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The present invention relates to the field of industrial safety to shutdown a process or flow when the fluid reaches an unsafe pressure. In the event of detecting an alarm condition the invented device will provide a pneumatic or hydraulic signal to cause a safety shutdown.
As shown in the reference U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,276,135; 5,213,133; 4,616,670 and 4,485,727 the prior art has an abundance of diverse process shutdown systems.
While the prior art inventions are adequate for the basic purpose and function for which they have been designed, they fail to provide a simple, reliable and ergonomic device that monitors the process' pressure and initiates shutdown when the sensed pressure falls out of the preset limits. A number of the prior art devices have sliding seals that are prone to become frozen after some time because of lubricants drying out, creating the need for frequent preventive maintenance by highly specialized instrumentation personnel. Another type of device seen on the prior art resorts to bourdon tubes that directly control pneumatic valves which leads to very delicate mechanisms, expensive and prone to failures.
Adding to the above disadvantages, some of the devices shown on the prior art have just one alarm point, creating the need of two separate devices to protect against high and low pressure conditions. Furthermore, the operators have little means to know the mechanical conditions of the shutdown device, as they do not show any activity until an abnormal pressure is detected.
As consequence of the above there is a need for a better mean to sense pressure and provide a simple and reliable safety shutdown device for unattended installations to protect them when the pressure reaches unsafe limits.
The Self-Contained Electronic Pressure Monitoring and Shutdown Device provides the means for a safety process shutdown that is reliable, needs minimal maintenance and provides the operator with direct reading of the process' pressure as well as the high and low pressure settings. Also, it provides a flashing lamp for each specific cause of shutdown and the means to recall the last cause of shutdown after the device has been reset. The invention is constituted of a Switch-Gauge (1) (a pressure gauge with electric contacts for high and low pressure alarms), an Electronic Logic Circuit (2), a Power Module (3), a Pulse Driven Solenoid Valve (4), a “High Pressure” indicator lamp (5), a “Low Pressure” indicator lamp (6), a “Low Battery” indicator lamp (7), a “System OK” indicator lamp (8) a “Reset” momentary switch or pushbutton (9) and a “Test” momentary switch or pushbutton (10). In essence the system uses the Switch-Gauge (1) to sense the high and low pressure conditions and when an abnormal pressure is detected the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) sends one or more consecutive “shutdown” pulses to the Pulse Driven Solenoid Valve (4) which controls a pneumatic or hydraulic signal that initiates the shutdown.
The device is composed of a Switch-Gauge (1), Electronic Logic Circuit (2), Power Module (3), High Pressure indicating lamp (5), Low Pressure indicating lamp (6), Low Battery indicating lamp (7), System OK indicating lamp (8), a momentary switch or pushbutton “Reset” (9) and a momentary switch or pushbutton “Test” (10).
When operating under normal conditions, the contacts in the Switch-Gauge (1) remain on their normally open condition and the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) remains in a routine of continuously scanning the input signals and periodically reading power voltages. The sign of life in the system is that the “System OK” lamp flashes every one or two seconds to show the operator that the system is working and no abnormal conditions have been detected.
If one of the contacts in the Switch-Gauge (1) goes from its normally open to a close condition (alarm), the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) confirms the alarm by re-scanning and re-confirming it for about one second before taking action. Once the alarm is confirmed, the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) generates one or more consecutive shutdown pulses to trip the Pulse Driven Solenoid Valve (4), causing the shutdown of the process. The subsequent shutdown pulses are for redundancy to insure that action is taken.
It is to be noted that the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) can be jumper-configured by the operator in the field to have a pre-programmed time delay (i.e. 15 seconds) before responding to a high or a low pressure condition. The time delay can be configured independently for the high or the low-pressure alarm and it allows the system to ignore temporary pressure excursions, as those excursions may be normal in some processes.
If a shutdown would occur the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) flashes de corresponding alarm indicator lamp to display the specific cause of it. The alarm indicator lamp will continue to flash even if the Switch-Gauge (1) contact goes back to normal or other alarm is sensed in order to insure that the cause of the shutdown is made known to the operator when he arrives to the location. The device will continue to display the condition causing the shutdown until the operator presses the “Reset” momentary switch or pushbutton (9).
When the “Reset” switch or pushbutton (9) is pressed the alarm lamp turns “off” and the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) pulses the Pulse Driven Solenoid Valve (4) back to “Open” to allow the process to resume. Also, after the device is “Reset” by the operator the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) will ignore any alarm that may be present for a pre-programmed period of time (i.e. 30 minutes) to allow the process to return to normal. If the alarm continues to be present after that period of time the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) will initiate shutdown again.
If the device detects that one of the battery voltages is reaching below a pre-programmed level, it will blink the Low Battery Voltage lamp (7) instead of the System OK lamp (8) to alert the operator that it is time to replace the batteries. If the batteries are not replaced within reasonable time the voltage will eventually fall below a pre-programmed “low-low” level the Electronic Logic Circuit (2) will initiate shutdown as the low voltage will compromise the device's reliability.
The Power Module (3), as shown in
Given the low power consumption achievable with the current electronic circuits combined with the fact that the pulse driven solenoid valve consumes no power except when being tripped, the power module can be designed to last five (5) or more years before battery replacement is needed.
An alternative Power Module (3-A) using no batteries is shown on
As shown in
In contrast, the electronic logic module is continuously consuming some current from the low voltage source (roughly 50 uA in current version) and it runs mainly on the energy accumulated in the storage capacitor (C2) which is charged directly from the solar module (SM1) through the second blocking diode (D2). By having a storage capacitor charged at a higher voltage more usable energy is stored for transferring to the low voltage capacitor (C3) by the switcher regulator (VR1). It is to be noted that the switcher regulator (VR1) will not run continuously but it will run and stop as per a control signal from the electronic logic circuit (2). In this alternative design the logic control circuit will be frequently monitoring the voltage on the low voltage capacitor (C3) and will command the switcher to run and transfer energy from the storage capacitor (C2) when the voltage is approaching a low limit (i.e. 3 VDC) and stop once the voltage reaches a high limit (i.e. 4 VDC).
Although only an exemplary embodiment of the invention has been described in the detailed description above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible without materially departing from the novel teachings of this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the following claims.