This invention relates to spark testing apparatus and has been devised particularly though not solely for assessing the safety of energy sources used in high risk mining situations.
There are many situations where explosive atmospheres exist and present a safety hazard if those atmospheres come in contact with a source of energy such as en explosive such as from an electrical circuit. The concept of “intrinsic safety” is well recognised as a method of equipment protection in such explosive atmospheres. Protection is achieved by designing the energy source such that it is incapable of producing an explosive spark. This is achieved by limitation of the electrical energy made available by the source, either always, or when the onset of a fault is detected.
In the past, energy sources with simple electrical characteristics have been certified intrinsically safe purely on the basis of those characteristics, through the use of assessment curves. Many devices however have more complicated characteristics which are assessed using a mechanical device known as a spark test apparatus (STA). The STA is a device connected as a load to the energy source which simulates a spark in an explosive atmosphere. This is accomplished through the use of a representative flammable gas mixture which surrounds a tungsten wire held against a rapidly rotating cadmium disc configured to randomly emit a spark causing an explosion of the flammable gas mixture. The observation, or absence of an actual explosion, is the basis for assessment using a STA.
There are however, several problems affecting the usability and reliability of currently used spark test apparatus (STA) including the issue of repeatability. Although the STA simulates the spark and explosion conditions well, it does so in a random manner. Usually the STA is run for a set number of revolutions, based on the assumption that a worst case spark will occur within this set number of revolutions, This means that there is no guarantee that during a given test the energy source under test has been subjected to the worst possible fault condition.
There is also a no quantifiable result from an STA test, which is based solely on observation. If an explosion occurs during the test period, the energy source is deemed to have faded but there is no quantitative indication of safety.
A further issue with current STA apparatus is that the apparatus uses hazardous materials. Both the cadmium disc used to generate the spark and also the flammable gases surrounding the apparatus are hazardous substances with consequential health and safety issues.
The present invention therefore proposes to replace the current STA apparatus with an electronic spark testing method which performs the functions of the STA while mitigating the above mentioned issues. This alternative test according to the invention is a departure from the STA in two primary ways, namely the simulation of the fault condition and the safety assessment of the device under test.
Accordingly, in one aspect, the present invention provides a method of assessing the safety of an energy source including the steps of applying a simulated spark load to the energy source and measuring the time varying current response to that load.
Preferably, the time varying current response measurement is used to determine the energy delivered to the load over the duration of the simulated spark.
Preferably the time varying current response measurement is also used to determine the instantaneous power.
Preferably, the measured energy and instantaneous power are used to assess whether an explosion would have occurred.
In one form of the invention the energy source is connected to an electronic spark tester, and the method includes the following steps:
Preferably the stimulus required to yield the most energetic simulated spark is applied to an analogue subsystem within the electronic spark tester and the resulting current/voltage response of the energy source is measured and recorded
Preferably the measured current/voltage is used to calculate the time varying power, which in turn is used to calculate a quantitative measure of ignition safely.
In a further aspect, the present invention provides apparatus for assessing the safety of an energy source including means for electronically generating a simulated spark load adapted to be applied to the energy source, and electronic means for measuring the time varying current response to that load.
Preferably, the apparatus includes a digital subsystem adapted to output control signals and an analogue system configured to replicate the dynamic characteristics of a mechanical spark testing apparatus and measure the response of the energy source.
Notwithstanding any other forms that may fall within its scope, one preferred form of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
h the preferred form of the invention, the mechanical STA apparatus of the prior art is replaced by an electronic circuit which both generates and measures the impact or the characteristics of a spark of the type previously generated by a mechanical spark testing apparatus (STA).
The STA creates sparks randomly, with no certainty as to when an explosion will be created (if at all). As the STA is connected as a load to the energy source under test, the sparks it generates can be analysed purely in terms of their electrical characteristics.
Specifically, a spark can be considered to be a time varying electrical load. This means that the voltage across and current flowing through the spark over its duration, fully describe it. The electrical characteristics of a typical break spark are shown in
The definition and description of a spark in this manner creates the possibility of simulating an explosive spark by an electronic device configured to attempt to force the voltage profile shown in
Once the real spark and explosion of a STA is replaced with a simulated spark load of the type described above with reference to
This is achieved by providing a semiconductor device configured to function as a controllable electronic load, and PC based data acquisition and waveform generation system providing the control and measurement functions. This embodiment of the invention, termed an electronic spark tester (EST) is described further below.
The EST, when connected as a load to an energy supply, simulates the electrical characteristics of an STA including time varying energy dissipation (resistance), and time varying energy storage (capacitance/inductance).
In an STA these characteristics are the result of repeated making and breaking of physical contact between a tungsten wire and a cadmium disc and arcing in between the making and breaking of this physical contact.
The EST analyses the energy sources response to these simulated load characteristics and based on this analysis produces a result enabling a quantitative assessment of the energy sources propensity to cause an explosive spark.
At a conceptual level, this is achieved by a device consisting of two subsystems as shown in
The subsystems comprise an analogue subsystem 5 and a digital subsystem 6 connected by a digital to analogue converter 7 and an analogue to digital converter 5 as shown in
The analogue subsystem 5 outputs two measurement signals, namely voltage and current measurements. These are converted to digital signals by the ADC 8 and read by the digital subsystem 6.
In turn, the digital subsystem 6 outputs control signals which are converted to analogue signals by the digital to analogue convertor 7 and become inputs to the analogue subsystem 5.
The analogue subsystem's purpose is to replicate the dynamic characteristics of an STA and measure the response of the device under test. The basic structure of the analogue subsystem is shown in
The current and voltage measurement circuit elements are designed so as not to load the device under test in any significant way. The use of a high valued shunt resistance and low valued series resistance for voltage and current measurements is preferred. Other methods such as magnetic sensing (Hall Effect or transformer) for current measurement are also possible.
The semiconductor circuit shown in
This circuit is a commonly used multistage amplifier. An integrated circuit amplifier is used as the first stage, providing gain, and the second stage is a push-pull bipolar buffer, providing low output impedance to drive the final stage formed by a MOSFET.
Over the duration of the simulated spark, the digital subsystem stores the measured voltage and current values, as well as generating the control signal. The primary logical components of the digital subsystem are the control logic and the output logic.
The control logic generates a vector valued signal in real time used as input to the semiconductor circuit. This signal can depend on time, past and present values of measured voltage, and past and present values of measured current
In an alternative method to the real time control system, it is possible to do en offline analysis of the power supply unit (PSU) and use this to mathematically calculate the required control signal for the electronics.
The purpose of the output logic is to provide a scalar valued score indicating the safety of the device under test. This safety score is calculated “offline” using the stored values of voltage and current measurements.
In an enhanced version of the procedure for electronic spark testing, an automated mufti-step process is applied, involving the following steps;
In this manner an electronic spark tester (EST) is provided to replace the previously used spark testing apparatus (STA). The key advantage of electrically simulating a spark, rather than an actually creating one via a STA, is control. Rather than generating a large number of sparks over a test period, relying on a random process to deliver an explosion, a worst case explosive spark can be characterised (in a similar manner to that shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011902910 | Jul 2011 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AU2012/000864 | 7/19/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/18/2015 |