Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
The present invention is directed toward pumps, and particularly toward vacuum primed pumps.
Pumps for liquids or fluids, often having non-microscopic solid particles therein, are well known in the art, and commonly use a rotary or centrifugal action to mechanically impel the fluid in the desired direction.
Typically such pumps are vacuum primed and are positioned above the level of the liquid being pumped. In such installations, the pump will not operate properly unless there is a head of fluid from the lower liquid level into the pump itself. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,331,769 which discloses a pumping system with vacuum priming. That is, if the fluid does not reach into the pump, the pump will merely drive air and will not create a sufficient force to draw the fluid up to the pump for the desired pumping. Therefore, such pumps are primed with fluid to ensure that there is the desired head of fluid extending into the pump so that it may operate as desired. Moreover, it is important that the pump impeller, mechanical seal or packing be completely submerged in order to prevent air from being entrained in the pump and potentially air locking the impeller to prevent pump operation. This has typically been accomplished by providing a separate vacuum pump, connected to the primary pump at its highest point, to ensure that all air is extracted as desired.
Heretofore, in uses where the fluid includes debris, sensors have been used to detect the presence of fluid at the level required for ensure the pump is in the primed state, such as shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,519,369 and 5,035,583. However, those sensors have extended into the priming chamber sufficiently to come into contact with a significant amount of debris, and the sensors have been such that debris could wrap or coat the priming sensor, causing false prime detections.
Further, when such pumps are used in applications where they will encounter different and changing conditions (e.g., where the fluid includes debris and/or different components such as both water and oils), false prime detections are also possible when the conditions where used change.
The present invention is directed toward overcoming one or more of the problems set forth above.
In one aspect of the disclosure herein, a pumping system includes a primary pump for pumping fluid from an inlet out an outlet, a priming chamber disposed above the pumping chamber, and a primer for drawing fluid into the priming chamber up to at least a selected depth at which the primary pump will properly operate. A sensor has a cylindrical shaft extending into the priming chamber with a sensing dome on an end of the cylindrical shaft at the selected depth, the sensing dome shaped as a spherical cap with a vertical base on an end of the cylindrical shaft, the cap vertical base having a diameter less than the cylindrical shaft diameter, wherein the sensing dome is adapted to detect the presence of liquid at the selected depth in the priming chamber and signal whether liquid is present at the selected depth. A controller is adapted to control operation of the pump and primer based on whether the signal indicates the presence of fluid at the selected depth.
In one form of the pumping system, the sensor is adapted to adjust the sensitivity of the sensor in correlation with characteristics of the fluid in the priming chamber.
In another form of the pumping system, the sensor includes an algorithm adapted to sense the presence of liquid in environments having various forms of debris in the liquid including strings and rags, the algorithm having settings for variables including at least one of dampening of the electromagnetic field, conductance of the electric field, and permittivity of the magnetic field.
In still another form of the pumping system, the sensor periodically signals to the controller whether liquid is present at the selected depth, and the controller changes pump operation between prime and not prime states when the sensor signal indicates a changed state for a selected period.
In yet another form of the pumping system, the controller is adapted to control operation of the pump and primer by (a) activating the primer when the sensor signal indicates that liquid is not present at the selected depth, and (b) allowing the primary pump to be operated when the sensor signal correlates with a fluid depth in the priming chamber which is at least the selected fluid depth for fluid having characteristics correlating to the fluid in the priming chamber. In a further form, one of the fluid characteristics is the presence or absence of oil in water.
In yet another form of the pumping system, the controller allows operation of the pump when the sensor signal indicates the presence of liquid at the selected depth for a selected period of time.
In another aspect of the invention, a pumping system includes a primary pump for pumping fluid from an inlet out an outlet with a priming chamber disposed above the pumping chamber. A primer draws fluid into the priming chamber up to at least a selected depth at which the primary pump will properly operate. The pumping system also includes a controller and a domed sensor supported in the priming chamber at the selected depth. The sensor is adapted to detect an interface between liquid and air at the selected depth in the priming chamber and send the detected interface to a controller. The controller is adapted to (a) correlate the selected fluid depth in the priming chamber with selected sensor detected interfaces based on characteristics of the fluid in the priming chamber, and (b) control operation of the pump and primer based on whether the selected detected interface sent by the sensor correlates with the selected fluid depth in the priming chamber for fluid having characteristics correlating to the fluid in the priming chamber.
In a further form of this pumping system, the controlled operation of the pump and primer comprises (a) activating the primer when the detected interface sent by the sensor correlates with a fluid depth in the priming chamber which is less than the selected fluid depth for fluid having characteristics correlating to the fluid in the priming chamber, and (b) allowing the primary pump to be operated when the detected interface sent by the sensor correlates with a fluid depth in the priming chamber which is at least the selected fluid depth for fluid having characteristics correlating to the fluid in the priming chamber.
In another form of this pumping system, the fluid characteristics may include at least one of the presence or absence of fats, oils or grease (FOG) or a large amount of solid debris in the fluid.
In still another form of this pumping system, the controller allows operation of the pump when the sensor sends the detected interface between liquid and air to the controller for a selected period of time.
In yet another form of this pumping system, the sensor has a cylindrical shaft extending into the priming chamber with a sensing dome on an end of the cylindrical shaft, with the sensing dome shaped as a spherical cap with a vertical base on an end of the cylindrical shaft, the cap vertical base having a diameter less than the cylindrical shaft diameter.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become apparent from a review of the entire specification, including the appended claims and drawings.
A pumping system 10 according to the present invention is shown in
The primary pump 14 illustrated particularly in
A suction or primer chamber 50, which may be a part of the adapter for the pump motor 34 and volute 24, is defined above the volute 24, and is used to draw priming fluid into the pump inlet 16 as described below. A throttle opening 54 is provided between the suction chamber 50 and the pumping chamber 30.
A clear plastic housing dome 60 may be provided above the suction chamber 50 to allow for visual inspection into the dome 60. A suitable vacuum line 64 is connected to the dome 60 for drawing a vacuum in the suction chamber 50 as appropriate. Specifically, a vacuum pump 66 may be connected to the vacuum line 64 and selectively operated to prime the primary pump 14. It should be appreciated that any vacuum pump 66 capable of generating a vacuum sufficient to prime the primary pump 14 will be suitable.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,331,769 B2 entitled “Pumping System” and issued Feb. 19, 2008 discloses a pumping system similar to that shown in
In prior art systems, a sensor 70A such as illustrated in
Further, the sensor 80 may advantageously be a capacitive sensor having a generally horizontal face for sensing the relative movement of the interface between the fluid and air in the pump priming chamber 50. The sensing dome 86 generates an electrical field in the priming chamber 50, measuring the dielectric properties of the medium in the pump chamber to sense only liquid or fluid. As described in greater detail herein, once fluid is detected, the sensor changes state to ON indicating that the pump is primed and thus is ready to operate.
The sensor 80 incorporates a novel prime sensing technology in a wastewater environment that contains debris such as rags, strings, wipes or other flushable debris that can create maintenance issues for other types of sensors, and has custom settings to provide better system response than standard sensors. The sensor 80 evaluates the media at the probe's face using multiple measurement points, which measurements are controlled by sensitivity settings in the sensor 80 to optimize the sensor performance and determine if there is liquid present at the sensor's 80 face. An embedded algorithm in the sensor 80 evaluates the measurements and provides signals to indicate when liquid is present at the probe.
By providing such a sensor 80 as described, there is a reduced surface area and reduced projection into the priming chamber 50 relative to previously used sensors (such as sensor 70A in
The sensor 80 incorporates a new sensing technology to create effective pump priming in this application and in a wastewater environment that contains debris such as rags, strings, wipes or other flushable debris that can create maintenance issues for other types of sensors. The sensor 80 advantageously has custom settings including reaction time to provide better system response for wastewater applications. The sensor 80 also advantageously incorporates high-frequency spectrum sweeping (to evaluate the media at the probe's face using multiple measurement points), dampening of the electromagnetic field, conductance of the electric field, and permittivity of the magnetic field. These measurements can be advantageously controlled by custom sensitivity settings in the sensor 80 to optimize the sensor performance for this application and determine if there is liquid present at the sensor's 80 face. An algorithm may be advantageously embedded in the sensor 80 to evaluate the measurements and provide signals to indicate when liquid is present at the probe.
The sensor 80 may be advantageously used for detecting the presence of fluid as described herein.
The pumping system 10 disclosed herein also provides advantageous operation in conjunction with the sensor 80.
Specifically, as illustrated in
Further, as illustrated in
One communication module 130 which may be advantageously used with the system 110 as described herein is an IO Link Master.
Basic operation of the pumping system 10 is as follows.
If the fluid level is lower than desired in the pump 14 for pump operation, the vacuum pump 66 will be operated to generate a vacuum in vacuum line 64 and in turn generate a vacuum in suction chamber 50.
Once the level of the fluid has sufficiently reached a sufficient depth that the pump 14 may be considered primed, the dome 86 of the sensor 80 will be contacted by the fluid and, as described in greater detail below, the sensor 80 will indicate that the pump 14 is primed and the vacuum pump 66 may be turned off.
Heretofore, the use of sensors 70A in pumping applications such as described herein have relied upon fixed settings for the sensor 70A independent of the initial and/or changing conditions of the specific installation. The system 110 disclosed herein, by contrast, allows for fine tuning of liquid detection settings for difficult wastewater installations as well as adjustment over time based on changing conditions. Moreover, the system 110 disclosed herein provides sensor feedback to enable monitoring to facilitate sensor maintenance and/or adjustment when appropriate. That is, as disclosed herein, the communication module 130, controller 120 and associated logic provide diagnostics which allow the settings of the sensor 80 to be appropriately adjusted and monitored. The control logic and sensor 80 allow the operator to adjust the prime detection control settings for sensor switching and time set points via an operator interface screen.
A flow chart showing the adjustable prime detection control logic is shown in
When first set up (step 200), settings for the sensor 80 establish the sensitivity of the sensor 80 to indicate when liquid is present (step 202) and when liquid is not present (step 204), as well as the time period over which such ON/OFF (liquid present/not present) state must exist (step 206) to recognize that the sensed state has transitioned from liquid present (or not present) to liquid not present (or present). These settings (steps 202, 204, 206 may be factory set on the sensor itself, but if adjusted for particular installation conditions may be adjusted at the factory or adjusted in the field (by using, e.g., a PC, PC software and cable connected to the sensor) with such adjusted settings saved to the sensor 80.
During operation, if the sensor liquid sensitivity switch ON setting (0-100%) is met (step 210), then an internal time delay starts in the sensor 80. The liquid sensitivity switch ON setting is met when the percentage read by the sensor 80 is greater than or equal to the set point (set at step 202). If that time delay setting (in, e.g., 0.1 second increments) is met and the sensor switch ON setting is still met (step 212), then the sensor 80 indicates that the pump 14 is primed (step 214).
Thereafter, if the sensor 80 has been indicating prime (step 214), and the sensor detects that the current liquid sensitivity is less than the switch off setting (0-100%) (step 216), then the sensor 80 no longer indicates prime (step 218)—that is, recognizes that the primary pump 14 is not primed, and will remain in that sensed condition until the sensor liquid sensitivity switch ON setting (0-100%) is met (step 210) for a sufficient time period (step 212) at which point it will switch to indicating prime again (step 214).
It should be appreciated that if the sensor settings are too sensitive and thus cause false prime indications, an operator would soon recognize this and adjust the settings (e.g., using a connected PC, software and cable) (steps 202, 206) to make them less sensitive. Examples of the sensor settings being too sensitive could include the switch ON set point being set too low (step 202), the switch OFF set point being set too high (step 204), or transition time set point set too low (step 206). Conversely, if the sensor settings are not sensitive enough, the sensor might not indicate that the pump is primed even though it is. Examples of the sensor settings that are not sensitive enough could include the switch ON set point set too high (step 202), or the transition time set point set too high (step 206). Further, if the switch OFF set point is set too low, then the sensor 80 may not reset from a primed state (steps 214, 216), also causing a false prime detection.
In addition to the above described adjustability of the sensor 80, the system 110 which also includes the PLC 120 and communication module 130 provides diagnostics which monitor sensor performance to alert (via a connected human-machine interface [“HMI”]) when preventative maintenance is required (e.g., prompting an operator that the sensor is dirty, and may need maintenance).
The PLC 130 and associated sensor diagnostic monitoring logic allows for trending, monitoring sensor health and issuing preventative maintenance messages. It also allows the sensor settings to be adjusted to improve performance for a given environment. For example, in an environment with a wastewater stream, water with a high oil content may be encountered which will require the liquid sensitivity settings of the sensor 80 to be adjust to less sensitive values to indicate that the primary pump 14 is primed, whereas when clean water is encountered it will require the liquid sensitivity settings to be adjusted to more sensitive values to indicate that the pump is primed. Further, if the prime sensor device status monitor indicates the sensor 80 is not in a functional state, then via the HMI an operator may be informed that a sensor adjustment or maintenance is required.
Still further, because the liquid sensitivity and temperature are trended, this allows the sensor health to be advantageously monitored. The controller 130 monitors whether the sensor 80 is performing to acceptable levels (getting dirty or coated, or the application has water with high oil content) and needs setting adjustment or maintenance. That is, when a particular time trend monitor setting (step 304) is established, the PLC 130 may advantageously monitor one or more of the liquid sensitivity delta (step 308), temperature (step 310), and temperature delta (step 312) over that period. If, during that time, any of the monitored variables is out of the set range, the PLC 130 will recognize that maintenance is required and indicate that to the operator via the HMI. Similar maintenance indications may be provided if (a) the liquid sensitivity setting and liquid sensitivity delta settings are enabled and the current sensor liquid reading is not within the set range, and/or (b) the temperature setting and temperature delta settings are enabled and the current sensor temperature reading is not within the set range.
Further, an operator may select which trended values are necessary for sensor health monitoring and via the HMI enable or disable them, depending on their necessity. For example, if the temperature and temperature delta are not necessary, then the user can disable those in a manner whereby these variables will still be conveyed via the HMI but they will not be used to determine the sensor health and/or indicate whether sensor maintenance is required. Alternatively, the same can be done with the liquid sensitivity settings, if needed.
Still other aspects, objects, and advantages of the present invention can be obtained from a study of the specification, the drawings, and the appended claims. It should be understood, however, that the present invention could be used in alternate forms where less than all of the objects and advantages of the present invention and preferred embodiment as described above would be obtained.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US20/51393 | 9/18/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62903387 | Sep 2019 | US |