The above explanation noted a case the metal used to the rotator 6 is a pure metal made of one metal, such as aluminum, titanium or the like, however, it is possible to provide the same effect in case of alloy, such as aluminum alloy of which main component is aluminum, or titanium alloy of which main component is titanium.
Referring to
First Embodiment suggests a method and an apparatus of measuring the viscosity of silicon oil (Δ in
In Second embodiment of the present invention, it is configured so that, by providing the inner surface of the container 1 shown in
By using the apparatus provided with the container of which inner surface is coated by the conducting film, the sample of which viscosity is known, and the equation (1), the constants k1 and k2 corresponding to each temperature are found in the same way as First Embodiment.
As described above, in Second Embodiment, even if the sample is easy to take the streaming electrification, (e.g. toluene), when the apparatus employs the container 1 so as to discharge the electric charge generated in the sample, it is easy to obtain the measured value (Δ in
As shown in
Additionally, Second Embodiment employs the method of coating the inner surface of the container 1 with the conducting film in order to have the inner surface of the container the conductivity, however, the method of coating with the conducting film may be a silver mirror reaction, a non-electroplating, a vapor deposition, or the like.
The present invention can obtain the viscosity without depending on the temperature of the measuring environment, so that the industrial applicability is very large.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-032375 | Feb 2010 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2011/000870 | 2/17/2011 | WO | 00 | 5/29/2012 |