Tubular Sensors for Inline Measurement of The Properties of a Fluid
20210096050 · 2021-04-01
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01N9/002
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An inline fluid properties measurement device that includes a tube defining an interior space that includes at least one non-cylindrical volume, and having a fluid entrance and exit, and capable of conducting fluid from the fluid entrance to the fluid exit, through the at least one non-cylindrical volume. An excitation and sensing transducer assembly is positioned to torsionally drive the tube and to sense torsional movement of the tube and a controller is programmed to drive the excitation and sensing transducer to drive the tube in torsion, thereby translating the fluid in the at least one non-cylindrical volume, and to sense torsional movement of the tube, thereby producing a sense signal. Finally, a signal analysis assembly responsive to the sense signal to form a measurement of at least one property of the fluid.
Claims
1. An inline fluid properties measurement device, comprising: (a) a tube, having an exterior surface that is mounted in and to a supportive casing, and defining an interior space that includes at least one non-circularly cylindrical volume, and having a fluid entrance and exit that extends further than said casing, thereby providing a free end for a pipe to be attached on either end to said tube, so that all of the liquid flowing through said pipe flows through said tube, and capable of conducting fluid from said fluid entrance to said fluid exit, through said at least one non-circularly cylindrical volume; (b) an excitation and sensing transducer assembly positioned to torsionally drive said tube and to sense torsional movement of said tube; (c) a controller programmed to drive said excitation and sensing transducer to drive said tube in torsion, thereby translating said fluid in said at least one non-circularly cylindrical volume, and to sense torsional movement of said tube, thereby producing a sense signal; (d) a signal analysis assembly responsive to said sense signal to form a measurement of at least one property of said fluid; and (e) whereby said tube can be mounted in and form a part of a fluid pathway.
2. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of said tube is non-circularly cylindrical, thereby defining a single non-circularly cylindrical interior volume.
3. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein said tube includes inwardly extending fins, thereby dividing said interior space into multiple non-circularly cylindrical volumes.
4. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein said tube includes at least one longitudinal partition, thereby dividing said interior space into at least two separate non-circularly cylindrical volumes.
5. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein said signal analysis assembly includes an analog to digital convertor and a data processing assembly.
6. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein said one property of said fluid is fluid density.
7. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 6, further measuring viscosity.
8. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, further measuring a second fluid property.
9. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, wherein said excitation and sensing transducer includes an electromagnet assembly and an attached magnet assembly, attached directly to said exterior surface of said tube and responsive to said electromagnet assembly to place a torqueing force on said tube, and wherein said electromagnet assembly also senses movement of said attached magnet assembly, said electromagnetic assembly being longitudinally coincident to said attached magnet assembly.
10. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 9, wherein said electromagnetic assembly includes a first electromagnet on a first side of said tube and a second electromagnet on a second side of said tube, opposed to said first side of said tube, and wherein said attached magnet assembly includes a first magnet opposed to said first electromagnet and a second magnet opposed to said second electromagnet.
11. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 10, wherein said attached magnets are permanent magnets.
12. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 10, wherein said first electromagnet drives said first attached magnet and said second electromagnet senses said second attached magnet.
13. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 10, wherein said first and second electromagnets simultaneously drive said permanent magnets, and repeatedly stop driving said permanent magnets and sense movement of said permanent magnets, by producing current in proportion to said movement.
14. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 1, further including a pair of mounting fixtures, mounting said tube in said casing and a pair of inertial masses, inward of said mounting fixtures, mounted to said tube and not touching said casing.
15. The inline fluid properties measurement device of claim 14, wherein said inertial masses and said mounting fixtures are in the form of disks.
16. A method for measuring properties of a fluid, comprising: (a) providing an inline fluid properties measurement device, comprising: (i) a tube having an exterior surface that is mounted in and to a casing, and that defines an interior space that includes at least one non-circularly cylindrical volume, and that has a fluid entrance and exit and is mounted into a fluid pathway, so that all of said fluid flowing through said fluid pathway flows through said tube; (ii) an excitation and sensing transducer assembly positioned to torsionally drive said tube and to sense torsional movement of said tube; (b) driving said excitation and sensing transducer assembly to drive said tube in torsion, thereby translating and shearing said fluid in said at least one non-circularly cylindrical volume and using said excitation and sensing transducer assembly to sense movement of said tube; and (c) analyzing said sense signals to measure at least two fluid properties of said fluid in said tube.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein at least a portion of said tube is non-circularly cylindrical, thereby defining a single non-circularly cylindrical interior volume.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein said tube includes inwardly extending fins, thereby dividing said interior space into multiple non-circularly cylindrical volumes.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein said tube includes at least one longitudinal partition, thereby dividing said interior space into at least two separate non-circularly cylindrical volumes.
20. The method of claim 16, wherein said two fluid properties are fluid density and viscosity.
21. The method of claim 16, wherein said excitation and sensing transducer includes an electromagnet assembly and an attached magnet assembly, attached directly to said exterior of said tube and responsive to said electromagnet assembly to apply a torqueing force to said tube, and wherein said electromagnet assembly also senses movement of said attached magnet assembly, said electromagnetic assembly being longitudinally coincident to said attached magnet assembly.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein said electromagnet assembly includes a first electromagnet on a first side of said tube and a second electromagnet on a second side of said tube, opposed to said first side of said tube, and wherein said attached magnet assembly includes a first magnet opposed to said first electromagnet and a second magnet opposed to said second electromagnet.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein attached magnets are permanent magnets.
24. The method of claim 22, wherein said first electromagnet drives said first attached magnet and said second electromagnet senses said second attached magnet.
25. The method of claim 22, wherein said first and second electromagnets simultaneously drive said permanent magnets, and repeatedly stop driving said permanent magnets and sense movement of said permanent magnets, by producing current in proportion to said movement.
26. The method of claim 16, wherein said tube is attached inside said casing by a pair of fixtures at opposed ends and further wherein a pair of inertial masses are attached about said tube, inward of said fixtures, to help isolate tube vibrations.
27. The method of claim 26, wherein said inertial masses are in the form of disks.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0022] Definition: In the context of this application, a cylindrical volume is round in cross-section.
[0023] In broad overview, this application discloses several structures for tubular resonators that produce motion of the tube contents perpendicular to the surface of the tube when the tube is driven torsionally, to permit separation of the effects of fluid density and viscosity. In this way, the advantages of a purely torsional resonator can be gained while simultaneously providing an inline sensor that is sensitive to at least density and viscosity of the contained fluid.
[0024] Referring to
[0025] Resonator 10 includes an excitation and sensing transducer assembly (see
[0026] The resonant vibrations of the tubular torsionally resonant structure 12 are modified by the fluid contained within it in two principal ways. As the tube vibrates torsionally, it shears the fluid in a thin boundary layer close to the wall of the tube 12. The shear stresses produced by this shearing motion are proportional to the viscosity of the fluid and therefore extract energy from the vibrating tube at a rate dependent on the fluid's viscosity.
[0027] Furthermore, because the cross-section of tube 12 is flattened, torsional motion about the lengthwise axis produces a motion of the wall perpendicular to its own interior surface, causing apparent additional fluid mass to vibrate along with the tube 12, the additional fluid mass being proportional to the fluid's density. The additional mass-loading, combined with the rotational inertia of the tube's vibrating section, decreases the torsional resonant frequency of the tubular resonator, in proportion to the density of the fluid.
[0028] In addition to providing means to shear and displace fluid within the resonant structure, resonator 10 includes inertial masses 18, typically in the form of disks, and mounting fixtures 20, also typically in the form of disks, affixed to the interior of casing 14 (
[0029] Two further species of resonators meeting the criteria of both shearing and displacing fluid during torsional motion are disclosed as embodiments of this method. It should be understood that these are merely exemplary of possible further embodiments.
[0030] Referring to
[0031] Radially symmetric fin patterns are used to avoid applying unbalanced transverse forces on the contents of tube 118 that could excite unwanted transverse vibrations. This precludes the use of a single radial fin 116, although such radially asymmetric fin patterns could be used if such modes were desired.
[0032] A third embodiment 210 of the resonator, also fitted with inertial masses 212 and mounting fixtures 214, extends at least two of the radial vanes to create a longitudinal wall or partition 216 through at least a portion of the tube 218, as shown in
[0033] As shown in
[0034] The transducer arrangement shown in
[0035] The two coils 326, disposed on either side of the lengthwise plane, carry currents I and I′ in opposite directions. The fields of the two magnets 324 bonded to the flattened tube 316 surface are parallel to one another. The resultant Lorentz forces, F and F′, produce matching torsional forces on the tube, as shown in
[0036] Referring, now, to
[0037] Referring to
[0038] Increasing viscosity of the fluid lowers and broadens the resonant peak, the broadening and lowering being roughly proportional to the square root of the product of the fluid's viscosity and density. The broadening and lowering of the peak are shown in
[0039] Electronic means for measuring the damping and resonant frequency are known. A method that is particularly suited to the measurement of the resonant properties is disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 8,291,750. In that method, a gated excitation signal excites the resonator at several phase values around its resonant frequency, and a gated phase locked loop measures the frequencies at which the phase values occur. From the frequencies and the phase values, the resonant frequency and width of the resonant peak may be calculated, from which calculated values a viscosity and a density may be derived.
[0040] The operation of this phase locked loop is shown in