Measuring and testing – Volume or rate of flow – By measuring electrical or magnetic properties
Reexamination Certificate
1998-04-01
2003-07-01
Patel, Harshad (Department: 2855)
Measuring and testing
Volume or rate of flow
By measuring electrical or magnetic properties
C073S861110
Reexamination Certificate
active
06584859
ABSTRACT:
The invention concerns a magnetically inductive flowmeter for flowing media, with a measuring tube with a magnet serving to generate a magnetic field passing at least essentially perpendicular to the axis of the measuring tube, with at least two measuring electrodes arranged along a connecting line passing essentially perpendicular to the axis of the measuring tube and to the direction of the magnetic field, with at least one reference electrode and with one difference amplifier connected with the measuring electrodes via measuring electrode connections, serving for amplification of the measuring voltage applied to the measuring electrodes, and having a reference potential connection. The invention also concerns a magnetically inductive flowmeter of the type described previously, in the case of which no reference electrode is provided.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The basic principle of the magnetically inductive flowmeter for flowing media goes back to Faraday, who proposed the principle of electrodynamic induction for flow. rate measurement in 1832. According to Faraday's law of induction, an electric field strength perpendicular to the direction of flow and to the magnetic field arises in a flowing medium which carries charge carriers with it and flows through a magnetic field. This law is used in the case of a magnetically inductive flowmeter in that a magnet, regularly consisting of two magnetic coils, generates a magnetic field perpendicular to the direction of flow in the measuring tube. Within this magnetic field, each volume element of the flowing medium moving through the magnetic field makes a contribution with the field strength arising in this volume element to the measurement voltage shunted off via the measuring electrodes. In the case of the known magnetically inductive flowmeters, the measuring electrodes are designed so that they are coupled either galvanically or capacitatively with the flowing medium. A special feature of magnetically inductive flowmeters is the proportionality between the measurement voltage and the rate of flow of the medium determined over the cross-section of the tube, that is, the proportionality between measuring voltage and volume current.
In the case of the known magnetically inductive flowmeters upon which the invention is based, the measuring voltage appearing between the measuring electrodes is amplified via electronic difference amplifiers, the difference amplifiers operating with respect to a reference potential, which usually corresponds to the ground potential. For this purpose, the reference potential connection of the difference amplifiers is connected directly with a potential equalization which is at ground potential. At the same time, the flowing medium is also connected with the potential equalization via reference potential rings or reference potential electrodes, so that the flowing medium also lies at the reference potential. Since the reference potential usually is the ground potential, usually the reference potential rings are designated as grounding rings and the reference potential electrodes are designated as grounding electrodes; this terminology is also used below.
The measuring tube of a magnetically inductive flowmeter is always made to be insulating in the area of the measuring electrodes. According to the prior art, grounding rings, which are in annular electrical contact with the flowing medium, are regularly mounted outside of this area. These grounding rings are connected with the already-mentioned potential equalization, so that the potential of the flowing medium is at the reference potential, usually the ground potential. In the case of industrial use of a magnetically inductive flowmeter, frequently high currents appear between the grounding rings and the potential equalization, in particular because of inductive couplings. The grounding rings have to have high chemical resistance and therefore result in correspondingly high costs in the case of greater nominal widths of the rings. The cost of the grounding rings in this case actually can amount to as much as the entire cost of the rest of the components of the magnetically inductive flowmeter. In addition, identical materials should always be used for the measuring electrodes and the grounding rings, since otherwise there can be electrochemical reactions, which greatly impair measurement of the flow rate. Finally, the grounding rings also create a problem since using them results in additionally possible leakage points.
In order to keep down the use of materials which is connected with potential equalization measures, it is also known from the prior art that at least one grounding electrode can be used instead of grounding rings. These grounding electrodes are used in the area of the insulated measuring tube, similar to measuring electrodes. In this case, the grounding electrodes can be made relatively easily from the same material of which the measuring electrodes are also made, so that, as a result, no electrochemical reactions appear between the measuring electrodes and the grounding electrodes. However, at least one additional possible leakage point also appears here. In the case of potential differences between the flowing media and the potential equalization, high electric currents through which the grounding electrodes dissolve in an electrolytic process, can also arise here, so that a leak would appear in the measuring tube.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Thus, the object of the invention is to provide a magnetically inductive flowmeter for flowing media, which imposes clearly lower demands on the measures for producing a reference potential.
The previously derived and indicated object is solved in accordance with the invention in the case of the initially described magnetically inductive flowmeter, in which a reference electrode is present, by means of the fact that the reference potential connection of the difference amplifier is connected only with the reference electrode and the reference electrode is connected only with the reference potential connection of the difference amplifier, and that the difference amplifier is not connected with a potential equalization. In the case of the magnetic inductive flowmeter described initially, in which a reference electrode is not present, the basic object is solved by means of the fact that the reference potential connection of the difference amplifier is connected only with at least one measuring electrode and that the difference amplifier is not connected with a potential equalization. In both cases, it can be a matter of a potential equalization which is usually at ground potential.
The measures in accordance with the invention ensure that the difference amplifier operates as a reference potential as compared with the potential of the flowing medium, but the potential of the flowing medium does not necessarily because of a connection with a potential equalization have to be at a general reference potential, in particular the ground potential. Thus, on the one hand, it is assured that the difference amplifier, provided that it is designed sufficiently voltage-resistant, can operate cleanly, without high common mode voltages, and, on the other hand, it is assured that no high currents have to be shunted off between the flowing medium and the potential equalization which is, e.g., at ground potential. Potential fluctuations of the flowing medium which appear are not shunted off in the case of the design in accordance with the invention, but made available to the difference amplifier as a reference potential via its reference potential connection, so that the latter can amplify the potentials applied to its measuring electrode connections relative to one another and at a definite distance from the potential of the flowing medium.
In the case of the embodiment of the magnetically inductive flowmeter in accordance with the invention, in the case of which a—special—reference electrode is not present, preferably the reference potential connection of the difference amplifier is connected with both measur
Brockhaus Helmut
Florin Wilhelm
Hoogendijk Christiaan Johan
Cesari and McKenna LLP
Krohne Messtechnik GmbH & Co. KG
Patel Harshad
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