This invention pertains to inspection lenses, especially to inspection lenses used in dusty environments, and to a method and apparatus for maintaining an inspection lens free from fouling by gas-borne particulates in the atmosphere where it is used.
Standard inspection lenses are used in installations having enclosed process spaces that require monitoring by inspection cameras. In such spaces having a heavily particle laden atmosphere, especially a high temperature atmosphere such as recovery boilers, steel manufacturing, various kilns such as cement kilns, where there is a need to protect the camera optics from heat and particulate fouling, air flow around the lens is typically provided to cool the lens and prevent fouling by the particles in the particle laden atmosphere.
A typical inspection lens is illustrated here to explain the nature of the structure and the air flow that the structure produces, and to compare it to the invention exemplified below. An inspection lens 40 of the prior art, shown in
When a camera installation using the prior art air flow cooling and cleaning nozzle becomes unusable because of light-blocking contamination or because of breakage of the outermost optics element, the operator is faced with difficult choices. In the case of a recovery boiler, fine dust and black liquor debris can accumulate and quickly render the camera unusable by a coating of dust and other contamination on the outermost surface of the optics. The lens is not difficult to clean, but if it can become fouled quickly (for example, every 10 minutes) in an industrial environment, the instrument would typically no longer be used until its use was essential. This greatly reduces its usefulness. The diversion of manpower to perform this frequent cleaning is not acceptable, since the operator just does not have the employees available to clean the instrument every 10 minutes.
In other applications such as in steel plants like LMF and EAF (Liquid Metallurgy Furnace and Electric Arc Furnace), the process space environments not only include the possibility of high dust environments but large (millimeter sized) steel particles can impact the optics. When this happens, the front camera optics element can become covered with opaque particles or can be damaged, necessitating repairs before the system can be used again.
Thus, new sheath (purge) flow jet technology that significantly reduces (or completely eliminates) the particle deposition on the lens has long needed.
We have discovered that the flow diversion nozzle in prior art inspection lenses produces a recirculation zone 62 (shown in
To remedy this problem, this invention provides a reverse nozzle that diverts the sheath (purge) flow jet to produce a reverse flow that converges inside the lens tip, creating a strong axial jet that is effective in keeping the particles from penetrating into the area around the lens optics. The converging reverse flow jet creates an oblique impinging jet that is focused to impinge against and along the front of the lens optics to sweep away any particles that may have intruded into the area in front of the lens and substantially reduces or completely eliminates the recirculation area on front of the lens optics, thereby significantly reducing (or completely eliminating) the particle deposition on the lens.
The inspection lens of the preferred embodiment of this invention includes a lens tube having a central longitudinal axis and a plurality of axially aligned lenses, including an outermost optics element, which can be a lens or preferably an optical window. A sheath surrounds the lens tube and defines therebetween an annular air flow channel for conveying an air flow forward. A diversion nozzle at the distal end of the sheath terminates in a lens tip. The diversion nozzle is configured to divert the air flow in the annular channel inward toward the longitudinal axis and at a slight reverse angle relative to a plane normal to the axis and back toward the outermost optics element, such that the air flow converges at the outer surface of the outermost optical element creating a reverse oblique impinging jet inside the lens tip that minimizes any recirculation zone in front of the outermost optics element and produces a strong axial jet that is effective in cleaning the lens surface by transferring air flow momentum to any particulates depositing on said lens surface.
The invention and its many advantages and features will become better understood upon reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments in conjunction with the following drawings, wherein:
Turning now to the drawings, and more particularly to
Particle laden gas is trapped in this recirculating zone 62, or eddy, in front of the frontmost optics element, inside and also forward of the lens tip 66, followed by particle deposition onto the lens optics. The physics of formation of this recirculation eddy 62, shown in
As shown in
A reverse sheath (purge) flow jet nozzle 64 in accordance with the invention diverts the gas flow inward toward a longitudinal axis 47′ to produce a converging reverse flow jet 70 focused at the front of the lens optics to substantially reduce or completely eliminate the possibility of a recirculation area forming in the region 72 immediately in front of the lens optics, thereby significantly reducing (or completely eliminating) the particle deposition on the lens.
The reverse flow lens makes a more efficient use of the air supply (by nature of the stronger jet vs the prior art for the same purge flowrate). More “efficient” than the prior art means that the same amount of air flow will provide a more focused and higher velocity jet and thus provide better overall purging of the optics region. It allows for camera systems to be installed in environments that were previously unattainable with the prior art.
The flow angle for reversed flow depends on the desired view angle; for example
Specific air flowrates and pressures are different in different industrial applications because of their different constraints, (limited air supply, limited allowable air that can be used due to the process, position of camera system, the level of dust and particles that have to be rejected, etc.) The reverse flow lens allows for installations in applications that are difficult or impossible for the prior art. For example, the new lens will reject steel splatter if enough air is supplied, but the amount of air needed by the new lens to create a strong enough axial jet to protect the optics from damage is much lower that what the prior art system can provide. The exact amount of air required changes with the specific application. Also, the reverse flow lens can be used to keep the inspection lens clean in installations where the prior art was successful, but can do so while using less air, which saves money.
Benefits of using the new design include a greatly reduced recirculation area in front of the lens and is located well inside of the lens tip. Particles and aerosol droplets are less likely to be captured in a small recirculation zone and therefore are less likely to be deposited on the optics. A much stronger axial jet is formed for the same operating conditions (purge air flow rate and pressure) which helps prevent particles from entering into the area of the lens tip. The oblique impinging gas jets against the outermost optics element greatly improves cleaning of the lens optics by the jets due to the transfer of the flow momentum to any particulates depositing onto the lens surface.
Obviously, numerous modifications and variations of the preferred embodiment described above are possible and will become apparent to those skilled in the art in light of this specification. For example, in high temperature process environments that could not use oxygen containing air as the cooling/cleaning gas, such as explosive or other highly reactive atmospheres, nitrogen, argon or CO2 could be used as the cooling/cleaning purge gas. In process spaces having temperatures in warm or ambient temperature, an IR camera may be unsuitable because the temperature in the process space must be elevated at least 200F to get good images. However, a cooled MWIR camera would be able to get good images and use the new reverse flow lens in a dusty cool environment to maintain the dust-free condition of the lens. Therefore, we expressly intend that all these and other embodiments, species, modifications and variations, and the equivalents thereof, are to be considered within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims, wherein we claim:
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US15/00025 | 2/11/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61965959 | Feb 2014 | US |