DYNAMIC GAS BLENDING SYSTEM AND PROCESS FOR PRODUCING MIXTURES WITH MINIMAL VARIATION WITHIN TOLERANCE LIMITS AND INCREASED GAS UTILIZATION
20190354122 ยท 2019-11-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01F35/883
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G05D11/138
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A dynamic blending system and process to produce a mixture of a desired target concentration with minimal tolerance variation and no waste gas generation is provided. The mixture made from the blending process can be utilized without the need to vent. The inventive system and process enables the ability to perform relatively small adjustments to the concentration of the blended gas mixture. The system and process also includes specifically designed sampling protocols that reduce measurement error.
Claims
1. A method for analyzing a gas mixture in a surge vessel without generating waste gas, comprising: regulating a pressure of the gas from the surge vessel using a pressure control device; regulating a flow rate of the gas mixture from the surge vessel using a flow control device; sending a predetermined quantity of the gas mixture to a secondary analyzer for measurement of the concentration of the gas mixture; discharging the predetermined quantity of the gas mixture from the analyzer into a sample collection vessel at a fill pressure that is lower than a fill pressure of the surge vessel; and supplying the gas mixture from the sample collection vessel to a downstream user at a supply pressure that is greater than or at least equal to a supply pressure of the gas mixture in the surge vessel; wherein the supplying of the gas mixture to the downstream user occurs in the absence of pressurizing the mixture.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising maintaining the pressure across the secondary analyzer substantially constant.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising utilizing a pressure regulation device at a location that is upstream of the secondary analyzer.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing and utilizing a pressure regulation device at a location that is upstream of the secondary analyzer to control a delivery pressure of the sample gas to the secondary analyzer while maintaining a substantially constant gas pressure and a substantially constant flow rate through the secondary analyzer by having a flow control device at a location that is downstream of the secondary analyzer.
5. A system for reducing mixing variation in a dynamic blending process, comprising: an active gas source having a first control valve connected to a first flow controller configured for regulating a predetermined flow rate of the active gas; a balance gas source having a second control valve connected to a second flow controller configured for regulating a predetermined flow rate of the balance gas; a mixer configured to received the predetermined flow of the balance gas and the predetermined flow of the active gas and thereafter discharge a blended gas mixture from the mixer; an in-line analyzer situated downstream of the mixer configured to measure the concentration of the blended gas mixture when the pressure across the analyzer, the flow rate of the active gas and the flow rate of the balance gas each has stabilized to their corresponding predetermined values, said in-line analyzer thereafter configured to generate measurement signals referable to concentration levels of the blended gas mixture; a first back pressure control device located downstream of the in-line analyzer for maintaining a substantially constant pressure across the in-line analyzer; a controller in communication with the in-line analyzer and the first control valve and the second control valve, said controller responsive to the measurement signals and configured to minimize variation between the measured concentration of the blended gas mixture and a target concentration of the mixture by dynamically fine-tuning the flow rate of the active gas and/or the flow rate of the balance gas in response to the measured concentration of the blended gas mixture; and one or more surge vessels located downstream of the in-line analyzer to accumulate the blended gas mixture and thereafter direct said mixture as a product stream to an end-user, or alternatively to direct said mixture to a secondary analyzer.
6. The system of claim 5, further comprising a sample collection vessel situated downstream of the secondary analyzer, said sample collection vessel being sized to receive a sample of the blended mixture at a predetermined first pressure and thereafter direct the sample to the end-user at a predetermined second pressure lower than the predetermined first pressure in the absence of utilizing a pressurization device.
7. The system of claim 5, further comprising a second back pressure control device located downstream of the secondary analyzer with back pressure regulator for maintaining a substantially constant pressure across the secondary analyzer.
8. The system of claim 5, further comprising a flow network supply loop, said supply loop comprising a first leg and a second leg, said first leg in flow communication with the one or more surge vessels, a secondary analyzer and a sample collection vessel, and said second leg in flow communication with the one or more surge vessels and the end-user to discharge the product stream directly from the one or more surge vessels to the end-user.
9. The system of claim 5, wherein the sample collection vessel operates at a fill pressure that is lower than a fill pressure of the surge vessel, and further wherein the sample collection vessel operates at a supply pressure that is greater than or at least equal to a supply pressure of the gas mixture in the one or more surge vessels, thereby allowing substantially all of the blended gas mixture that is sampled by secondary analyzer to be routed to the end-user as the product stream.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] The objects and advantages of the invention will be better understood from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments thereof in connection with the accompanying figures wherein like numbers denote same features throughout and wherein:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] As used herein, all concentrations are expressed as volumetric percentages. One aspect that embodies the principles of the present invention will now be described.
[0020] The supply gas sources for the active gas and the balance gas are designated as active gas source 100 and balance gas source 200, respectively. Each of the two gas sources 100 and 200 may be contained in a variety of different vessels such as, by way of example, ISO containers, drums, ton containers, tubes, or cylinders.
[0021] H.sub.2 or other inert gases may be used as the balance gas contained in balance gas source 200. A variety of active gas sources as known in the art may be utilized, such as, for example, phosphine (PH.sub.3), arsine (AsH.sub.3), trimethylboron (B(CH.sub.3).sub.3), silane (SiH.sub.4), diborane (B.sub.2H.sub.6), disilane (Si.sub.2H.sub.6), germane (GeH.sub.4), boron trifluoride (BF.sub.3), boron trichloride (BCl.sub.3), fluorine (F.sub.2), xenon (Xe), argon (Ar) and krypton (Kr), or mixtures of these active gases with other gases including the balance gas.
[0022] The delivery pressures of the active gas source 100 and the balance gas source 200 may be controlled by corresponding pressure regulators 101 and 201, respectively. Downstream of the pressure regulators 101 and 201 are gas flow controlling devices 107 and 207 which control the flow rates of the active and balance gases, respectively, through the process piping. Various gas flow control devices as known in the art may be used, such as, for example, mass flow meters, orifices, and adjustable valves. Preferably, and as shown in
[0023] The blending system includes a mixer 109, into which active gas and balance gas are dynamically blended. The term mixer as used herein refers to any type of mixing device known in the art for use in blending gaseous components. Possible mixing devices include, but are not limited to, mixing manifolds, mixing chambers with impellers, and conduits with baffles. As active gas and balance gas flow at their predetermined flow rates through the mixer, the gases are blended. It should be understood that the terms mixer and dynamic blender and blender will be used interchangeably with each other throughout the specification.
[0024] The blended gas stream exits the mixer 109 and is then sampled by gas analyzer 111. A back pressure control device 114 is used to keep the pressure of the gas through the analyzer 111 substantially constant which ensures accurate measurement. The gas mixture entering the gas analyzer 111 is preferably of uniform composition. Gas analyzer 111 measures the concentration of the blended gas stream and then sends a signal to the controller 112 which then sends a signal to mass flow controller 107 and/or 207 to make appropriate adjustments to the flow rates of active gas and/or balance from their respective gas sources 100 and 200 in order to increase mixing precision and reduce variation of the mixture concentration within the tolerance limits. The present invention utilizes fine-tuning to improve the mix precision. Fine-tuning as used herein refers to the adjustment of flow rates of the active gas and/or the balance gas to produce an in-spec blended gas mixture that is based on concentrations measured by the in-line blending analyzer 111. In-spec as used herein refers to the concentration of the blended mixture that meets applicable product specification and is within a predetermined tolerance. Off-spec as used herein refers to the concentration of a blended mixture produced by a specific blending run or operation that does not meet applicable product specification and is outside of a predetermined tolerance. In-line analyzer as used herein refers to the entire blended gas mixture produced by mixer 109 being analyzed by the analyzer 111. The flow rates of the active gas and the balance gas are regulated to be in a range in which the blending of the active gas with the balance gas produces a blended gas mixture having a concentration of active gas that meets a pre-determined specification during operation, and through fine tuning can incrementally minimize the in-spec variation of the blended mixture such that there is reduced variation within the tolerance limits. In this regard, the blending protocol is designed to not substantially alter the blending flow rates but yet have the ability to increase mixing precision by reducing error during the process that is caused, at least in part, by variation of gas flow rates and concentration measurement error.
[0025] As part of the fine-tuning utilized by present invention, a feedback control loop procedure can be repeated throughout the gas blending process to monitor the gas mixture produced from blending in the mixer 109 and in response thereto, incremental adjustments to the mass flow controllers 107 and/or 207 are performed, if required, to ensure that the gas concentration of the active source is within the acceptable tolerance of the target concentration and that the blended mixture exhibits reduced variation within the tolerance limits such that high precision mixtures are consistently produced. As a result, the present invention does not produce off-spec gas and therefore does not include a recycle loop. Furthermore, no waste product is generated that must be vented or discarded by other suitable means. Accordingly, the mass flow controllers 107 and/or 207 are dynamically adjusted with a closed-loop feedback controller 112 that is capable of controlling blend accuracy and precision of the active gas and balance gas in real-time. The system of the present invention as part of the control loop methodology includes a controller in communication with the in-line analyzers 111 and 131 and control valves for the active gas source 100 and balance gas source 200. The controller is responsive to the measurement signals and configured to minimize variation between the measured concentration of the blended gas mixture and a target concentration of the mixture by dynamically fine-tuning the flow rate of the active gas and/or the flow rate of the balance gas in response to the measured concentration of the blended gas mixture. The present invention recognizes a potential exists for the dynamic blender to start and stop frequently, especially when the blending occurs on a user's site. The frequent starting and stopping of the blender can occur at irregular intervals (i.e., intermittent basis) and therefore has the potential to produce large variations in mixture concentration due to the variations in flow rate invariably occurring during start and stop. Additionally, during this period, the measurement errors from the in-line analyzer 111 can be large due to unstable flow rates and system pressures which would generate even higher variations in mixture concentration if the concentration result from the in-line analyzer is used to control mixing. In order to reduce the variation of mixture concentration and to improve mixing precision, when the dynamic blender 109 starts, the blending protocol in accordance with the present invention ramps up flow rates of both the active gas and balance gas at a preset ramping rate to pre-determined flow rates that are based on earlier mixing runs at the same relative ramping rate; once the flow rates reach the pre-determined value and gas pressure becomes stabilized, the in-line analyzer 111 then becomes active and is used to control the mixture concentration throughout the remainder of the blending process prior to stopping of the flow. Analyzer control occurs by slightly or incrementally adjusting one or more mass flow controllers based on the mix concentration measured by the in-line analyzer 111. Preferably, in one embodiment of the present invention, only the flow rate of the active gas is adjusted while the flow rate of the balance gas is kept constant. As previously mentioned, and unlike conventional blending processes, the blending protocol of the present invention does not significantly vary the blending flow rates of active gas or balance gas over a wide range. After one or more of the flow rates are incrementally adjusted, a specified amount of time is required for the mix to reach the in-line analyzer 111 and be measured, e.g., preferably a few seconds depending, at least in part, upon flow rates and piping length. Therefore, the blending protocol is designed to not conduct another flow rate adjustment until the mix reaches in-line analyzer 111. This can be done by setting a predetermined minimum delay time between each MFC adjustment to ensure the concentration of the current fine-tuned blended gas mix is measured and thereafter used as a basis for the next flow rate adjustment to further refine the concentration of the gas mixture produced in the next blend that is produced. In this manner, the present invention eliminates the potential for the blending protocol to pre-maturely adjust the one or more flow rates (and, therefore potentially over compensate or over-adjust) by virtue of the in-line analyzer 111 taking a measurement prior to the adjusted blended gas mix reaching the in-line analyzer 111. When it is time to stop the blending process, the control system stops analyzer control first and then ramps down each of the flow rates of both the active gas and balance gas to 0 at the same preset ramping rate so that the flow ratio of active to balance gas source is maintained while the flow rates decrease. The mixture is then directed to surge vessels 118 and/or 119. The surge vessels 118 and/or 119 acts as a storage reservoir which absorbs process variations, such as, for example, mixture concentration, pressure, and flow rate. The use of surge vessel 118 and/or 119 allows the blending in mixer 109 to occur at a substantially constant blending flow rate which further enhances the mixing precision of the present invention. Furthermore, surge vessel 118 and/or 119 can be used to avoid gas feed supply pressure variation to an optional compressor if used. The dynamic gas blending process and system may include one or multiple surge vessels, depending at least in part on the usage and downstream process requirements. Preferably, two surge vessels 118 and 119 may be utilized as shown in
[0026] After a surge vessel 118 or 119 has been filled, the gas may be supplied to the downstream user directly from the surge vessel 118 or 119 through a regulator 126 as mentioned above. An optional secondary analyzer 131 may be equipped to further analyze the gas mixture concentration within the filled surge vessel 118 or 119. The setup of an optional secondary analyzer 131 further assures and provides an integrity check to the upstream blending process that the active gas concentration of the product mixture to be delivered downstream is within acceptable tolerance limits before the product gas is used in the downstream process. In addition, the analytical result obtained from the product gas in the surge vessel 118 or 119 can be used to determine the mixing concentration target for the next fill. In other words, the measured concentration in the surge vessel 118 or 119 is preferably measured by the secondary analyzer 131. The measured concentration is thereafter preferably utilized to determine the appropriate target mixing concentration for performing the next mixing or blending operation. Additionally, the concentration as measured in each of the in-line analyzer 111 and the secondary analyzer 131 is calibrated to take into account the effects of temperature, pressure and/or flow rate or any combination thereof. The present invention therefore has the ability to fine-tune successive mixes to produce high precision blends.
[0027] In this manner, the mix concentration as measured in the surge vessel 118 and/or 119 allows for fine tuning in each of the successive mixes and fills, thereby allowing the present invention to have the ability to further tighten the concentration of the in-spec blended mixes to be within the tolerance of the mixtures accumulating in surge vessels 118 and/or 119. As a result, unlike conventional dynamic blending processes, high precision mixes are consistently produced by the present invention with significantly reduced variation within the tolerance limits.
[0028] Since the product gas mixture can be supplied from the blending system directly to the user or from one or multiple surge vessels 118 and 119 in which the concentration of the product gas in each surge vessel 118 and 119 is verified independently, the system and process of the present invention allows for the incremental addition of surge vessels without supply interruption. The embodiment shown in
[0029]
[0030] Preferably, and in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, the pressure set on regulator 139 is greater than or at least equal to the pressure set on regulator 126 so that the gas in sample collection vessel 136 can be utilized by downstream user. After the gas pressure in sample collection vessel 136 drops to a desired level, e.g., slightly higher than or equal to the set value on regulator 139, sample collection vessel 136 is then isolated from the supply downstream and is ready to collect sample gas for the next analysis. The sample collection vessel 136 is designed so that the pressure in the collection vessel is sufficiently low enough that sample gas can be collected therewithin from the surge vessel 118 and/or 119 after the surge vessel 118 and/or 119 is filled and the pressure in the vessel 136 is high enough after the analysis by secondary analyzer 131 so that the gas mixture in the collection vessel 136 can be directed and utilized by a downstream user with no need for venting and without the need for pressurization by an external device such as a pump. By utilizing the pressure difference between surge vessel 118/119, downstream supply and sample collection vessel 136, the process allows the product gas in the surge vessel 118/119 to be analyzed; the sample gas to be routed to the supply loop; and increased gas utilization to be achieved without generating any waste gas. In a preferred embodiment, 100% gas utilization is obtained such that no waste gas is generated; none of the gas mixture is required to be vented; and increased pressurization of the mixture is not required as the sampled gas is discharged downstream to an end-user. Table 1 below shows an example of pressure settings that may be used to sample the mixture in the surge vessels 118/119 so that no venting of the blended gas mixture is required.
[0031] The sample collection vessel 136 may be sized based on the requirement of sampling time and flow rate. For example, assuming a sampling flow rate is 0.5 standard liter per minute (SLM), for a 20 minute sampling time, the total sample volume is 10SL. If the max fill pressure and drain down pressure of sample collection vessel are 75 psig and 65 psig, respectively, then the volume of the sample collection vessel needs to be >15 Liter. The pressures set forth in Table 1 are intended to merely illustrate the protocol and wide applicability of the blending protocol to various process scenarios. Modifications are contemplated by the present invention.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Pressure Items (Psig) Fill pressure in Surge Vessel 118 and 119 90 Supply pressure from Surge Vessel to downstream user- 65 regulator 126 Sampling pressure from Surge Vessel to analyzer131- 85 regulator 128 Set point of back pressure regulator 133 80 Max Fill pressure in sample collection vessel 136 75-80 Supply pressure from sample collection vessel 136 to 65-70 downstream user - set point of pressure regulator 139
[0032] Alternatively, it should be understood that the present invention contemplates the sampling gas from the secondary analyzer 131 may flow freely from sample collection vessel 136 to a downstream user without using regulator 139. Furthermore, if the downstream piping can hold and/or use the amount of sample gas in real-time (for example, the sample gas does not increase the pressure of the downstream piping to an unacceptable level that the downstream piping cannot handle any additional sample gas), then both the sample collection vessel 136 and its corresponding regulator 139 may not be needed to practice the dynamic blending of the present invention. As a result, the sampling gas may flow freely from secondary analyzer 131 through back pressure regulator 133 and then directly to the downstream piping.
[0033] Other means for maintaining a substantially constant pressure across secondary analyzer 131 are contemplated by the present invention. For example, an alternative set-up to sampling the product gas mixture from the surge vessel 118/119 is shown in
[0034] Other modifications are contemplated. For example, any range of flow rates and concentrations can be incorporated into the blending protocol. Further, the inventive blending protocol as described may consist of controlling with a mass flow controller or other flow control device a single gas stream, two or more gas streams or all gas streams. Additionally, although the examples above illustrate blending a balance gas with a single active gas component, blending of two or more active gas components to respective target concentrations is also contemplated.
[0035] The blending protocol for dynamically blending gas to a target concentration having a tight tolerance and increased gas utilization will now be illustrated in more detail by the following examples. However, it is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the examples. A piezocon sensor (Model No: PZN-SS-003-04) commercially available and produced by Veeco Instruments, Inc. (Plainview, N.Y.) was used as the in-line analyzer to monitor mixture concentration. A high precision back pressure regulator (Model No: EB1LF2) produced by Equilibar, LLC (Fletcher, N.Y.) was used to keep the gas pressure through the analyzer constant.
[0036] In all examples, a mixture of 10% GeH.sub.4 was used as the active source gas and then further blended with balance gas H.sub.2 to produce 1% GeH.sub.4 and balance H.sub.2. The flow rates of GeH.sub.4 active gas mix were regulated using a 0 to 1 standard liter per minute (slpm) GeH.sub.4 mass flow controller, and the flow rates of H.sub.2 balance gas were regulated with a 0 to 10 slpm H.sub.2 mass flow controller. The delivery pressure of 10% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 and H.sub.2 from source cylinders was controlled at 110 psig and total mixture flow rate was approximately 5 slpm. The blending pressure was controlled at approximately 95 psig by a back pressure regulator. Two 49 Liter cylinders were used as surge vessels. A customized labview control program was developed by the inventors to control the blending process in a closed loop.
Example 1, Blending Precision with Venting
[0037] The objective of this Example 1 was to demonstrate the ability to produce high precision mixtures at 1% GeH.sub.4/H.sub.2 mixture having a tolerance of 5 ppm. In this case, the system vented gas. Surge vessels were first vacuumed to <1 torr before being filled. After the blender started and before the mixture concentration stabilized, the mixture was vented to a scrubber. The blender was then switched to fill surge vessel only after the flow rates of source gas, blending pressure and mixture concentration became stabilized. Approximately 5 min to 15 min before the mixture concentration became stabilized after the blender started. During the fill process, the measured result from the analyzer was used to automatically adjust the flow rate of 10% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 to further refine and control the mixture concentration. Once the pressure in surge vessel reached 85 psig, the mixture was switched from filling surge vessel to venting before the blending was stopped. Two surge vessels were filled in succession one at a time.
[0038] It was observed that even though the pressure of surge vessel increased from less than about 1 torr to 90 psig during the fill process, the pressure across the blending analyzer was maintained within a 10 torr range by the back pressure regulator.
[0039] After the surge vessel was filled, a sample was withdrawn from surge vessel and the mixture concentration was analyzed by the same analyzer but at a flow rate of 2 Liter/min and a pressure of 20 psig. Surge vessels were filled a total of 16 times.
Example 2, Blending Precision with 100% Gas Utilization
[0040] A blender was operated as would be used on a user's site to make gas mixtures as needed. In this case, the system was expected to start and stop very frequently on an intermittent basis and not vent gas. Accordingly, fills were performed utilizing the process of the present invention.
[0041] The two surge vessels filled in example 1 were vented to 70 psig and used as surge vessels in this example. The target blending mixture concentration for each fill was pre-determined based on the measured concentration in the two surge vessels as well as the final target of 1% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 in the surge vessels. The initial flow rates for both 10% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 and balance H.sub.2 were pre-determined based on expected flow rates of both source gases needed to achieve a 1% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 mix.
[0042] When blending started, the flow rates of both source gases were ramped at preset rates to the pre-determined flow rates over 30 seconds. After approximately 1-2 minutes, the gas pressure became stabilized and analyzer control was then activated. The activation of analyzer control indicated that the measured result from analyzer could be used to adjust the flow rate of the 10% GeH.sub.4 balance H.sub.2 source gas in order to keep the mixture concentration within the specified range. In this example, the process of using the measured result from the analyzer to automatically adjust the flow rate of is the same as that in example 1. When the pressure in the surge vessel reached 90 psig, the analyzer control was deactivated and the flow rates of both source gases were ramped down to 0 over 30 seconds at the same ramping rate to maintain a constant flow ratio of both the active and the balance gas. The surge vessel was then isolated from the blending system and the fill to the vessel was completed. In this example, all the mixture made from the blending system was collected in surge vessel even during the start and stop period without any venting. It took approximately 12 minutes to fill each surge vessel from 70 psig to 90 psig.
[0043] The mixture in the vessel was analyzed. A total of 11 fills of the surge vessels were completed following the same process described above.
[0044] While it has been shown and described what is considered to be certain embodiments of the invention, it will, of course, be understood that various modifications and changes in form or detail can readily be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is, therefore, intended that this invention not be limited to the exact form and detail herein shown and described, nor to anything less than the whole of the invention herein disclosed and hereinafter claimed.