1 / 22

An Overview of Process Instrumentation

An Overview of Process Instrumentation. CM4110 Unit Operations Lab October 2009. Outline. The Evolution of Process Instrumentation Choosing the Right Instrument Temperature Pressure Flow Level. Background: Important Discoveries. 1592 – 1 st thermometer

bao
Download Presentation

An Overview of Process Instrumentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Overview of Process Instrumentation CM4110 Unit Operations Lab October 2009

  2. Outline • The Evolution of Process Instrumentation • Choosing the Right Instrument • Temperature • Pressure • Flow • Level

  3. Background:Important Discoveries • 1592 – 1st thermometer • 1701 – first practical thermometer • late 1700’s – temperature is not a fluid! • 1821 – thermocouple effect • 1880 – first controller • 1885 – effect of temperature on conductivity • late 1800’s – metals have different thermal expansion effect Fisher Type 1 pump controller, 1880

  4. Background:Several Early Technologies Optical Pyrometer – Color used to measure high Temp Bi-metallic Temperature measurement – connection to dial is similar to pressure gage Bourdon tube for Pressure or Temp measurement

  5. Background:Beginning of Industrial Revolution to 1920’s • Temperature readings by a Thermometer or colorimetric method or Bimetallic Device • Pressure by Bourdon Tube gages • Level by Sight Glass • dP by Manometer • Pen Chart Recorders

  6. Background:Need for Signal Transmission Arises 1930’s • Transmitters used to convert sensing device signal to pneumatic signal • Feedback controllers invented • Improvements in valve design • Valves fitted with pneumatic actuators Foxboro Flow Controller w/ 24-hr. Chart Recorder

  7. Background:1960’s - Need Greater X-mission Distance • Control rooms w/ centralized control panels are common • Most process signals can be converted to low-level electric by transmitter • 4-20 mA current loop becomes standard for analog instruments

  8. Background:More Recent Developments Industry recognized weaknesses of 4-20 mA devices • need continuous re-zero and re-range • transmits PV as a linearly scaled value only • Digital Instrumentation-1988 • Self-Calibration, Transmits PV in EU, Self-Diagnostics • Networked Instrumentation-1998 • Bus systems for process instrumentation • Wireless Transmitters-2004 • Self-Organizing Networks

  9. Selecting the Right Instrument • What variable do I want to measure? • What accuracy and precision are required? • What are the process conditions? • How should the measured variable be displayed? • Does the measured variable have to be used by another device?

  10. Local Temperature Measurement • Glass stem Thermometer • low cost, long life • local readout, difficult to read, no transmitter • -200 to 600ºF, 0.1ºF accuracy • Bi-metallic Thermometer • low cost • -80 to 800ºF, 1ºF accuracy

  11. Local Temperature Measurement/ Control • Fluid-filled Thermal Elements • low cost, long life • -300 to 1000ºF, ±½% of full scale accuracy • low accuracy, great for some applications where tight control is not req’d • self-contained, self-powered control (can use fluid expansion to proportionally open control valve) • dial read-out for indication, can be remotely located

  12. Local or Remote Temperature Measurement • Thermocouples • low cost sensor • needs transmitter/readout • -440 to 5000ºF, typically 1 to 2ºF accuracy • wide temperature range for various types • rugged, but degrades over time • many modern transmitters can handle T/C or RTD

  13. Local or Remote Temperature Measurement • RTD’s • -300 to 1150ºF, 0.1ºF accuracy or better • more fragile, expensive than T/C • very stable over time • wide temperature range • also needs readout/transmitter

  14. Pressure Measurement • Pressure Transmitters • available in gage pressure, absolute pressure and differential pressure • typically ±0.075% range accuracy • 50:1 turndown • same transmitter and sensor body as in dP flow measurement and dP level

  15. Flow Measurement • Differential Pressure – Orifice Meter • well-characterized and predictable • causes permanent pressure (energy) loss in piping system, typically 8 ft. head loss (3 to 4 psi loss) • 5:1 rangeability • requires straight run of 20 pipe diameters upstream, 5 downstream • suitable for liquid, gas, and steam • accuracy is 1 to 2% of upper range

  16. Flow Measurement • Turbine Flow Meter • accuracy is ±0.25% of rate • good for clean liquids, gases • 5 to 10 pipe diameters upstream/downstream • 10:1 turndown • 3 to 5 psig pressure drop

  17. Flow Measurement • Magnetic Flow Meter (Mag Meter) • 0.4 to 40 ft/s, bidirectional • accurate to ±0.5% of rate • fluid must meet minimum electrical conductivity • head losses are insignificant • good for liquids and slurries • upstream/downstream piping does not effect reading • linear over a 10:1 turndown

  18. Flow Measurement • Vortex Flow Meter • suitable for liquids, steam, and gases • must meet min. velocity spec • 0.5 to 20 ft/sec range for liquid • 5 to 250 ft/sec for gases • non-clogging design • not suitable if cavitation is a problem • accuracy is ±½% of rate • up to 5 psig head loss • linear over flow ranges of 20:1

  19. Flow Measurement Coriolis Effect Mass Flow Meter • used for steam, liquids, gases • measure mass flow, density, temperature, volumetric flow • expensive, but 0.2% of rate accuracy • very stable over time • 100:1 turndown • negligible to up to 15 psig head loss

  20. Level Measurement • Non-Contacting – Radar Level • suitable for liquids and solids • foaming, turbulence, vessel walls and internals can effect signal if not installed correctly • can use “stilling leg” if turbulence is extreme • typically ±0.1 inch accuracy

  21. Level Measurement • Contacting – dP Level • suitable for liquids only • foaming and turbulence will effect signal • can use “stilling leg” if turbulence is extreme • typically ±0.05% range accuracy • 100:1 turndown • uses same dP transmitter as in dP flow measurement

  22. References Miller, Richard W., Flow Measurement Engineering Handbook, 3rd Ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 1996. Taylor Instrument Division, The Measurement of Process Variables, no date. www.emersonprocess.com/rosemount/, Rosemount, Inc., Oct. 2006. www.emersonprocess.com/micromotion/, Micro Motion, Inc., Oct. 2006. www.ametekusg.com/, Ametek, Inc. Oct. 2006.

More Related