Thermal conductivity detector circuit and method for operating the same
09903770 ยท 2018-02-27
Assignee
Inventors
- Glen Eugene Schmidt (Bartlesville, OK, US)
- Udo Gellert (Bellheim, DE)
- Aosheng Wang (Eden Prairie, MN, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A thermal conductivity detector includes a switch controllable to short-circuit the input of an amplifier to improve the thermal conductivity detector for use in gas chromatography without the need of an additional reference cell, wherein a digital signal processor calculates a transfer function of an analog signal processor from a digitized difference signal received in response to short-circuiting the input of the amplifier at a given time when solely a reference carrier fluid passes through a measuring cell, and the digital signal processor recovers a detector signal by deconvoluting the digitized difference signal with a transfer function.
Claims
1. A thermal conductivity detector comprising: a measuring cell containing at least one thermal conductivity detector element and providing a detector signal and being passed through by a sample fluid in a reference carrier fluid stream; an analog signal processor including an amplifier for amplifying the detector signal, a low-pass filter for providing a running average of the amplified detector signal, and a subtractor for generating a difference signal from the amplified detector signal and the running average; a digital signal processor for digitizing and digitally processing the difference signal, said digital signal processor deconvoluting the digitized difference signal with a transfer function to recover the amplified detector signal in digitized form; and a switch controllable to short-circuit an input of the amplifier; wherein the digital signal processor is configured to calculate the transfer function of the analog signal processor from the digitized difference signal received in response to short-circuiting the input of the amplifier at a given time when solely the reference carrier fluid passes the measuring cell such that the thermal conductivity detector is operated in a substantially continuous manner to increase an operating speed of a gas chromatograph.
2. A gas chromatograph comprising at least one thermal conductivity detector of claim 1.
3. A method for operating a thermal conductivity detector comprising: passing a sample fluid in a reference carrier fluid stream through a measuring cell and generating a detector signal via a thermal conductivity detector; processing the detector signal in an analog signal processor including amplifying the detector signal, providing a running average of the amplified detector signal by low-pass filtering, and generating a difference signal from the amplified detector signal and the running average; and digitizing and digitally processing the difference signal comprising deconvoluting the digitized difference signal with a transfer function to recover the detector signal in digitized form; the method further comprising, as an initial step, short-circuiting an input of the amplifier at a given time when solely the reference carrier fluid passes the measuring cell and calculating the transfer function of the analog signal processor from the digitized difference signal received in response to short-circuiting the input of the amplifier such that the thermal conductivity detector is operated in a substantially continuous manner to increase an operating speed of a gas chromatograph.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
(4)
(5)
(6) A switch 23, here in the form of an NPN transistor, is arranged between the input of the amplifier 14 and ground. The switch 23 is controlled by the digital signal processor 22 to close and thus short-circuit the input of the amplifier 14 at the start of each or every n-th chromatographic cycle for a short time while solely the reference carrier gas 1 flows through the measuring cell 7. The amplifier 14 responds with a rapid change in its output, effectively being a step function. The analog signal processing portion 11 responds by what is the convolution of the step function and the impulse response of the analog signal processing portion 11 itself. Thus, the transfer function f(n) of the low-pass filter 16 and the transfer function 1f(n) of the combined low-pass filter 16 and subtractor 17 can be calculated from the digitized difference signal 20 received by the digital signal processor 22 in response to the step function. This allows for characterizing and, if necessary, adapting the low-pass filter 16.
(7) When a chromatographic cycle starts and the sample in the carrier gas stream passes through the measuring cell 7, the switch 23 is open and has no effect on the detector element 8 and the subsequent processing electronics. As the low-pass filter 16 not only removes a DC component from the amplified detector signal 15 but also affects higher frequency signal portions which represent the sample, the difference signal 18 will be distorted correspondingly. The digital signal processor 22 therefore restores the detector signal in digitized form by deconvoluting the digitized difference signal 20 with the transfer function 1f(n) of the analog signal processing portion 11.
(8) The operating sequence of the thermal conductivity detector 5 may be as follows:
(9) 1. Wait until a previous sample is cleared from the separation device 4 and the tubing to the measuring cell 7, such that only carrier gas 1 is flowing.
(10) 2. Apply step function (close switch 23).
(11) 3. Acquire transfer function of the analog signal processor 11 from the step response.
(12) 4. Remove step function (open switch 23).
(13) 5. Allow system to settle after removal of step function.
(14) 6. Start chromatographic cycle.
(15) 7. End of chromatographic cycle.
(16) 8. Restore detector signal by deconvoluting the received difference signal 20 with the transfer function of the analog signal processor 11.
(17) 9. Decide if low-pass filter 16 needs to be re-characterized; if so return to step 1.
(18) 10. Else: Go back to step 6.
(19) One significant advantage of the invention is that the operating sequence of the thermal conductivity detector and thus of the gas chromatograph is closer to being a continuous process because the low-pass filter time constant needs to be set only at some multiple of the widest chromatographic peak of interest. This keeps from having a low pass filter that requires many seconds or even minutes to settle and be ready for a measurement. DC drift of the low-pass filter 16 is also less important because this would be calibrated out in the transfer function.
(20) Thus, while there have shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements and/or method steps which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements and/or method steps shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.