Capillary Viscometer
20230266219 ยท 2023-08-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A capillary viscometer is disclosed for measuring the relative viscosity of a solute in a solvent. The capillary viscometer consists of a single fluid flow circuit having a measuring capillary and a thermal flow sensor connected in series for in-situ velocity measurement. Relative viscosity is determined by measuring the flow velocity ratio of pure solvent compared to that of a sample. Two different differential viscometers are also disclosed. The first differential viscometer has two fluid flow circuits with one of the circuits also having a large volume vessel to allow for sample dilution. Another configuration of the differential viscometer is disclosed where four fluid flow circuits are configured in a Wheatstone bridge configuration.
Claims
1. A capillary viscometer including a fluid flow circuit which is a fluid line and includes therein, in series, a measuring capillary and a thermal flow sensor.
2. A capillary viscometer of claim 1 in which the thermal flow sensor is further comprised of a quartz tube, a heating element wrapped around said quartz tube, a first temperature sensor located inside said quartz tube and upstream of said heating element, and a second temperature sensor located inside said quartz tube and downstream of said heating element.
3. A process for measuring the relative viscosity of a sample consisting essentially of: (a) first feeding a pure solvent through the capillary viscometer according to claim 1 and measuring the mean flow velocity by using a thermal flow sensor; (b) feeding a sample consisting of a solute in solution with a solvent through the capillary viscometer according to claim 1 and measuring the mean flow velocity by using a thermal flow sensor; said sample having the same volume as the pure solvent; and (c) determining the relative viscosity of the sample by calculating the ratio of the two measured flow velocities.
4. A capillary viscometer of claim 1 in which the capillary viscometer is at least partially immersed in a liquid which is maintained at a constant temperature.
5. A differential viscometer including: (a) a first capillary that creates the inlet fluid line; (b) a flow splitter connected to the distal end of the first capillary; (c) a first fluid flow circuit connected to the flow splitter and further containing therein, in sequence from the inlet: a pressure stable vessel, a first measuring capillary, a first thermal flow sensor and a first outlet capillary; and (d) a second fluid flow circuit also connected to said flow splitter and further containing therein, in sequence from the inlet: a second measuring capillary, a second thermal flow sensor and a second outlet capillary.
6. A process for measuring the relative viscosity of a sample using a differential viscometer according to claim 5 and consisting essentially of: (a) first feeding a pure solvent through the inlet line of the differential viscometer at a constant flow rate; (b) feeding a sample consisting of a solute in solution with a solvent through the inlet line of the differential viscometer at a constant flow rate; (c) the sample will flow through both fluid flow circuits but will be substantially diluted in the first fluid flow circuit due to the vessel which has a substantially larger volume than the fluid flow line; (d) the sample will remain at its original concentration while flowing through the second flow circuit because there is no vessel in the line; (e) the partial flows of the first and second fluid flow circuits will behave inversely to the viscosity change created according to the Hagen-Poiseuille law and as a result the thermal flow sensors and measuring capillaries of the first and second fluid flow circuits will detect different flow velocities; and (f) determining the relative viscosity of the sample by calculating the ratio of the two measured flow velocities of the first and second fluid flow circuits.
7. A differential viscometer of claim 5 in which the vessel used is a mechanical mixing device.
8. A differential viscometer of claim 5 in which the differential viscometer is operated at a constant temperature.
9. A differential viscometer of claim 5 in which the differential viscometer is integrated into a separate device capable of measuring the pressure of the sample at a plurality of locations.
10. A differential viscometer of claim 5 in which the differential viscometer is integrated into a separate device capable of determining the sample concentration.
11. A differential viscometer of claim 5 in which the differential viscometer is integrated into a separate device capable of determining the light scattering of the sample.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] Referring now to the drawings and in particular
[0022] Referring next to
[0023] The present invention aims to replace the volume or pressure measurement of prior art viscometers by a direct, in-situ flow measurement using a thermal flow sensor. This solution offers a significant improvement by allowing the use of capillaries of any type and material and provides significant accuracy improvements through a direct flow velocity measurement technique.
[0024] The second embodiment of a differential viscometer is shown in
[0025] an inlet capillary (50);
[0026] a flow splitter (commonly referred to as a T fitting) (70);
[0027] a pressure stable vessel (90);
[0028] a first measuring capillary (10a);
[0029] a first thermal flow sensor (20a);
[0030] a first outlet capillary (52a);
[0031] a second measuring capillary (10b);
[0032] a second thermal flow sensor (20b); and
[0033] a second outlet capillary (52b)
[0034] The operation of the differential viscometer according to
[0035] In-situ measurement using thermal flow sensors also offers significant advantages over previous prior art solutions, The change in flow within the system is the primary information that results when a sample segment is introduced into the system. Thus, the immediate measurement of the change in flow is directly related to the change in viscosity in the system and is therefore an unbiased method. Furthermore, the measurement of the flow is much simpler than the indirect determination by the system pressure and does not require a balanced system, nor is it sensitive to disturbances such as air bubbles.
[0036] One skilled in the art of making viscometers could create other embodiments of the present invention. Some additional examples are described here without the use of additional figure drawings. In yet another embodiment of a differential viscometer, the two separate outlet capillaries 52a and 52b can be brought together by means of another flow splitter 70 to create a common outlet capillary 52c. Also, the position of the thermal flow sensors 20a and 20b can be modified, taking into account that thermal flow sensor 20a is always positioned downstream of the vessel 90. Also possible is to measure the total flow F at the inlet or at the common outlet and to realize only one of the two partial flows F1 and F2. All these variants lead to the same result.
[0037] Yet another significant advantage is that a differential viscometer of this design can easily be combined with other measuring devices such as devices for determining the sample concentration or the light scattering of the sample. The aim can be the determination of the intrinsic viscosity or the absolute molar mass. The combination can be in the form of a separate module or as an integral part of the viscometer. Indeed, the ability to integrate the present invention into other measuring instruments gives the present invention a significant advantage over prior art stand-alone viscometers.
[0038] A final embodiment of a viscometer is shown in
[0039] The function of the viscometer 300 according to
[0040] In the other branch (flow F2), however, the sample segment flows undisturbed through the measuring capillary 10b. Thus, the apparent resistance of the two branches (flows F1 and F2) is changed, because in the first branch (flow F1), the measuring capillaries 10a and 10c still have pure solvent flowing through them, while the measuring capillary 10b has sample flowing through it. According to Hagen-Poiseuille's law, the partial flows F1 and F2 will therefore behave inversely to the viscosity change in measuring capillary 10b and change accordingly. As a result, the pressure at the flow splitters 70b and 70c will no longer be identical and thus a transverse flow F3 will occur, which will be detected by the thermal flow sensor 20b. When the sample then reaches the vessel 90b, it will also be strongly diluted here, the measuring capillary 10d will then flow through as almost pure solvent and thus equilibrium will be restored in the system and the flow F3 will become zero again. Thus, the specific viscosity of the sample is determined from the two flow signals of thermal flow sensor 20a and thermal flow sensor 20b.
[0041] One skilled in the art of making viscometers could create yet other embodiments of the present invention shown in