The invention concerns a rotational rheometer or viscometer comprising a measuring motor for driving a measuring shaft which carries a measuring system, particularly a measuring head supported by a shaft portion, which may be contacted with a substance to be examined, particularly a liquid. The measuring data, particularly electrical parameters of the measuring motor and/or rotational and/or axial movements of the measuring shaft, sensed in the course of a measurement are brought into the calculation of the properties, particularly the viscosity, of the substance.
Rheometers or viscometers of this type are known, for example, from Austrian patent AT-404192 B1 (cf. U.S. Pat. No. 6,167,752), German patent DE 2733099 B1 (cf. U.S. Pat. No. 4,173,142), as well as German DE 19911441 (cf. U.S. Pat. No. 6,240,770).
When designing such rotational rheometers or viscometers, there is the object, above all, to be able to determine the properties of the substances examined with sufficiently high precision as required by rheologists. In this connection, both the influences of temperature, for determining the normal force, and the support of the measuring shaft to be as frictionless as possible play a role. Furthermore, such rotational rheometers or viscometers should be able to be simple in manufacture and should be constructed in a operationally reliable way. In an advantageous manner, such rotational rheometers or viscometers show an air borne measuring shaft in order to be able to absorb rotational and axial movements of the measuring shaft in a frictionless way.
For the measuring motor that drives the measuring shaft, the relation between the torque at the measuring shaft and the current consumption of the measuring motor is known or is determined as precisely as possible by appropriate calibrating measurements. In this way, the moment exerted by the substance to be examined to the measuring shaft via the measuring system can be determined by measuring the current consumption of the measuring motor. Measuring the torque precisely is of paramount importance. Furthermore, the force can be determined that acts in axial direction onto the measuring shaft which, in particular, is effected by measuring the air gap in axial direction in the air bearing of the measuring shaft. Any movement or displacement of the measuring shaft or changes of the thickness of the air gaps are proportional to the axial force exerted to the measuring shaft or are in a mathematical correlation to it. Due to the proportionality or the mathematical correlation, one can conclude to the force exerted by the substance by measuring the torque, and optionally the thickness and/or the change of the air gap, i.e. the change of position and stroke of the measuring shaft in axial direction.
In order to determine the parameters of a sample, it is possible to drive the measuring shaft with a constant number of revolutions and to measure the torque (CSR test). However, it is also possible to drive the measuring shaft with constant torque and to measure the number of revolutions or the rotational position (CSS test). Finally, the measuring shaft may be driven with a rotational movement that is sinusoidal or has another wave form (oscillation test). In this latter experimental procedure, apart form being able to determine the viscous share, one can also determine the elastic component of the sample.
For evaluating the sensed measuring values or the electrical parameters of the measuring motor and/or of the measuring shaft, the geometry of the measuring system plays also an important role. In principle, the different measuring systems are standardized and encompass substantially cone/plate measuring systems, plate/plate measuring systems and cylinder measuring systems. For evaluating the measuring data, it is also important to know the precise values of the geometry of the measuring system used. However, such measuring systems show small, but very influential differences of geometry, particularly due to manufacturing tolerances, which falsify the rheologic results or the measuring results. Above all, it is the torque which is influenced by geometry. Consequently, the geometric values are determined and written down or recorded by the producers of such measuring systems. Then, these recorded values are included into the calculation when evaluating the measuring data or when preparing the measuring results, and thus the different geometries of the measuring systems due to manufacturing tolerances are eliminated.
In
Furthermore, such rotational rheometers or viscometers comprise a stand 8 of a construction that is dimensionally stable as much as possible. The measuring system 7a, 7b, 7c may be displaced to a required level by means of a lifting device 9.
In principle, three different measuring systems of a standardized geometry are used. These different measuring systems comprise cone/plate measuring systems 7a, plate/plate measuring systems and cylinder measuring systems 7b.
In special cases, even non-standardized measuring systems 7c are used, as illustrated in
For precisely determining the rheologic characteristic values, apart from measured variables such as number of revolutions, torque, deformation angle and phase position, the knowledge of the precise values of the measuring system geometry is of extraordinary importance. Caused by manufacturing tolerances, even measuring systems of the same construction show small differences of geometry which would falsify the rheologic results. For example in a plate/plate measuring system, the viscosity result is influenced by the fourth order of the plate diameter. In cone/plate measuring systems, the measuring results are influenced, in addition, from the angular variation of cone as well as from the magnitude of the cone diminution. Therefore, all measuring systems are measured on measuring machines by the rheometer producers, and the geometric values are assigned to the measuring systems by a unique serial number or identification which is typical for the respective measuring system. The user has to take care that with every measurement for calculating the rheologic values, the data or measuring system geometry of the measuring system used, that correspond to the serial number or the identification, are input into the calculator system 10, 11.
It is an object of the invention to provide a rotational rheometer or viscometer of the type described at the outset where the recognition of the measuring system used can automatically be effected, and where the specific geometry data can be transmitted to the calculator system in a manner as simple and as precise as possible and without the help of the user. Transmission of the measuring data and/or of the serial number or the identification should neither influence the rheologic measuring values nor the measuring procedure.
In accordance with the invention, these objects are achieved with a rotational rheometer or viscometer of the type described at the outset by the features given in the characterizing clause of claim 1.
With the design according to the invention, it is possible to read out the data characterizing the measuring system used and to put it at the disposal of the evaluation unit without any intervention into the construction of the measuring arrangement and without any influence to the measuring data accrued so that the data can be taken into consideration when calculating the measuring results. This data transmission, effected in a frictionless and contactless manner, can be utilized for any measuring system used, provided it has such identification which can, in particular, be read out or off by an encoding module of the evaluation unit. Reading the data, that are contained in the identification, can be done at any time during the measuring procedure or can be repeated, unless these data are not temporarily stored in the evaluation unit for the measuring procedure. When manufacturing the measuring systems, one has only to take care that the data of the identification are present in an appropriately readable form, e.g. in an electronically readable form or in a form that may be detected in an optical way.
Conveniently, the characteristics of claims 5 and 6 are realized. The coupling units and coupler units, as provided, serve, on the one hand, for the transmission of data from the memory element to the evaluation unit, or for the energy supply to the memory element in the case an appropriate energy supply is necessary for reading the data out, e.g. for sending data through the antenna unit.
In principle. it is possible to store the data in the memory element in such a form that they are readable to the evaluation unit or the coupling units at the side of the encoder module by an inductive or capacitive influence. In likewise manner, the energy supply could be effected through the coupler units by inductive or capacitive coupling of an energy source, e.g. alternating voltage source, to it. Optical coupling units may read out optically memorized information, e.g. in the form of a bar code. An optical energy supply is possible, for example, by impinging radiation or light from appropriate optical transmitter units to photo-sensitive elements which are assigned to the memory element.
It is not of principal importance at which place on the measuring shaft and/or the measuring part the coupling units or the coupler units are arranged; here only the advantageous construction and arrangement of these units are important. It is advantageous, if the coupling and coupler units of the side of the memory element are located in the upper end region of the measuring shaft, because there is a corresponding free space for arranging the coupling and coupler elements of the side of the evaluation unit. There are definitely advantages, if the coupling and coupler units are arranged in the upper region of the measuring part, because there is also the possibility to arrange corresponding coupling and coupler units of the encoder side. The length of the air transmission path or of the section where a contactless transmission of data or of the energy needed for the memory element will be chosen in accordance with the actual facts. In doing this, it should be considered that the transmission of data should be made in an uninfluenced or identical and faultless way; distances of less than a millimeter or up to several centimeters and more can practically be provided.
Advantageous may also be the characteristics of claim 12, according to which the memory element is connected to the corresponding coupling or coupler units by wire. In an advantageous manner, the wire is lead in the interior of the measuring part and/or of the measuring shaft up to the corresponding element.
In the following, the invention will be described in detail by way of example with reference to the drawings.
The rotational rheometer or viscometer, in principle formed in a known manner, according to
During a current measuring procedure, the rheologic characteristic values of a substance can be determined and may be transmitted, through the interface, to the overriding calculator 11 which may then carry out some further calculations and, optionally, implements a visualization of the measuring data.
The serial number or identification of the measuring system 7a, 7b, 7c and/or its geometry data are stored in a memory 14, that is optionally a non-volatile one, which is connected to the measuring system 7a, 7b, 7c in an undetachable manner. As a memory element 14, an electronic chip or a mark, such as a bar code or color code, may be used. The transmission of data from the rotating measuring system 7a, 7b, 7c to the evaluation unit 10 is effected through electromagnetic or electric fields (radio system and/or a capacitive and/or inductive coupling) and/or through a transmission medium.
Such a transmission medium is, for example, realized by the coupling elements 12, 13. The coupling element 12 is coupled to the memory element 14 either through a line (not shown here), particularly a bipolar one, and/or through the coupling 5 between measuring shaft 4 and measuring part 7 and the measuring shaft 4. Through an air transmission path A, a coupling element 13 at the side of the evaluation unit is coupled to the coupling element 12 and is, in some cases, also coupled to an encoder module 18, which is optionally connected in series to the evaluation unit 10. Through this air transmission path, that is formed by the coupling elements 12, 13, it is possible to read data from the memory element 14 in a contactless way, to transmit them and to feed them to the evaluation unit 10.
The energy supply of the memory element 14, necessary for reading out the data, can be solved in different ways, e.g. electromagnetically through an antenna and coupling system 19, 20 between the stand 8 and the rotating shaft 4 or the measuring part 7 (
In principle, reading out the data could also be performed by an inductive coupling including coupling elements 19, 20 which are situated on the measuring shaft 4 in the way as is represented in
In
In
The transmission medium 17, particularly a wire, connects the memory element 14 with the coupling element 19. The energy supply for the memory element 14 is either effected through the coupling elements 19 and 20, realized as an electromagnetic antenna system, such as frame antennas, coupling capacities and/or as an optical transmission system, e.g. realized as a radiation source on the stand 8 and an optical detector on the rotating shaft 4, or via a local energy source 21, situated on the measuring system 7a, 7b, 7c and realized as a battery, an accumulator or a condenser or a combination of them, wherein energy is transmitted via the coupling system 19, 20 and is supplied in the energy source 21.
In
A further embodiment is shown in
A contactless transmission of data and/or energy between the memory element 14 or the measuring part 7 and/or the measuring head 27 and/or the measuring shaft 4, on the one hand, and the evaluation unit 10 or 11 and/or the encoder 18, on the other hand, may be effected in different ways. In order to guarantee a transmission over an air transmission path, they are advantageously assigned to the respective coupling units for data transmission and/or the coupler units for transmission of energy at the side of the memory element, corresponding coupling units and coupler units being associated to them in a corresponding way at the side of the evaluation unit. It should be taken care that both a contactless transmission of data and, if necessary, a contactless transmission of the energy necessary for transmitting the data can be effected, if an energy storage device is assigned to the memory element 14.
For a contactless transmission of data, transponder systems are known which deliver energy by means of a coupler unit at the side of the evaluation unit, the energy being received by a coupler unit at the side of the memory element. By a coupling unit at the side of the memory element, the information or data are superimposed to the transferred transmitter energy, and can be detected or read out by a coupling element at the side of the evaluation unit. Usually, the energy radiated to the memory element will be influenced by the memory element in such transponder systems, and changes of the energy radiated into the memory element are evaluated with respect to the, thus, transmitted data.
In principle, a transmission of data could also be effected in a similar way as shown in
As an optical coupler element, an LED or a laser beam or any other light source could be used which sends a light beam, particularly a beamed one.
In principle, it is also possible to supply energy in an inductive way to a coupling element that is coupled to the memory element 4, and to send the data via an antenna which is powered due to the energy supplied.
In a comparable way, it is also possible to write data into the memory element 4 by means of the coupling elements. Such writing of data into the memory element 4 will be carried out, above all, when initializing this memory element, when the measuring systems 7a, 7b, 7c have been measured. In case that the geometries of the measuring systems should change in some way during their use or some defect occurs in the memory element, the data could be read in anew. For this reason, volatile memories or programmable memories can be used in an advantageous manner as the memory element. This feeding and storing of data is effected with the coupling element provided at the side of the evaluation unit and with the coupling elements at the side of the memory element in a comparable way, as it is provided for reading the data contained in the memory elements.
Reading data into the memory element can be carried out by a central unit or by an evaluation unit. The central unit and the evaluation unit can be combined to form a single unit.
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A 896/2004 | May 2004 | AT | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060000262 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |