Method for determining condition of piping and a sequence controlled sample pump
09588021 · 2017-03-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04B51/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01M1/00
PHYSICS
F04B43/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
G01N29/22
PHYSICS
F04B51/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a sampling apparatus and method. In the sampling method, a sample is led through a flowline (20) to a pump (5) and from there on to sampling means (12, 13). According to the invention, the pump (5) is formed of an actual pump (5) and magnetic valves (4, 6) located on either side of it, which are controlled in such a way that the pumping is pulse-like.
Claims
1. A sampling method comprising the steps of: leading a sample through an inlet channel to a pump and from there on to sampling means through measurement piping, producing, via the pump, a pressure pulse in the measurement piping, measuring an echo of the pressure pulse in the measurement piping and estimating the change of the echoes caused by the pressure pulse as a function of time in order to determine the condition of the measurement piping, wherein the inlet channel is a flow-line and the pump is formed of a pump and magnetic valves located on either side of the pump, and further comprising the step of controlling the magnetic valves in such a way that the pumping is pulse-like.
2. A sampling method according to claim 1, further comprising the steps of forming a pumping pulse from the following sequence: A. opening a suction valve, wherein the suction valve is one of the magnetic valves, B. moving the actual pump's pump membrane to the upper position, C. closing the suction valve, D. opening an outlet valve, wherein the outlet valve is the other of the magnetic valves, E. moving the actual pump's pump membrane to the upper position when a visible pulse is created, and D. closing the outlet valve.
3. A sampling method according to claim 1 wherein the pressure pulse is measured after the pump in the flow direction as a function of time in order to create an impulse response in the piping of the measuring device.
4. A sampling method according to claim 1, further comprising the steps of: creating a reference value at the beginning of the measurement, when the measurement piping is clean, in order to create an impulse response in the measuring device's measurement piping), and repeatedly evaluating the impulse response at the moment of measurement against the reference impulse response, in order to assess the condition of the measurement piping and the sample collectors.
5. A sampling method according to claim 1, wherein a pressure pulse is produced by at least one of a control element and a valve in a desired direction in the measurement piping, when assessing the condition of the measurement piping.
6. A sampling method according to claim 1, wherein at least one three-way valve is used to direct a flow to different sampling elements.
7. A sampling method according to claim 1, wherein the pump is operated on a blow-back principle.
8. A pressure-measurement method comprising the steps of; leading a sample through an inlet channel to a pump and from there on to sampling means through measurement piping, producing a pressure pulse in the measurement piping, measuring an echo of the pressure pulse in the measurement piping, estimating the change of the echoes caused by the pressure pulse as a function of time in order to determine the condition of the measurement piping, measuring the pressure in a set of inlet channels containing a liquid or a gas, repeatedly measuring an impulse-response of the pressure in the set of inlet channels, and on the basis of the measured impulse-response information, modelling the pressure of the entire set of channels.
9. A sampling apparatus comprising: measurement piping, which has at least a flowline, a pump connected to the flowline, wherein the pump is capable of producing a pressure pulse in the measurement piping a sampling means connected to the pump by the measurement piping for taking a sample from the flow, and a means for measuring an echo of a pressure pulse produced by the pump and for evaluating changes in the shape of the echoes caused by the pressure pulse, as a function of time, in order to determine the condition of the measurement piping.
10. A sampling apparatus according to claim 9, wherein the pump has a pump and magnetic valves located on either side of it, and wherein the sampling apparatus further comprises control elements for controlling the pump and the valves in such a way that pumping is pulse-like.
11. A sampling apparatus according claim 10, wherein the control elements have means for determining an impulse response of the pulse-like pumping pulse at different moments in time and for comparing the impulse responses determined at different moments in time with each other.
12. A sampling apparatus according to claim 9, further comprising a pressure-measurement device which is located after the pump in a designated flow direction.
13. A sampling apparatus according to claim 9, further comprising at least one three-way valve for directing the flow to various sampling elements.
Description
(1) In the following, the invention is examined with the aid of embodiments according to the accompanying figures,
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8) According to
(9) Expressed mathematically:
L=.Math.v.Math.T, in which
(10) L=the distance of the impedance-change point from the pressure sensor
(11) v=the propagation velocity of the pressure pulse in a gas or liquid
(12) T=the delay from the transmission of the pressure pulse to the reception of the reflection, the coefficient takes into account the travel of the pressure pulse from the pump to the impedance change and back.
(13) The static measurement of pressures according to the prior art does not produce a fraction of such an amount of observations.
(14) Traditional sampling pumps for a corresponding flow area require good pre-treatment of the sample.
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18) In practice it has been observed that, when the reading value formed with the aid of the curves of
(19) In
(20) According to
(21) It can be seen from the curve of
(22) A blockage in the sample-gas suction piping can be seen from the curve of
(23)
(24) The following explains the matter:
(25) The pumping cycle is formed on the following principle, with reference to
(26) A pressure sensor 8 or microphone is located after the outlet valve 6.
(27) From this cycle, it can be seen that the pressure pulse is always directed in normal operation to the piping on the outlet side of pump 5. According to the programming, the pulse is directed to the outlet or to the collection of some specific sample.
(28) From each of these, the back-reflected pressure shock can be seen in the time after the work pulse.
(29) In this case, the so-called echosounding is operating normally. However, the outlet valve of pump 5 closes before the arriving echo and the slow pressure drop of the work pulse caused by the blockage is sufficient indication of the events.
(30) The phenomena of the time before the work pulse are in the time when the pump's inlet valve opens. The outlet valve is then closed and the possible blockage in front of the pump has created a vacuum in the inlet line during the previous cycles.
(31) This vacuum transfers to the interior parts of the pump and when the outlet valve opens this vacuum pulse is seen in the pressure sensor. The pump's internal volume fills through the outlet-side channels.
(32) This chain of events shows a blockage in the devices on the suction side of the pump 5, but does not exploit the back-reflection information.
(33) A pressure pulse oriented in the desired direction can be easily attached to an environmental analysis of pump 5.
(34) By monitoring the back reflections, information can be obtained by means of the same device on the magnitude of the change, and, on the basis of the arrival time of the reflection, on the distance of that change relative to the pump.
(35) In the present application, the term measurement piping typically refers to the piping connecting the pump 4, 5, 6 and the collection sorbents 12, 13, including the collection sorbents 12, 13 and the other components, such as valves. The measurement piping can also include other parts of the measurement system, such as the gas inlet channel 21 nd the gas outlet channel 22.
(36) In the present application, the term modelling refer to the creation of a computational model on the basis of measurement.