U.S. Patent Application Publication 2010-0028819 and www.yokogawa.comius/ia/analytical/tdls200 describe the TruePeak® TDLS200 tunable diode laser spectroscopy analyzer from Yokogawa Corporation of America.
The above described system of the '819 publication operates by measuring the amount of laser light at specific wavelengths, which light is absorbed (lost) as it travels through the combustion gas. Carbon monoxide, gaseous water and hydrocarbons each have a spectral absorption of infrared light that exhibits unique fine structure. The individual features of the spectra are seen at the high resolution of the tunable diode laser.
The system described above is commercially successful and is used, for example, to optimize the operation of furnaces in oil refineries. However, the characteristics of the laser diode can drift over time that requires the analyzer to be re-calibrated periodically, say once per two years. Additionally, the laser diode has a specified service life and eventually will need to be replaced either on a periodic preventative maintenance schedule or upon the eventual failure of the laser diode or upon other unknown random failure mode. There are a sufficient number of parameters unique to each laser diode (such as the precise wavelength of the diode at a specific precise current fed to the diode, the slope of wavelength from the diode v. current fed to the diode and the wavelength variation with temperature of the diode) that the analyzer as a whole must be recalibrated when the diode is replaced. If the replacement laser module is not recalibrated the results from the analyzer will be incorrect at best or more probably the analyzer will not even work.
The first step in recalibrating an existing or replacement laser module in the prior art is to remove the complete analyzer including the laser, detector (and controller, depending on analyzer architecture) from the live process and attach it to an off-line calibration cell taking care not to contaminate the process or create a hazardous condition by releasing process gas. The movement of the analyzer from the process to the off-line condition is often restrictive due to the numerous cables, conduits, tubes, pipes and other outdoor site logistics that exist in industrial plant environments. After some initial alignment of the laser and detector, the calibration cell is then flushed with a transparent gas such as nitrogen. Then the calibration cell is flushed with a known gas taking care that there are no gas leaks in the calibration cell. The user must then very carefully enter a series of new parameters at the CPU that are specific to the new laser diode—these are typically the target operating temperature, the tuning range, and any diode specific compensation parameters. These parameters may have been provided in the form of text, or uploadable file or other format but great care must be taken to ensure the correct parameters are entered or uploaded to the analyzer. The pressure, temperature, and path length of the calibration gas is then inputted into the CPU of the analyzer and a system calibration program is initiated to calibrate the system for the new laser module. The laser unit and detector unit (and controller depending on architecture) is then reinstalled on the process. Again, great care must be taken to ensure there is no hazardous gas release and other industrial hazardous are avoided. The user must now input the correct process operating conditions for the process analyzer otherwise the measurement values will be incorrect. Such recalibration is especially difficult because it must be done on site in an industrial environment. Furthermore, an unforeseen failure generally requires immediate action from the user to ensure the analyzer is returned to service as soon as possible—the current method does not lend itself well to these situations. It would be an advance in the art if a means were discovered that would allow a diode laser module to be replaced without the need to then recalibrate the analyzer on site and/or having to perform additional parameter setting changes or system updates.
The instant invention is a solution to the above-mentioned problem. The instant invention is an improved smart diode laser module, the module containing the diode and a programmable non-volatile memory device (such as an EEPROM chip) attached to the module. Diode specific information (such as the above mentioned wavelength v. current) is pre-stored in the non-volatile memory. The smart module of the instant invention facilitates plug-in style assembly when the analyzer is manufactured and when the analyzer is serviced in use. The instant invention provides for the replacement of the laser module of a tunable diode laser spectroscopy analyzer without the need to recalibrate the analyzer on site. If desired, a spare laser module can be installed while the original laser module is validated off-line.
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This example demonstrates the replacement of a laser module of a tunable diode laser gas analyzer installed on an industrial furnace with significantly reduced difficulties of working in an industrial environment. In the comfort of a electronic laboratory, a new TruePeak TDLS200 tunable diode laser module from Yokogawa Corporation of America is modified by attaching an EEPROM chip to the circuit board of the module so that the EEPROM chip is in electronic communication with the CPU cable connector on the back of the module. The laser module is attached to one side of a calibration cell. A TruePeak TDLS200 tunable diode laser analyzer detector is attached to the other side of the calibration cell. The calibration cell is then flushed with nitrogen and the detector is connected to a TruePeak TDLS200 tunable diode laser analyzer. The alignment of the laser module is then optimized so that the raw detector signal is flat for the first 20 data points. Then the calibration cell is flushed with a mixture containing a known concentration of carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, water, methane and oxygen, taking care that there are no gas leaks in the calibration cell. The pressure, temperature, and path length of the calibration gas is inputted into the CPU of the analyzer and a system calibration program is initiated to calibrate the system for the first laser module. The EEPROM chip of the laser module is programmed by the CPU of the analyzer for the laser module serial number, the laser temperature control parameters, the laser current drive parameters, the laser power information (including a power spectrum with zero gas absorption) and the span calibration coefficients and absorption spectrum for carbon monoxide, methane and water. The new module is removed from the calibration cell and shipped to a location having a TruePeak TDLS200 tunable diode laser analyzer mounted on an industrial furnace, the original laser module of which analyzer needs replacement. The analyzer is powered off, the original laser module is removed from the analyzer and the new laser module is installed on the analyzer. The analyzer is powered on. The CPU of the analyzer reads the laser module serial number, the laser temperature control parameters, the laser current drive parameters, the laser power information (including a power spectrum with zero gas absorption) and the span calibration coefficients and absorption spectrum for carbon monoxide, methane and oxygen from the EEPROM chip of the new module.
While the instant invention has been described above according to its preferred embodiments, it can be modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the instant invention using the general principles disclosed herein. Further, the instant application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within the known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the following claim.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application 61690096 filed 19 Jun. 2012. The instant invention is in the field of gas analysis, such as combustion gas analysis, and more specifically the instant invention is in the field of tunable diode laser spectroscopic analysis of a gas. A tunable diode laser emits near monochromatic light of a wavelength that is dependent on the current fed to the diode. Tunable diode laser spectroscopic analysis of combustion gases is known and described in the prior art, for example, by: Lackner et al., Thermal Science, V.6, p13-27, 2002; Allen, Measurement Science and Technology, V.9, p545-562, 1998; Nikkary et al., Applied Optics, V.41(3), p446-452, 2002; Upschulte et al., Applied Optics, V.38(9), p1506-1512, 1999; Mihalcea et al., Measurement Science and Technology, V.9, p327-338, 1998; Webber et al., Proceedings of the Combustion Institute, V.28, p407-413, 2000; Ebert et al., Proceedings of the Combustion Institute, V.30, p1611-1618, 2005; Nagali et al., Applied Optics, V.35(21), p4027-4032, 1996; and U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,248,755 7,244936 and 7,217,121.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61690096 | Jun 2012 | US |