Claims
- 1. A control system for a plurality of burners in a multiple burner industrial furnace having a plurality of burners with associated fuel supplies distributed in said industrial furnace, the control system comprising, in combination:
- a plurality of electronic flame sensors, each having an input for connection to a flame sensing transducer exposed to a flame to be sensed, each having an output for producing an electronic level signal indicative of the sensed flame, and each having a test input for polling by an electronic processor;
- an electronic programmable processor having a set of program modules which include:
- a polling module operative on the flame sensor test inputs for detecting the presence of a flame sensor for each burner and checking initialization conditions for each burner before startup;
- a startup module for initiating burner firing, the startup module including purge and ignite sequences;
- a run module including means for polling the flame sensors to monitor the flames sensed by the associated transducers; and
- an alarm module for orderly shutting down of the system upon detection of a lost flame from an extinguished burner and recording the identity of the extinguished burner and the time at which the burner extinguished;
- memory means associated with the processor for recording status information at the time of occurrence of an alarm condition, the status information including the identity of any extinguished burner and the time at which said extinguished burner extinguished.
- 2. The combination of claim 1 wherein the electronic programmable processor includes manually settable means for specifying the number of flame sensors in a particular system, and the polling module compares the number of detected flame sensors against said specified number, and initiates a lockout condition in the event of mismatch.
- 3. The combination as set forth in claim 1 wherein the memory means includes non-volatile memory means for storing status information on the system, the non-volatile memory means having sufficient capacity to store information on all burners and maintain said storage in the event of power failure upon system shutdown.
- 4. The combination as set forth in claim 1 in which each flame sensor includes an output relay associated with an output circuit for energizing the relay when the sensing transducer detects a flame, the test inputs of the flame sensors being driven by the processor for simulating the presence of a flame to thereby switch the relay from the de-energized to the energized condition, the processor monitoring the flame sensor outputs during the course of said switching to detect failed relays.
- 5. The combination as set forth in claim 1 wherein the memory means includes a plurality of words of storage for storing information regarding system faults as they are detected for later scanning of the stored fault information to detect patterns therein.
- 6. The combination as set forth in claim 1 wherein the processor further has a display port for connection to a remote display, and a display connected to said display port and driven by the processor for displaying messages initiated from the processor.
- 7. The combination as set forth in claim 1 in which the control system includes a flame watchdog timer triggered by the programmable processor and having an output serving as an enabling signal for a main fuel valve relay, the main fuel valve relay connected as the only means for energizing the main fuel valve in the furnace, the processor in the startup and run module including means for providing trigger pulses to the flame watchdog timer and as a signal to energize the main fuel valve relay.
- 8. The combination as set forth in claim 7 in which a flame present signal generated by the run module when polling the flame sensors is operatively associated with the flame watchdog timer to enable the flame watchdog timer to respond to trigger pulses from the processor only in the presence of the flame present signal.
- 9. The combination as set forth in claim 8 wherein the flame watchdog timer has a reset input, and means coupling the reset input to the processor for enabling the flame watchdog timer in a normal mode to sense the flame present signal and respond to trigger pulses to energize the main fuel valve relay.
- 10. The combination as set forth in claim 9 including a further watchdog timer having a trigger input connected to the microcomputer for being serviced periodically within the time constant of the further watchdog timer, an output from the further watchdog timer being connected to a fault relay for control thereof, the fault relay having a contact set which passes power to output relays which control the industrial furnace, the output of the watchdog timer serving to energize the fault relay and open the supply of power in the event the further watchdog timer is not triggered by the processor.
- 11. The combination as set forth in claim 1 including an analog-to-digital converter associated with the processor and with the flame sensors, a multiplexer connected to an analog signal from the flame sensors indicative of flame quality, and having an output connected to the analog-to-digital converter for digitizing flame quality signals and passing them to the processor for storage.
- 12. A control system for a plurality of burners in a multiple burner industrial furnace having a plurality of burners with associated fuel supplies distributed in said industrial furnace, the control system comprising, in combination:
- a plurality of electronic flame sensors, each having an input for connection to a flame sensing transducer exposed to a flame to be sensed, each having an output for producing an electronic level signal indicative of the sensed flame, and each having a test input for polling by an electronic processor;
- an electronic programmable processor having a port connected to the plurality of electronic flame sensors for:
- (a) sensing the presence and quality of the flames sensed by the flame sensors;
- (b) signalling the flame sensors and testing the operability thereof; and
- (c) determining if the number of operable flame sensors is the same as a predetermined number of flame relays for the number of burners in the furnace;
- the processor having a further port for connection to a plurality of output relays for controlling the industrial furnace, the output relays including a main valve relay for controlling the fuel flow to the main burners of the furnace, and a fault relay interlocked with the output relays for interrupting the power supply to the output relays in the event a fault is detected;
- an external watchdog timer being connected to the processor for triggering thereby at a rate greater than a predetermined time constant established for the external watchdog timer, the external watchdog timer having an output connected to the fault relay for disabling the fault relay and removing power from the output relays in the event the processor fails to trigger the external watchdog timer more frequently than the predetermined interval; and
- a flame watchdog timer having a time constant and being connected for triggering by the processor at a rate greater than said time constant, hardware means connecting the flame watchdog timer to the electronic flame sensors for disabling the flame watchdog timer in the event one or more flame sensors fail to sense a flame, an output from the flame watchdog timer connected to the main valve relay whereby if the flame fails or the processor fails to trigger the flame watchdog timer the main valve relay opens the circuit to the main valve thereby preventing fuel flow to the furnace.
- 13. The combination as set forth in claim 12 further including an external alphanumeric display, a display port on the processor, and a cable connecting the external display to the display port, the processor serving to drive the display port with messages indicating the status of the system for display to an operator.
- 14. The combination as set forth in claim 12 further including manually settable switch means connected to a port of the processor, the manually settable switch means including means for fixedly setting a number corresponding to the number of burners in the system, the processor including means for cycling the test inputs of the flame relays to determine the number of operative flame relays in the system, and matching said determined number against said fixedly set number.
- 15. The combination as set forth in claim 12 in which the memory means records additional status information, including the status of all burners in the system at the time of recording an alarm condition, and means for preventing updating of the status information in the event an alarm condition is detected.
- 16. The combination as set forth in claim 15 in which non-volatile memory means are associated with the memory means and driven by the processor to record said status information, so that said status information is available in the event of a power failure.
- 17. The combination as set forth in claim 12 including an analog-to-digital converter associated with the processor and with the flame sensors, a multiplexer connected to the signal from the flame sensors indicative of flame quality, and having an output connected to the analog-to-digital converter for digitizing flame quality signals and passing them to the processor for storage.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. Ser. No. 08/203,170, filed Feb. 28, 1994.
US Referenced Citations (13)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2344934A1 |
Mar 1975 |
DEX |
4027090A1 |
Mar 1992 |
DEX |
1276672 |
Jun 1972 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry |
"Single and Multi-Burner Solid State Protectofier Combustion Safeguard", Bulletin P-24-R, Form 6642V, of Protection Controls, Inc. in Skokie, Illinois. |
"Sens-A-Flame II Single-& Multi-Burner Combustion Safeguard", brochure of Pyronics, Inc. in Cleveland, Ohio. |
"Electronic Flame Supervision", brochure of Pyronics, Inc. in Cleveland, Ohio. |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
203170 |
Feb 1994 |
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