Composition control for OBOGS
11577101 ยท 2023-02-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D53/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2259/4575
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2259/40009
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D53/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A62B9/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A control system for an onboard oxygen generating system (OBOGS) includes a gain control communicatively coupled to an oxygen sensor configured to measure an oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS. The gain control selectively switches between unbalanced and balanced bed cycling modes of the OBOGS to produce a target oxygen concentration based on demand. A corresponding method includes providing a gain control communicatively coupled to an oxygen sensor configured to measure an oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS, controlling the OBOGS to operate in the unbalanced bed cycling mode when a low demand is placed on the OBOGS whereby the gain control provides a short bed cycle and a corresponding long cycle of a fixed cycle time, and switching the OBOGS to operate in the balanced bed cycling mode when a high demand is placed on the OBOGS. The balanced bed cycling mode operates at a decreased bed cycle time.
Claims
1. A control system for an onboard oxygen generating system (OBOGS) comprising: a gain control communicatively coupled to an oxygen sensor configured to measure an oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS, whereby the gain control selectively switches between unbalanced and balanced bed cycling modes of the OBOGS to produce a target oxygen concentration; wherein the OBOGS operates in the unbalanced bed cycling mode for a fixed bed cycle time wherein the gain control communicates a length of an output cycle that is less than one-half of the fixed bed cycle time; and wherein, when the gain control communicates the length of the output cycle to be greater than one-half the fixed bed cycling time, the gain control switches to the balance bed cycling mode, and wherein the balanced bed cycle time is less than the fixed bed cycle time.
2. The control system of claim 1 wherein cycle times of the unbalanced bed cycling mode are commanded to become more balanced when the oxygen sensor indicates a lower oxygen concentration than the target oxygen concentration.
3. The control system of claim 2 wherein the unbalanced bed cycling mode shifts to the balanced bed cycling mode when the cycle times of the unbalanced bed cycling mode become equivalent.
4. The control system of claim 1 wherein cycle times when operating in the balanced bed cycling mode decrease when the oxygen sensor indicates a lower measured oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS than the target oxygen concentration.
5. The control system of claim 1 wherein the target oxygen concentration is determined based on aircraft altitude.
6. The control system of claim 1 wherein a caution light is activated when the oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS is less than the target oxygen concentration.
7. A method for transitioning between unbalanced and balanced bed cycling modes of an onboard oxygen generating system (OBOGS) as a function of demand, the method comprising: a) providing a gain control communicatively coupled to an oxygen sensor configured to measure an oxygen concentration outputted from the OBOGS; b) controlling the OBOGS to operate in the unbalanced bed cycling mode when a low demand is placed on the OBOGS whereby the gain control causes the OBOGS operate using a fixed cycle time comprising a short bed cycle portion and a long bed cycle portion; c) switching the OBOGS to operate in the balanced bed cycling mode having a balanced bed cycle time comprising two equal bed cycle portions when a high demand is placed on the OBOGS, and wherein the balanced bed cycle time is less than the fixed cycle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(3) Turning now to the figures, with particular reference to
(4) By way of example, flow diagram 100 may be used in newer OBOG systems, such as those designed to meet an oxygen delivery schedule. The control output for these systems adjusts the bed cycle time in order to control the amount of oxygen that is concentrated to a prescribed level 106 at certain altitudes.
(5) The use of balanced bed cycles 104 to control the amount of oxygen concentrated works well at high demands, but as demand is decreased, the bed cycle times become significantly longer. This reduces the ability to control the concentration of oxygen delivered when dynamic changes are present, making it a less desirable method for control under typically low demands.
(6) The use of unbalanced bed cycles 102 to control the oxygen concentration is very effective at lower demands to control oxygen concentration, but the cycle times must be quite short in order to produce enough oxygen to support high demand conditions. However, as described above, using short bed cycle times requires significantly more supply air which increases power usage, increases average pressure drop through the entire system and increases the rate of degradation of components, including the sieve material used to separate the oxygen in the system.
(7) Thus, as shown in
(8) Specifically, as shown generally in
(9) By using a control signal 116, which compares measured output 113 via oxygen sensor 115 to target concentration 117, to adjust the offset in the beds, the output concentration can be controlled. As the time difference between the two beds increases, the efficiency drops, as well as the concentration of oxygen. Conversely, as the bed times become closer to one another, their efficiency increases and the oxygen concentration increases.
(10) As an example, the demand on PSA concentrator 114 may be very low, and with a two bed system, the time difference between the beds may be large with the long bed being 4 seconds and the short bed being 2 seconds (for a fixed 6 second cycle time). The gain of the control provides an output that is equivalent to the short bed cycle. In this case, the control calls for an output of 2 seconds. As the demand increases for product gas, the control calls for greater output, increasing from 2 to 2.5 seconds and eventually on to 3 seconds. The time difference between beds becomes more equal until the control will cause the time of both beds to be 3 seconds and 3 seconds when the control calls for 3 seconds. If the demand continues to rise, the control will require an output of 3.1 seconds and higher. However, the beds cannot respond as they are concentrating the maximum amount of oxygen with the fixed 6 second cycle time. As a result, this is the extent of the unbalanced bed control.
(11) In accordance with an aspect of the present invention, additional output may be seamlessly provided as the demand continues to increase. By using gain control 112, when the demand increases such that the control calls for 3.1 seconds for example, instead of changing the imbalance of the cycle time, the control decreases the time of each bed equally. In the above case, when gain control calls for 3.1 second output, the amount above 3.0 seconds is converted to a balanced value of 2.9 seconds for each bed (for a total balanced cycle time of 5.8 seconds). Since control 112 does not have to account for this transition, control 112 continues to function without change. The bed timing based on the output of the control computation changes to make a slightly shorter overall cycle with balanced beds (e.g., 5.8 second as opposed to the fixed 6 second cycle time). See
(12) Thus, a method in accordance with the present invention may be used to increase the maximum output of the concentrator in times of high demand without the penalties of a more rapid bed cycle when the demand is low. As a result, the OBOGS may be more responsive to dynamic changes and may be able to autocorrect for degradation of the efficiency of the PSA sieve material over time.
(13) Although the invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it is understood that various modifications may be made thereto without departing from the full spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the claims which follow.