VIBRONIC SENSOR
20190339107 · 2019-11-07
Inventors
- Sascha D'Angelico (Rümmingen, DE)
- Raphael Kuhnen (Schliengen, DE)
- Tobias Brengartner (Emmendingen, DE)
- Izabella Sandor (Schopfheim, DE)
Cpc classification
G01N29/42
PHYSICS
G01N9/002
PHYSICS
G01N29/022
PHYSICS
International classification
G01N9/00
PHYSICS
G01N29/42
PHYSICS
Abstract
The present invention relates to a vibronic sensor for determining a process variable of a medium in a containment, comprising a mechanically oscillatable unit, a driving/receiving unit and an electronics unit having an adaptive filter. The present invention relates also to a method for operating the sensor. The electronics unit is embodied alternately to execute a first operating mode and a second operating mode. The driving/receiving unit is embodied during the first operating mode to excite the oscillatable unit using an electrical excitation signal. During the second operating mode, the exciting of the oscillatable unit is interrupted and the oscillations of the oscillatable unit are received and transduced into an electrical, received signal. At least one filter characteristic of the adaptive filter is set such that a predeterminable phase shift is present between the excitation signal and the received signal, and the process variable is determined from the received signal.
Claims
1-16. (canceled)
17. A vibronic sensor for determining a process variable of a medium, comprising: a mechanically oscillatable unit; a driving/receiving unit; and an electronics unit including an adaptive filter, wherein the electronics unit is embodied to execute alternately a first operating mode and a second operating mode, wherein the driving/receiving unit is embodied during the first operating mode to excite the mechanically oscillatable unit with an electrical excitation signal to cause the mechanically oscillatable unit to mechanically oscillate, and wherein the electronics unit is embodied during the second operating mode to interrupt the exciting of the mechanically oscillatable unit with the excitation signal, to receive mechanical oscillations of the mechanically oscillatable unit and to transduce the mechanical oscillations into an electrical, received signal, to set a value of a filter characteristic of the adaptive filter such that a first phase shift is present between the excitation signal and the received signal, and to determine from the received signal the process variable.
18. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the excitation signal is an electrical, rectangular signal.
19. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the electronics unit includes at least one switch configured to switch back and forth between the first operating mode and the second operating mode.
20. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the electronics unit is further embodied to set the first phase shift by setting a center frequency of the adaptive filter.
21. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the electronics unit further includes a phase control unit based on the principle of a lock-in amplifier, wherein the phase control unit is configured to control a center frequency of the adaptive filter such that a second phase shift is present between an input signal and an output signal of the filter.
22. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the electronics unit includes a ring buffer and/or a phase shifter by which the first phase shift is settable.
23. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the bandwidth and/or the quality of the adaptive filter can be set.
24. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the adaptive filter is a resonator filter.
25. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the adapter filter is a low-pass bandpass filter of second order.
26. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the first phase shift is, at times, +/90, +/45 or 0.
27. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 21, wherein the electronics unit further includes an amplitude control unit configured to control the amplitude of the excitation signal to a predeterminable value or to a value within a predeterminable interval.
28. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the electronics unit is embodied to execute a frequency scan, in the case of subceeding a threshold value for an amplitude, to excite the oscillatable unit using the frequency scanning, and to set a center frequency of the adaptive filter successive within a predeterminable frequency interval to discrete excitation frequencies following one another.
29. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 27, wherein the electronics unit is embodied to store and/or to furnish a value and/or a parameter of a component of the electronics unit, including a value and/or a parameter of the filter characteristic, the phase control unit or the amplitude control unit, during the first operating mode.
30. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 29, wherein the electronics unit is embodied to set at the beginning of the second operating mode the stored and/or furnished parameter and/or value of the component.
31. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the process variable is a fill level, a density, and/or a viscosity of the medium.
32. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the oscillatable unit is a membrane, a single rod, or an oscillatory fork.
33. The vibronic sensor as claimed in claim 17, wherein the driving/receiving unit is an electromagnetic or a piezoelectric driving/receiving unit.
34. A method for operating a vibronic sensor for determining a process variable of a medium, comprising: alternately executing a first operating mode and a second operating mode; during the first operating mode, exciting a mechanically oscillatable unit with an electrical excitation signal to cause the mechanically oscillatable unit to mechanically oscillate; during the second operating mode, interrupting the exciting of the mechanically oscillatable unit using the excitation signal is interrupted; receiving the mechanical oscillations of the mechanically oscillatable unit and transducing the mechanical oscillations into an electrical, received signal; setting a value of a filter characteristic of an adaptive filter such that a first phase shift is present between the excitation signal and the received signal; and determining the process variable from the received signal.
Description
[0061] The invention as well as advantageous embodiments thereof will now be described in greater detail based on the appended drawing, the figures of which show as follows:
[0062]
[0063]
[0064]
[0065]
[0066] A block diagram of an electronics unit of the invention is subject matter of
[0067] The quality Q of the adaptive filter 7 can be set by, among others, variation of Lehr's damping ratio D. In such case, the following relationship is utilized: Q=1/2D, wherein Lehr's damping ratio is, in turn, determined from the mechanical properties of the oscillatable unit.
[0068] The quality Q of the adaptive filter 7 obeys, moreover, the relationship B=fm/Q, wherein B is the bandwidth and f.sub.m the center frequency of the adaptive filter. An embodiment of the invention provides that the quality Q of the adaptive filter 7 and/or its bandwidth B are/is settable.
[0069] The received signal U.sub.R is characterized by its frequency, its amplitude and its phase. If the phase control of the phase control unit 8 occurs by setting the center frequency f.sub.m of the adaptive filter 7 to the input frequency of the adaptive filter, then, at all times, the frequency, with which the oscillatable unit 4 oscillates, is known.
[0070] Furthermore, optionally, an amplitude control unit 9 (shown here with dashed lines) can be integrated into the electronics unit 6. By means of the amplitude control unit 9, the amplitude A of the excitation signal U.sub.E is controlled to a predeterminable value or to a value within a predeterminable interval. For example, a conventional PI-controller can be applied for this.
[0071] With the application of an adaptive filter 7 for exciting the mechanically oscillatable unit 7, advantageously, no additional filters are required for signal filtering before the evaluation.
[0072] Before being transmitted via the output stage 11 of the electronics unit to the sensor unit 4,5, the excitation signal U.sub.E passes through a digital-analog converter 10a. Optionally, the received signal U.sub.R received from the sensor unit 4,5 can, moreover, be led through an anti-aliasing filter 13, shown in dashed lines, before being forwarded to the analog-digital converter 10 after passing through the input stage 12.
[0073] For executing the two operating modes 15,16, the electronics unit includes, furthermore, a switch element 14. The processes during the two operating modes 15,16 will now be explained in the following based on
[0074] For this example, the driving/receiving unit 5 is an electromagnetic driving/receiving unit. This is, however, not absolutely necessary.
[0075]
[0076] During the second operating mode 16, also referred to as the measuring/control sequence, the switch element 14 interrupts the supplying of sensor unit 4,5 by means of the excitation signal U.sub.E. This is shown in
[0077] The durations of the first 15 and second 16 operating modes are selectable and can be adapted to meet the needs of a certain sensor unit and the contemplated application of the sensor. It is to be heeded that the duration of the second operating mode be matched to the decay constant of the damped resonance oscillation of the oscillatable unit. Especially in the case of strongly damping media, it must, however, be simultaneously assured that the duration is sufficiently long, in order to assure a stable control and measuring of the phase shift between excitation signal U.sub.E and received signal U.sub.R. Fundamentally, however, especially in the case of an exciting of the oscillatable unit 4 by means of a rectangular signal, it is, furthermore, advantageous that, in each case, the point in time, at which, in each case, following on the second operating mode 16, the first operating mode 15 is started, there is a matching of the oscillations of the oscillatable unit 4, so that the switching back and forth between the two operating modes 15,16 is done phase correctly. This can occur, for example, by a detecting of the zero crossings (corresponding to the rest position) of the oscillations of the oscillatable unit 4 during the second operating mode 16. For this, the electronics unit 6 can, for example, have a unit (not shown) for detecting the amplitude of the oscillations of the oscillatable unit. Such an amplitude detection unit can, for example, be integrated as a component of an amplitude control unit 9 such as shown in
LIST OF REFERENCE CHARACTERS
[0078] 1 vibronic sensor [0079] 2 medium [0080] 3 container [0081] 4 oscillatable unit [0082] 5 electromechanical transducer unit [0083] 6 electronics unit [0084] 7 adaptive filter [0085] 8 phase control unit, 8a phase detection, 8b control [0086] 9 amplitude control unit [0087] 10.10a analog-digital converter, digital-analog converter [0088] 11 output stage [0089] 12 input stage [0090] 13 anti-aliasing filter [0091] 14 switch element [0092] 15 first operating mode, or excitation sequence [0093] 16 second operating mode, or measuring/control sequence [0094] 17 current-voltage converter [0095] 18 voltage-current converter [0096] U.sub.E excitation signal [0097] U.sub.R received signal [0098] f.sub.m center frequency of the adaptive filter [0099] f.sub.0 resonance frequency of the oscillatable unit [0100] A.sub.desired desired value of the amplitude [0101] phase [0102] .sub.desired predeterminable phase shift between excitation signal and received signal [0103] .sub.filter phase shift between input signal and output signal of the adaptive filter [0104] Q quality [0105] B bandwidth