Ultrasonic flowmeter for flowing media

Measuring and testing – Volume or rate of flow – By measuring vibrations or acoustic energy

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C073S866500

Reexamination Certificate

active

06584862

ABSTRACT:

The invention relates to an ultrasonic flowmeter for flowing media, that operates according to the transit time method, with a measuring tube and at least one transmitting receiving head, in connection with which the transmitting and/or receiving head has a housing and an ultrasonic transducer by which ultrasonic signals can be emitted into the flowing medium and ultrasonic signals can be received from the flowing medium.
In industrial flow measuring of flowing media, i.e. of flowing liquids or flowing gases, the use of ultrasonic flowmeters has been gaining importance in recent times. In this connection, it is particularly advantageous, as is also the case with magnetic-inductive flowmeters, for the flow measuring to be able to take place in such a way that nothing needs to be inserted into the flow, such that the flow is not disturbed by the measurement.
In the case of ultrasonic flowmeters, as regards the measuring process a distinction is made above all between the transit time method, on the one hand, and the Doppler method, on the other hand. In this connection, the precision achievable with the transit time method is considerably greater than with the Doppler method. For this reason, ultrasonic flowmeters are preferably used that operate according to the transit time method, namely in particular according to the transit time difference method.
The transit time of an ultrasonic signal along the measuring path from the ultrasonic transducer emitting ultrasonic signals to the ultrasonic transducer receiving the ultrasonic signals in a liquid results from the acoustic velocity in the liquid or in the gas carried along in the liquid/gas as well as from the flow rate of the liquid and/or the gas carried along. The concerned principle of ultrasonic flow measuring according to the transit time method is derived from this. In the transit time difference method, ultrasonic signals are alternately or simultaneously transmitted upstream and downstream in the liquid and/or in the gas. Due to the different propagation rates, with the same length measuring path upstream and, respectively, downstream, the signals reach the ultrasonic transducers operating as receivers at different transit times. In this connection, the transit time difference of the two sound waves is directly proportional to the flow rate of the flowing medium.
For an ultrasonic flowmeter of a flowing medium, a measuring tube carrying the flowing medium and at least one ultrasonic transducer, preferably two ultrasonic transducers arranged staggered in the flow direction, and a control and evaluation circuit for determining the transit time of the ultrasonic signals are required. In addition, the control and evaluation circuit can calculate the flow rate, the flow volume and other parameters of the flowing medium from the transit time.
However, in ultrasonic flow measuring of a flowing medium there is not only the transfer, i.e. the emitting and receiving of ultrasonic signals that have run through the flowing medium, but also of ultrasonic signals that make their way beyond the measuring tube from the ultrasonic transducer emitting ultrasonic signals to the ultrasonic transducer receiving ultrasonic signals. This leads to a disturbance signal that considerably hinders the ultrasonic flow measurement under certain circumstances. The ultrasonic signal transferred beyond the measuring tube is particularly disruptive in particular because it is at least partially a coherent signal that cannot be treated as normal noise during the suppression.
To solve this problem, various suggestions have been made in the past to avoid the transfer of ultrasonic signals from the transmitting ultrasonic transducer to the receiving ultrasonic transducer beyond the measuring tube. In this connection, for example, it has been proposed to isolate the oscillating ultrasonic transducer from the measuring tube as much as possible in terms of vibration by means of rubber seals or similar devices for example. Similar approaches consisted in filling the space in which the ultrasonic transducer is arranged as far as possible with a damping material such as wax, rubber or plastic. In this respect, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,410,825, 4,945,276 and 5,515,733 are referred to as examples.
Consequently, the invention is based on the technical problem of developing the known ultrasonic flowmeters in such a way that disturbances of ultrasonic flow measurement on a flowing medium due to ultrasonic signals transferred beyond the measuring tube are largely avoided.
The technical position deduced and described in the foregoing is solved according to the invention in that a damping device with at least one damping element is arranged around the sides of the housing of the transmitting and/or receiving head and at least partly adjacent to it, and the damping device is provided in a recess of the measuring tube.
According to the invention, the housing of the transmitting and/or receiving head in which the oscillating ultrasonic transducer is arranged is thus not directly connected with the measuring tube, but rather by means of a damping device, in such a way that the ultrasonic signals are fed into the measuring tube only through the damping device. The transition from the housing into the damping device, which is indeed connected mechanically with the housing but is not designed in one piece with it according to the invention, leads to a considerable reduction of the ultrasonic signal when it goes through the boundary surface between the housing and the damping device. In addition, signal coherence is also considerably reduced due to the dispersion of the sound at the boundary surface.
The inside of the measuring tube can already be sufficiently sealed off from the surroundings by the contact of the housing with the damping element as well as by the contact of the damping element with the measuring tube. If greater demands are made on the tightness of the ultrasonic flowmeter, however, the ultrasonic flowmeter according to the invention is preferably further developed by providing a seal between the housing and the damping device, on the one hand, and between the damping device and the measuring tube, on the other hand.
The housing can be inserted or slid into the damping device, for example, by having a recess designed in the damping device in conical shape corresponding to the outside of the housing. The housing preferably has an external screw thread and the damping device an internal screw thread, however, in such a way that the housing can be screwed with its external thread into the internal thread of the damping device. This enables the damping device to be particularly firmly seated in the housing, with the screwing having an additional sealing effect. In addition, the boundary surface between the housing and the damping device is substantially enlarged by the screwing, which has a positive effect on the damping of the ultrasonic signal penetrating the boundary surface and helps to reduce its coherence.
The size of the boundary surface through which the ultrasonic signals must pass in order to make their way from the ultrasonic transducer into the measuring tube can be further increased by the damping device having several damping elements nested into each other and at least partially contiguous. In this way, the ultrasonic signal must penetrate several consecutive boundary layers on its way from the ultrasonic transducer in order to arrive in the measuring tube.
The damping elements themselves can be sealing, if they are firmly inserted or screwed into each other, for example. However, a seal is preferably attached between each of the damping elements.
The measuring tube, the housing and the damping device with the damping elements can be made of numerous materials that only need to meet the requirements of a corresponding pressure resistance and a chemical resistance to the flowing medium. However, the measuring tube, the housing and at least one damping element preferably consist of a metal, preferably special steel.
Contiguous components, i.e. the measuring t

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