Device and method for identifying refrigerants
10031075 ยท 2018-07-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01N21/314
PHYSICS
International classification
G01N21/31
PHYSICS
Abstract
A device for identifying refrigerants includes a gas cell, which has a test gas inlet and a test gas outlet, an infrared source that radiates through the gas cell, and at least one sensor that detects the infrared radiation that passes through the gas cell. At least one wide-band filter is provided between the infrared source and the sensor. The passband of the at least one wide-band filter includes the absorption spectra of the refrigerants to be detected and does not include the absorption spectrum of hydrocarbons. The gas cell is connected to a cartridge, which contains the refrigerant to be detected in pure form as a reference gas.
Claims
1. A method for identifying the purity of a gas under test, the method comprising: radiating, by an infrared source, infrared radiation through a gas cell filled with a reference gas, wherein the gas cell is connected to a cartridge which contains the reference gas, wherein the reference gas comprises a 100 percent concentration of a first refrigerant, measuring, by at least one sensor, infrared absorption of the reference gas in a passband of a filter, wherein the filter is provided between the infrared source and the sensor, the passband of the filter comprising an absorption spectrum of each of a plurality of refrigerants, and wherein the entire absorption spectrum of hydrocarbons is outside the passband of said filter, radiating, by the infrared source, infrared radiation through the gas cell filled with the gas under test, measuring, by the at least one sensor, infrared absorption of the gas under test in the passband of the filter, dividing the measurement of the gas under test by the measurement of the reference gas to form a quotient of the measured values of the measurements on the reference gas and the gas under test, determining using the least square method a standard deviation between the quotient of the measured values of the measurements on the reference gas and the gas under test and a plurality of calibration values previously determined in a calibration process with gas compositions other than the gas under test, and determining a relative purity of the gas under test with respect to the reference gas based on the standard deviation between the quotient of the measured values and the plurality of calibration values.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: measuring, by the at least one sensor, infrared absorption of the gas under test at at least one wavelength that is outside the passband of the filter, and comparing, using the least square method, the infrared absorption of the gas under test measured outside of the passband of the filter with wavelengths corresponding to values previously determined in the calibration process with gas compositions other than the gas under test.
3. The method of claim 1, the method further comprising: determining proportions of an unknown refrigerant in the gas under test as coefficients of a linear equation system in which:
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: measuring, by the at least one sensor, infrared absorption of a plurality of refrigerants to be detected in the gas under test, wherein for each refrigerant of the plurality of the refrigerants to be detected in the gas under test, the measurement is made using a respective narrow-band filter with a passband including the entire absorption wavelength of the respective refrigerant of the plurality of the refrigerants to be detected in the gas under test.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the passband of the filter comprises wavelengths of more than 8 m and less than 14 m.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The following is a detailed description of embodiments of the invention with reference to the Figures. In the Figures:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) The device 10 of the present invention includes a gas cell 12 with a gas inlet 14 and a gas outlet 16. On two opposite sides, the gas cell is provided with CaF2 windows 18 that allow infrared radiation from an infrared source 20 to pass to a sensor 22 through the gas cell 12.
(7) The gas inlet 14 of the gas cell 12 is connected with an air inlet via a controllable valve V1. A check valve V4 connects the gas inlet 14 with a test gas inlet for the refrigerant to be detected. A controllable valve V2 and a pressure reducer 24 connect the gas inlet 14 with a cartridge 26 that holds the refrigerant HFO-1234yf, which is to be detected, in pure form as a reference gas. The reference gas cartridge 26 is part of the device of the present invention.
(8) Depending on the measurement, different optical filters 28, 30 are positioned in the beam path between the infrared source 20 and the sensor 22.
(9) A controllable valve V3 and a membrane pump 32 connect the gas outlet 16 of the gas cell 12 with a gas outlet to atmosphere.
(10) In each measurement, the refrigerant to be tested is compared with the reference refrigerant in the cartridge 26. Since all ambient conditions are identical both for the refrigerant to be tested and the reference refrigerant, they have no more relevance as disturbance variables.
(11) The sensor 22 used includes four individual sensor elements, each having a respective infrared filter 30 arranged upstream thereof for the detection of a specific wavelength range. Thus, the four wavelength elements provide different output voltages for the gas mixture contained in the gas cell 12. The four voltages measured are compared with measured values for various gas compositions obtained before during a calibration process, wherein that calibrated gas composition is considered as detected that closest to the measured voltages.
(12)
(13) Thereafter, valve V1 is closed to the air inlet and valve V3 is switched from the membrane pump 32 and the pump is deactivated. In order to fill the gas cell 12 with reference gas from the cartridge 26, valve V2 is opened for a period of 0.2 seconds. Thereafter, the voltages of the sensor elements of the senor 30 are measured.
(14) Subsequently, valve V1 is opened, valve V3 is switched to the pump and the pump 32 is activated to flush the gas cell with air.
(15) Thereafter, valve V1 is closed again, valve V3 is switched from the pump 32, the pump 32 is deactivated and the gas cell is filled with test gas via the check valve V4. After the gas cell 12 has been filled with test gas, the sensor voltages of the sensor 22 are measured and the proportion of the gas HFO-1234yf in the test gas is determined as described hereunder:
(16) In a first variant, sensor elements S1, S2, S3 and S4 are used. The sensor element S1 has a wide-band filter with a passband of 8-14 m associated therewith. The sensor element S2 is associated with a narrowband filter with a passband of 3.38 m for hydrocarbons. The sensor element S3 is associated with a narrow-band filter with a passband of 7.69 m for the refrigerant R134a. The sensor element S4 is associated with a narrow-band filter with a pass frequency of 7.3 m for the refrigerant HFO-1234yf to be detected.
(17) At the sensor element S1, with the gas cell 12 flooded with test gas, the voltage V.sub.Meas,S1 is measured, and the reference voltage V.sub.Ref, S1 is measured with the gas cell flooded with reference gas from the cartridge 26.
(18) The result of a measurement is the quotient of V.sub.Meas,S(i) and V.sub.Ref,S(i):
(19)
(20) The calibration values contained in the file are ratios V.sub.Meas/V.sub.Ref for the four sensor elements S1, S2, S3 and S4 measured once during a calibration process.
(21) An exemplary excerpt from a file containing calibration values reads as follows:
(22) TABLE-US-00001 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00231 1.00210 0.97337 1.00497 0.98800 1.00000 0.95000 1.00000 0.97600 0.99800 0.90800 1.00400
(23) The first row (1,00000 1,00000 1,00000 1,00000) represents the voltage ratios for 100% pure HFO-1234yf. Since the measured signal voltages for the gas to be tested and for the referece gas (which is 100% pure HFO-1234yf) have the same values, the quotient of both is 1.000, respectively.
(24) The second row shows the corresponding values for a mixture of 99.5% HFO-1234yf and 0.5% R134a, the third row shows the values for 99% HFO-1234yf and 1% R134a, etc.
(25) For the determination of the purity of the HFO-1234yf refrigerant of the composition of the gas mixtures to be tested, the deviation between the absorptions measured and the absorptions to be expected for specific mixtures is determined using a metric according to the least square method. In this manner, it is possible to determine which row of calibration data from the file shows the least deviation when compared with the measured values for the gas to be tested.
(26)
(27) This calculation is made for all rows of the calibration file, wherein [i] in the above formula is the number of the row. The result is an array with as many values as there are rows in the calibration file. The smallest value in this array is the value of interest or the gas mixture it represents.
(28) In an alternative embodiment of the measuring method of the invention the sensor 22 includes three infrared filters having different bandwidths. A first filter is matched to a wavelength of 7.4 m for HFO-1234yf. Another filter is matched to a wavelength of 7.69 m for R134a. A fourth filter is designed as a wide-band filter for the wavelength range from 8 to 14 m for all possible refrigerants. Another narrow-band filter is matched to a wavelength of 3.45 m for hydrocarbons. The passbands of these filters are illustrated in
(29) Measuring Principle:
(30) For determining the concentrations of a refrigerant mixture of the gas components j, the absorption on the wavelengths k is measured, whereupon the linear equation system
(31)
is solved, where the following designations apply: A.sub.k total absorption of the gas mixture in the wavelength range k c.sub.j concentration of the gas component j a.sub.jk absorption of the component j in the wavelength range k AK number of gas components
Characteristic of the Solution:
(32) One of the wavelength ranges is chosen with a width that includes all basically unknown refrigerants (8 . . . 14 m) and as such allows for a statement on the purity without analyzing all spectral lines individually.
(33) For this reason, no infrared photo-spectrometer is required, nor is it necessary to know all components contained in their entirety.
(34) Measuring Process in Detail:
(35) Calibration:
(36) 0. In preparation, each sensor is subjected to a factory calibration, wherein the factors a.sub.jk are determined individually (in compensation for filter tolerances). For this purpose, the substances j are respectively supplied (i.e. c.sub.j=1) and the absorptions a.sub.jk are determined from equation (1).
Measurement: 1. The measurement starts with a zero determination by letting air into the cuvette. Thereby, all zero absorptions A.sub.k,0 are determined. 2. The actual measurement is performed at a defined pressure (exactness of atmospheric pressure or measured with a pressure gage) after the unknown refrigerant mixture A.sub.k has been let in: all absorptions A.sub.k in the wavelength ranges k are measured.
Evaluation: 3. Using the known zero absorption A.sub.k,0, the net absorptions A.sub.k=A.sub.kA.sub.k,0 are now calculated. 4. Using the net absorptions and the a.sub.jk known from the calibration, the equation system (1) can now be set up. The solution is obtained by known methods, e.g. by matrix inversion. 5. If more than one measurement is performed on the same mixture, it is possible, in a manner known per se, to perform an equalization calculation with the equation system which, in this case, is overdetermined (e.g. multiple linear regression) and to thereby also determine the standard deviation of the concentrations.
(37)
(38) a) reference value for sum of refrigerants
(39) The wavelength range of 8 . . . 14 m is representative of all conventional refrigerants, but excludes hydrocarbons, such as methane, propane, butane, . . . , CO.sub.2 and water vapor. Thus, this is the ideal wavelength for representing the sum of all refrigerants and to form a 100% reference value for the necessary measurement of the purity of HFO-1234yf (this range is also used commercially for universal refrigerant detectors such as the INFICON devices D-TEKselect or HLD5000smart).
(40) Accordingly, the absorption signal in this entire range is a measure of the sum of the partial pressures of all refrigerants.
(41) b) measurand for the proportion of HFO-1234yf
(42) Ideally, a free absorption line of HFO-1234yf would be sufficient to measure a signal for the partial pressure of HFO-1234yf alone. The HFO-1234yf line at 7.2 m would be such a line, if it were not for the disturbing influence of water vapor absorption already occurring there.
(43) For this reason, two lines have to be extracted for the determination of the HFO-1234yf partial pressure: the line at 8.34 m represents the sum of R134a and HFO-1234yf, and the line at 7.69 m represents R134a alone.
(44) By subtracting the proportion of R134a known from the 7.69 m line from the line at 8.43 m, it is possible to determine the partial pressure of HFO-1234yf.
(45) c) determination of the purity of HFO-1234yf and of the contamination by R134a
(46) By forming a ratio between the HFO-1234yf partial pressure of b) and the total partial pressure of all refrigerants of a), a percentage for the purity of HFO-12343yf is obtained. Since, moreover, the partial pressure of R134a has been determined from the absorption at 7.69 m, it is also possible to state whether the contamination is caused by R134a alone or by further (unknown) refrigerants.