Device and method for measuring the spatial distribution of the concentration of compounds and mixtures thereof in a fluid and/or the level in a fluid
11525780 · 2022-12-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B64D37/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01N21/6408
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
The invention concerns a method for measuring the concentration of a substance or mixture of substances and/or determining the level in a fluid with intrinsic fluorescence, preferably fuel systems. The invention also refers to the optical device suitable for implementing the method, which comprises a unit which generates light for excitation of the sample; a unit of detection of the signal emitted by the sample and a unit of signal processing. The device and method by which it is implemented also allow the determination of the spatial distribution of the substance or mixture of liquid substances and/or the fluid level in a container. One of the main applications is the measurement of the concentration of oxygen in the fuel tank of aircrafts, based on the measurement of the intrinsic fluorescence of the fuel.
Claims
1. A method for measuring a concentration of a substance or mixture of substances at various heights in a fluid, or measuring a fluid level, characterized by comprising the following steps: a) irradiation of the fluid with excitation light; b) detection of an intrinsic fluorescence light emitted by the fluid and arriving at a detector; c) digital processing of a signal obtained in the detector, to obtain intensity or lifetime of the intrinsic fluorescence of the fluid; d) conversion of the intensity or lifetime of the intrinsic fluorescence of fluid into a concentration of a substance or fluid level through a calibration.
2. A method according to claim 1 characterized by the fluid being a fuel with intrinsic fluorescence.
3. A method according to claim 2 characterized by the fluid with intrinsic fluorescence being jet aircraft fuel.
4. A method according to claim 1, characterized by the substance whose concentration at various heights is to be measured being oxygen.
5. A method for measuring a concentration of oxygen in fuel systems of jet aircraft, characterized in that it comprises the following steps: a) irradiating a liquid fuel or a fuel present in a free volume of a fuel tank with excitation light at a temperature range between approximately-50° C. to about 50° C.; b) detecting an intrinsic fluorescence light emitted by the liquid fuel or by the fuel present in the free volume and arriving at a detector; c) digital processing of a signal obtained in the detector, to give a value of intensity or lifetime of the intrinsic fluorescence of the fuel; d) conversion of the intensity or lifetime of the intrinsic fluorescence of the fuel obtained into a concentration of oxygen through a calibration.
6. A method 1 for the measurement of a level of jet fuel in a tank, characterized in that it comprises the following steps: a) irradiating a liquid fuel of the tank with excitation light; b) detecting an intrinsic fluorescence light emitted by the liquid fuel and arriving at a detector; c) digital processing of a signal recorded in the detector, obtaining the intrinsic fluorescence intensity response of the fuel in response to a pulsed or modulated excitation; d) conversion of the obtained fluorescence signal of the fuel into the liquid level, through calibration and an algorithm.
7. A method according to claim 1, characterized by the excitation light being continuous, modulated or pulsed.
8. A method according to claim 7, characterized by the excitation light being a light emitting diode or a laser.
9. A method according to claim 2, characterized by the excitation light being guided to the fuel via an optical fibre or an optical window.
10. A method according to claim 3, characterized by the fuel being one of the following: a fuel based on hydrocarbon, a fuel derived from petroleum, Jet A-1, Jet A, Jet B, TS-1, or Jet no. 3.
11. A method according to claim 10, characterized by the fuel comprising kerosene or naphtha/kerosene.
12. An optical device suitable for implementing the method of claim 1, characterized by comprising: a low intensity light source in which an excitation light is generated to irradiate a fuel; an optical fibre or optical window to guide the excitation light to the fuel; a photodetector to detect the intrinsic fluorescence of the fuel; and a signal processing unit.
13. A device according to claim 12, characterized by the excitation light source emitting continuous, modulated or pulsed light.
14. A device according to claim 13, characterized by the excitation light source being a light emitting diode or a laser.
15. A system for measuring oxygen concentration or a fuel level in a fuel tanks of jet aircraft which comprises: the optical device according to claim 13 and a fuel tank.
16. Use of the device of claim 12 for the measurement of the the concentration of a particular substance or a mixture of several substances at various heights in a fluid or measurement of the fluid level.
17. Use of the device according to claim 12 to measure the concentration of a substance or a mixture of liquid substances at various heights, or to measure the level of a liquid substance in a given container or tank.
18. Use of the device according to claim 12 for measuring the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the liquid fuel at various heights, or the fuel present in the free volume of a fuel tank of a jet aircraft.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(9) The present invention concerns a method for measuring the spatial distribution of the concentration of a substance or mixture of substances in a fluid and/or the level in a fluid, comprising the following steps: a) irradiation of the fluid with excitation light; b) detection of light emitted by the fluid and arriving at a detector; c) emission and digital processing of the signal obtained in the detector, to give the value of the intensity or lifetime of the fluorescence of the fluid; d) conversion of the lifetime or the fluorescence of fluid into a concentration of a substance or fluid level through a calibration.
(10) In a preferred embodiment, in the method of the invention the fluid is a fluid with intrinsic fluorescence, preferably fuel, and even more preferably, jet aircraft fuel.
(11) In another preferred embodiment, oxygen is the substance whose spatial distribution of concentration is to be measured in the method of the invention.
(12) In another preferred embodiment, the method of the invention is aimed to measure the concentration of oxygen in the fuel systems of jet aircraft, and comprises the following steps: a) irradiating the liquid fuel or the fuel present in the free volume of the fuel tank with excitation light at a temperature range between approximately −50° C. to about 50° C.; b) detecting the light emitted by the liquid fuel or the fuel present in the free volume and arriving at a detector; c) emission and digital processing of the signal obtained at the detector, to give the value of the intensity or lifetime of the fluorescence of the fuel; d) conversion of the lifetime or the fluorescence of the fuel obtained into a concentration of oxygen through a calibration.
(13) In another preferred embodiment, the method of the invention is aimed to measure the level of jet fuel in a tank, and comprises the following steps: a) irradiating the liquid fuel of the tank with excitation light; b) detecting the light emitted by the liquid fuel and arriving at a detector; c) digital processing of the signal recorded in the detector, obtaining the fluorescence intensity response of the fuel in response to the pulsed or modulated excitation; d) conversion of the obtained fluorescence signal of the fuel into the liquid level, through calibration and an algorithm.
(14) In another even more preferred embodiment of the invention, the excitation light source can be continuous, modulated or pulsed, more preferably, a light emitting diode (LED) or a laser.
(15) In another even more preferred embodiment of the invention, the excitation light is guided to the fuel via an optical fibre or an optical window, among others.
(16) In another even more preferred embodiment of the invention, the fuel is one of the following: a hydrocarbon-based fuel, a petroleum-derived fuel, Jet A-1, Jet A, Jet B, TS-1, or Jet no. 3, or even better a fuel that comprises kerosene or naphtha/kerosene.
(17) The present invention also concerns an optical device suitable for implementing the method described above and which consists of: a low intensity light source in which an excitation light is generated to irradiate a particular substance or mixture of substances; an optical fibre or optical window to guide the excitation light to the fuel; a photodetector to detect the fluorescence of a substance or mixture of substances; and a signal processing unit.
(18) In a preferred embodiment, the excitation light source can be continuous, modulated or pulsed. In a more preferred embodiment, the excitation light source is a light emitting diode (LED) or a laser.
(19) The present invention also relates to a system for measuring oxygen concentration and/or the fuel level in the fuel tanks of jet aircraft which comprises: the optical device described above and a fuel tank.
(20) The present invention further relates to the use of the optical device described above for the measurement of the spatial distribution of the concentration of a given substance or mixture of various substances and/or the measurement of the level of a fluid.
(21) In a preferred embodiment, the optical device is used to determine the spatial distribution of a substance or a mixture of liquid substances or the level of a fluid in a given reservoir or tank. In an more preferred embodiment, the optical device is used for measuring and/or monitoring of the spatial distribution of the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the liquid fuel or the fuel present in the free volume of a fuel tank, more preferably in jet aircraft.
(22) Unless stated otherwise, “about x” means that any x value presented in the course of the description should be interpreted as an approximate value of actual x value, since such an approximation to the actual value would be reasonably expected by a specialist in technique, due to the experimental and/or measurement conditions that introduce deviations from the actual value.
(23) The term “fuel system” should be taken as the system that stores and distributes the fuel throughout the plane. This system consists of two main parts: fuel tanks and fuel delivery subsystems. The fuel tanks can be independent units or an integral part of the structure. The fuel is taken from the tanks to the engines through fuel lines, control valves and pumps placed along the route, called fuel delivery subsystems.
(24) The term “luminescent substance” should be taken as referring to a substance that is useful in the detection of oxygen in accordance with the invention by means of luminescence and luminescence quenching.
(25) “Luminescence” can be considered as an emission of light which does not result from the temperature of the emitting substance but from the excitation of this substance, for example with incident light.
(26) “Photoluminescence” is the luminescence produced by the absorption of light.
(27) “Luminescence quenching” is the reduction of the luminescence that results from the presence of a quenching substance such as oxygen. Contact with a quenching substance causes the luminescent substance to pass from the excited state to the ground state without emitting light, producing a reduction in the intensity and the respective lifetime of the luminescence.
(28) The term “light”, as used herein, includes visible, infrared and ultraviolet radiation. The light emitted by the luminescent substance must be distinguished from the light that is reflected or dispersed by the substance indicated.
(29) Luminescence is usually divided into two forms known as fluorescence and phosphorescence, that are well understood by specialists in the technique. Most of the substances that are luminescent are fluorescent or phosphorescent, but in some cases it is possible that luminescence occurs through a combination of the two mechanisms.
(30) The term “luminophore” refers to an atom or group of atoms in the luminescent substance, responsible for luminescence properties of that substance. The luminescent substance of the invention is the very fuel used in commercial aviation, specifically jet fuel.
(31) “Luminescence decay” is the process by which a substance containing luminophores emits light, after excitation with a short-duration pulse of light (typically tens of picoseconds). In the simplest case, the progressive decrease in the intensity of the light emitted is an exponential function of time, with a characteristic duration determined by the luminescence lifetime (τ).
(32) The term “quenching” is used to refer to a reduction in photoluminescence; in the present invention this is fluorescence. There is a wide variety of quenching processes that diminish the intensity and lifetime of fluorescence of a particular substance. In this case, the quenching is a non-radiative transfer of energy (resonance energy transfer). This process causes the luminescent substance to relax by dissipating the excitation energy through a quencher (“collision”) such as molecular oxygen (O.sub.2). Oxygen is an effective quencher due to its unusual ground state (triplet state).
(33) Quenching occurs when an oxygen molecule collides (collide means “to be in the vicinity”, typically less than 10 nm) with the excited fuel molecule, after which there is a transfer of energy—which thus allows the fluorescent molecule to lose energy without emission. However, since the implementation of the present invention is the issue, the terms are interpreted macroscopically: fluorescence occurs, but the presence of the quencher reduces the number of photons emitted per unit of time, resulting in a reduction of observable fluorescence and its lifetime.
(34) To improve the design and operation of fuel management systems, it is important to measure the concentration of oxygen in the liquid fuel or in the free volume above the fuel in a tank.
(35) In order to mitigate at least some of the problems mentioned above, the present invention provides a method for monitoring the concentration of dissolved oxygen in a fuel or the oxygen concentration in the gas phase present in the free volume above the jet fuel, in a tank.
(36) It has been found that the aviation fuel itself can be used to monitor the concentration of oxygen in the fuel or in the free volume above the fuel, for example in a tank.
(37) The present invention provides an optical method for detecting the dissolved oxygen in jet fuel or in the free volume above the jet fuel, comprising the following steps: 1—irradiating the liquid fuel or the fuel present in the free volume of the tank with excitation light; 2-detecting the light emitted by the liquid fuel or by the fuel present in the free volume and arriving at a detector; 3-digital processing of the signal obtained in the detector, to give the value of the intensity or lifetime of the fluorescence of the fuel; 4-conversion of the lifetime or fluorescence intensity values of the fuel obtained into a concentration of oxygen through a calibration.
(38) The method is suitable for the low temperatures found in aviation applications and in fact it applies across the temperature range, from around 50° C. to about −50° C., found in these applications.
(39) The device that is the subject of the present invention, includes: a low intensity light source, placed so as to irradiate jet fuel, liquid or fuel present in the free volume, and a photodetector, placed so as to detect the fluorescence of the jet fuel. Both the light source and the photodetector are placed outside the fuel tank, the radiation entering and leaving the tank via an optical window or an optical fibre.
(40) The present invention can be advantageously used in inerting applications in aviation as it is a fast and accurate means of monitoring the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the fuel or present in the free volume above it. With the knowledge of the oxygen concentration, an intelligent inerting system can control the injection of nitrogen-enriched air (NEA) to reduce the oxygen concentration and thus reduce the wear of the OBIGGS system and fuel consumption, without the risk of ignition being increased for this reason.
(41) The present invention has the benefit of using an optical technology in a fuel-rich environment. In contrast, alternative technologies may require the use of electrical power, metal parts and electricity conducting wires. This can introduce an extra risk of ignition in the fuel system. The present method works without any electric current in the regions where there is fuel in liquid or vapour form.
(42) The concentration of dissolved oxygen in jet fuel can also be monitored indirectly by using a portion of the fuel located above the liquid fuel (the oxygen concentration in the free volume is related to the concentration of oxygen in the liquid fuel, assuming equilibrium conditions).
(43) The method of this invention is based on the irradiation of jet fuel with light and the measurement of the intensity or lifetime of the fluorescence of the jet fuel, for different oxygen concentrations.
(44) The fuel can be irradiated by one of the following means: optical fibre, optical window, among others.
(45) The intensity of the light emitted by the jet fuel can be measured with an appropriate photodetector, such as a photodiode, CCD (charged couple device), etc., as is well known in the technique.
(46) The excitation source can be continuous, modulated or pulsed, for example, a LED (light-emitting diode) or a laser.
(47) The measurement is associated with a signal processing unit to generate and emit a signal derived from the intensity detected by the photosensor, in response to the irradiation of the jet fuel by the light source.
(48) In one form of implementation, the method of this invention can be used for spot measurements of the oxygen concentration. Alternatively, the method can be used to continuously monitor the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the fuel or the fuel present on the free volume above the fuel.
(49) In one form of implementation, the fuel is a hydrocarbon-based fuel containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. In another form of implementation of this invention, the fuel can be a petroleum-derived fuel. Still another form of implementation of this invention, the fuel can compromise kerosene. In yet another form of implementation, the fuel can comprise naphtha/kerosene. In the preferred form of implementation of this invention, the fuel is a jet aircraft fuel. This can be Jet A-1 fuel, suitable for most turbine engine aircraft, but also, for example, Jet A, Jet B or TS-1, the main fuel available in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), as well as Jet fuel no. 3, the main export-grade Chinese fuel, essentially the same as Jet A-1.
(50) Initial analyses consist of jet fuel exposed to air, the oxygen present having the effect of reducing the fluorescence intensity when the jet fuel is irradiated with ultraviolet light (UV) or visible light (250-400 nm). By passing a stream of nitrogen through the jet fuel, the dissolved oxygen in the jet fuel is drastically reduced, the fluorescence emission increases significantly (
(51)
(52) For the calibration of the lifetime of a given substance or mixture consisting of several substances dissolved in a liquid or in the free volume in a tank, the Stern-Volmer equation can be used in the event of suppression of luminescence lifetime:
τ.sub.0/τ=1+k.sub.qτ.sub.0[supressor] (eq. 1)
where [suppressor] is the suppressor concentration, k.sub.q is a second order rate constant that is temperature dependent, and τ.sub.0 is the fluorescence lifetime in the absence of oxygen at the temperature in question. The same relationship is valid for the calibration of the intensity, replacing τ.sub.0/τ with I.sub.0/I, where I.sub.0 is the intensity in the absence of a suppressor.
(53) It is possible to use the Stern-Volmer equation for the calibration of the lifetime of the jet fuel for different oxygen concentrations:
τ.sub.0/τ=1+k.sub.qτ.sub.0[O.sub.2] (eq. 2)
where [O.sub.2] is the concentration of oxygen, k.sub.q is a second order rate constant that is temperature dependent, and T.sub.0 is the fluorescence lifetime in the absence of oxygen at the temperature in question. The same relationship is valid for the calibration of the intensity, replacing τ.sub.0/τ with I.sub.0/I, where I.sub.0 is the intensity in the absence of oxygen.
(54) The fluorescence lifetime measurements provide specific numerical parameters that are only slightly dependent on the provenance of the jet fuel, as can be seen in
(55) In fact, as seen in
(56) Identical emission spectra are observed for two different batches of Jet A-1 fuel, proving once again that the method is not influenced by the fuel source, as seen in
EXAMPLES
Example 1
(57) A decrease in temperature produces an increase in the fluorescence lifetime of pure Jet A-1 fuel,
(58) This relationship was obtained experimentally as follows: pure Jet A-1 fuel was placed in a 1 cm optical path quartz cell that is sealed with a silicone stopper. The empty space above the fuel contains a controlled composition N.sub.2/O.sub.2 mixture (percentage of oxygen between 0% and 21% by volume). The composition of the gaseous mixture was controlled using a gas flow mixer. The fluorescence lifetime of the pure Jet A-1 fuel was measured for the different percentages of oxygen. The Jet A-1 fuel fluorescence lifetime was determined by single-photon counting spectroscopy with a system consisting of a Tsunami Spectra Physics (Ti: Sapphire) picosecond laser (80 MHz repetition rate, 100 fs pulses, 700-1000 nm) and a Coherent 701-2 Rhodamine 6G dye laser from (560-610 nm) or DCM (620-700 nm), with synchronous pumping by a Coherent Innova 440-10 ionized argon laser. The excitation pulses have a duration of 3 to 4 ps with a repetition ratio of 1.9 MHz. The excitation wavelength used was typically 300 nm. Fluorescence emission was measured with a polarizer placed at an angle of 54.7° (magic angle) and recorded at 345 nm. The scattered light is eliminated by a cut-off filter and the light emitted is selected by a Jobin-Yvon HR320 monochromator with a diffraction grating of 100 lines/nm and measured by a Hamamatsu MCP 2809U-01 photomultiplier. The instrumental response function (IRF) has a half-height width of 39 ps.
(59) At a temperature of 25° C. the fluorescence lifetime measured in the absence of oxygen was 39 ns, and for the highest oxygen concentration (21%) it was 15 ns.
Example 2
(60) An implementation of the system for measuring dissolved oxygen in jet fuel, close to the surface, and in equilibrium with the oxygen present in the free volume, consists of the assembly in
Example 3
(61) Another implementation of the system for measuring dissolved oxygen in jet fuel and in equilibrium with the oxygen present in the free volume, consists of the assembly in
Example 4
(62) An implementation of the system for measuring the level of fuel in a tank consists of the assembly in
Example 5
(63) In another implementation of the system for measuring the fuel level in a tank, corresponding to