The present invention relates to process field devices of the type used to monitor or control an industrial process. Specifically, the present invention relates to process field devices which are powered with power received from a two-wire industrial control loop.
Industrial processes are used in a variety of applications. For example, such systems are used to produce or control process fluids. Examples include oil refineries, food production, paper pulp production, etc. In such industrial processes, process fluids are utilized. Various process variables of the process fluid are monitored or controlled. Examples process variables include temperature, pressure, flow rate, level, etc. In industrial processes, process field devices are used to measure and/or control the process variables. A field device which measures a process variable is often referred to a process variable transmitter. A field device which is used to control a process variable may be referred to a process variable controller.
In many industrial processes, the process field devices are in communication with a centralized location such as a control room. Process variables are transmitted to the control room and equipment in the control room can be used to control the process by transmitting control signals to process variable controllers. Many industrial process installations utilize two-wire industrial process control loops for communication with process field devices. In such a configuration, the current level on the process control loop can be set to a value which represents a measured process variable, or set to value which represents a desired value for controlling a process variable. One example is a two-wire process control loop which operates in accordance with the HART® communication standard. In such a configuration, the current level through the process control loop can be controlled to represent a process variable and additional digital information is transmitted by modulating a digital signal onto the analog current level.
Many process field devices are configured to be powered from the same two-wire process control loop used to transmit information. The two-wire process control loop may couple to a single field device or to multiple field devices (“multi-drop”). This limits the power which is available to the process field device. In many instances, it is desirable to maximize the amount of power available to circuitry of the process field device.
A process field device for use in monitoring or controlling an industrial process includes first and second loop terminals configured to couple to a two-wire industrial process control loop. Field device circuitry is configured to monitor or control a process variable of the industrial process. The field device circuitry is powered by power connections from the two-wire industrial process control loop. A current regulator is connected in series with the two-wire industrial process control loop, the first and second loop terminals and the field device circuitry. The current regulator is configured to control a loop current flowing through the two-wire process control loop. A voltage regulator is connected in parallel with the current regulator and in series with the two-wire industrial process control loop, first and second loop terminals and field device circuitry. The voltage regulator is configured to control a voltage across the field device circuitry.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for recovering, or “scavenging”, power from a two-wire process control loop in a process field device. In one configuration, the present invention provides a current regulator and a voltage regulator connected in series with the process control loop and in parallel with one another. Process field device circuitry is coupled in series with the current/voltage regulators and powered with power from the two-wire process control loop. A bulk capacitor can be used in parallel with the process field device circuitry to store power.
As referenced above, during normal operation, the process control loop 108 carries a loop current which ranges between 4 mA and 20 mA. However, some loop powered devices have a low alarm feature which causes the loop current to go offscale low (below 4 mA) in the event of a device failure. The low alarm current may be as low as 3.6 mA. This places a lower limit on quiescent current which may be utilized by the electronic circuit within the device to operate at 3.6 mA or less. The available power is used to power sensors, measurement circuits, regulator circuits, microcontrollers which implement software algorithms, and many other functions.
Many process devices have an electronic power architecture that employs a series regulator and shunt regulator.
The shunt regulator 170 receives an input signal from a digital to analog converter that relates to the DC current level, e.g. the 4-20 mA signal. The regulator 170 receives a second input signal from the HART® modem that relates to outgoing (transmitted) HART® digital messages. The HART® protocol mandates that transmitted messages which are placed on the process control loop have a modulated 1 mA peak to peak current waveform. Thus, the shunt regulator 170 must modulate the loop ±0.5 mA for HART® messages. Increasing the loop current by 0.5 mA is not difficult. However, the shunt regulator 170 cannot impress a negative current on the loop. Therefore, in order to decrease the loop current by 0.5 mA there must be at least 0.5 mA of bias current already passing through the regulator 170. The implication of this is that 0.5 mA out of the available current must be reserved for the shunt regulator 170 to allow HART® communications to function at low alarm current level; this is 14% of the available current. The device 160 is constrained to a current budget of 3.6 mA of which 3.1 mA is allocated to the circuit functions, and 0.5 ma is allocated to biasing the shunt regulator 170.
One goal of power scavenging is to reduce the 0.5 mA of shunt regulator bias current, and make the current available to the circuitry of the device. This can be done by modulating the HART® current in the series regulator path rather than in the shunt regulator path. During the positive half cycle of the HART® digital modulation, the excess energy being taken from the loop is stored in bulk capacitors. During the negative half cycle of HART® modulation, the energy being taken from the loop is reduced, but it is augmented with the energy stored during the positive half cycle.
Note that in the configuration of
If the series regulator 166 waveform is accurate, then negligible HART® transmit current will pass through the shunt regulator 170 and the power scavenging circuit is said to be very efficient; nearly all of the 0.5 mA bias current can be recovered.
However, if the series regulator 166 waveform is not accurate, then significant HART® transmit current will pass through the shunt regulator 170 and the power scavenging circuit is said to be inefficient; only a fraction of the 0.5 mA bias current can be recovered.
Prior attempts to implement a HART® power scavenging circuit have had limited success. They generally involve the design of a circuit that adds the scavenging function to the series voltage regulator using a single control element. A simplified version of this circuit 166 is given in
The output voltage Vout is determined by the value of the reference voltage (Vref) and resistors R1 and R2 as given by Equation 1:
Vout=Vref*(R1+R2)/R2 Equation 1
This is a common opamp based voltage regulator architecture that uses a pass transistor 202 in the feedback path. The HART® signal is added to the control signal of transistor 202 such that when HART® is transmitting 1 mA pk-pk passes through FET 202 and the bulk capacitor 180 to achieve HART® power scavenging.
The high gain of the opamp 204 allows for precision control of the output voltage Vout. However, the opamp 204 does not take any role in controlling the current amplitude of the HART® transmit waveform. Thus, the precision of the HART® waveform depends upon the adjustment of the various resistors and capacitances, and gain characteristics of the active elements such as FET 202. These parameters are not well controlled and consequently the HART® transmit waveform is not well controlled. Thus, the efficiency of the HART® power scavenging circuit shown in
The present invention provides a circuit and method that accurately regulates HART® transmit current through the series regulator such that improved efficiency of HART® scavenging is obtained. However, the configuration still provides adequate design flexibility to address other concerns, such as noise propagation to the loop circuit.
The present invention employs two control elements in the series regulator to achieve both voltage regulation and HART® power scavenging current regulation. The use of two separate control elements allows improved control of both parameters: output voltage and HART® transmit current.
A block diagram of the series regulator is shown in
Although the regulators 220, 222 are connected in parallel, there is no contention between the two because regulator 222 regulates voltage, while regulator 220 regulates current. When a HART® message is transmitted, the HART® modulation (1 mA pk-pk) is superimposed on 1 mA of bias current in the current regulator 220. Thus, the net output current is the quiescent current Iq and the HART® modulation current. Circuit 168 includes a HART® modem configured to provide the TXA signal to regulator 220. As described above, circuitry 168 also provides an analog 4-20 mA control signal to the shunt regulator 170.
A simplified schematic of one example implementation of the series regulator is shown in
The voltage regulator output voltage is same as the expression for
The current regulator 220 bias current is dependent on output voltage Vout, and circuit resistors. HART® modulation current is dependent on the transmit signal from the modem (Vtxa), and circuit resistors. Capacitor Ctx is sufficiently large enough such that in the HART® band of frequencies its impedance is significantly less than that of resistor R6 which allows it to be ignored for the AC circuit analysis. The output current is given by:
In Equation 3 Vtxa(AC) designates the AC component of Vtxa since capacitor Ctx blocks the DC component of Vtxa In the expression of Equation 3 all the parameters are well controlled so that the output current Iout is accurate with respect to the desired bias current (e.g. 1 mA), and the HART® modulation current (1 mAp-p). this results in a very efficient HART® scavenging design.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Although the above description references the HART® protocol, the present invention can be used with other loop communication configurations such as a Foundation Fieldbus™ based communication system.
The present application is based on and claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/333,508, filed May 11, 2010, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61333508 | May 2010 | US |