METER FLOW CONDITIONER
A fluid conditioner for a fluid traveling through a conduit, the conduit having a longitudinal axis and substantially circular cross-section. The fluid conditioner includes a static mixing element and a straightener plate. The plate is affixed to a substantially rectangular member located downstream of the static mixing element and oriented substantially perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis of the conduit, the plate substantially covering the cross-section of the conduit having a plurality of openings to facilitate the passage of the fluid within the conduit.
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The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/495,406 filed on Jul. 27, 2006.
TECHNICAL FIELD OF INVENTIONThe present invention involves a fluid conditioner for use in a conduit carrying liquids or gases. The present fluid conditioner is ideally suited for use upstream of a flow meter to increase accurate flow rate readings.
The present invention relates generally to a material distribution mixing apparatus acting as a flow conditioner for fluid traveling through a conduit. The present invention has particular applicability in its employment in conjunction with a flow meter being able to improve fluid flow in a pipeline to provide a swirl-free fluid condition for a flow meter to improve accuracy.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONFluid flow meters have been employed in a wide variety of environments and applications. In addition, a plethora of technologies have been implemented in creating appropriate flow meters for every possible fluid measurement including differential pressure flow meters including, for example, flow nozzles, orifice plates, venturi tubes and variable area rotameters. Flow nozzles are most often used in industrial applications to measure air and gas flows and are available in a number of sizes and materials. There are calorimetric flow meters which are based upon two temperature sensors that are in close contact with a fluid. There are coriolis flow meters that use the coriolis effect to measure the amount of mass that moves through an element and ultrasonic Doppler flow meters that determine if a fluid moves towards a transducer or away from it to measure the frequency differences. Turbine flow meters are strategically placed in a conduit and the fluid passing over the turbine and thus moving the turbine in angular rotation does so in response to fluid flow.
With virtually all of these technologies, it can only be as accurate as the particular flow characteristics of an incoming fluid stream. Turbulence, in its numerous forms, causes these meters to have inaccurate readings. Knowing that turbulence is induced by upstream disturbances caused by such things as pipe elbows, valves, restrictions, diameter reductions and the like suffer inaccuracy as a consequence.
Inaccuracies in fluid flow imposed by the physical environment surrounding the fluid can be adjusted by the use of a meter factor which is used to correct the unique installation creating the inaccuracy. It has been suggested that a flow straightener plate or tube bundle which segregates the internal fluid flow within a conduit to approach the meter in parallel streams would be beneficial. This method imparts a backpressure to the fluid flow which reduces its velocity profile and eliminates swirl. However, this does not totally eliminate the velocity profile. In addition, this technique requires fifteen pipe diameters of straight pipe run upstream of the correction plate and a minimum of eight diameters of straight pipe run downstream prior to the meter.
It has also been suggested to use a baffled flow straightener which temporarily increases the turbulence of the fluid and then releases the result to a pipe upstream of the meter. It has been found that this method is inconsistent at best and does not adequately prepare the flow for a uniform approach to the meter. In addition, this technique requires ten pipe diameters of straight pipe run upstream of the plate and a minimum of five diameters of straight pipe run downstream prior to the meter.
The requirement for accurate flow measurements is becoming more and more acute. For example, flow meters are employed to measure the volume of petroleum crude discharged from a tanker or alternative storage vessel. As crude prices exceeds $70 a barrel, flow meters which even have the slightest degree of inaccuracy can result in mismeasurements costing many dollars in losses.
It is thus the object of the present invention to provide a flow conditioner which can be employed upstream of a fluid flow meter to eliminate substantially the fluid's velocity profile and to segregate the flow into parallel streams, thus optimizing repeatability and minimizing the meter factor.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a flow conditioner upstream of a fluid meter requiring no pipe diameters upstream of the device to provide repeatable and accurate meter readings.
These and other objects will become more readily apparent when considering the following disclosure and dependent claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is directed to a fluid flow conditioner for a fluid traveling through a conduit, the conduit having a longitudinal axis and substantially circular cross-section. The fluid flow conditioner comprises a static mixing element positioned upstream of a plate that substantially covers the cross section of the conduit and is provided with plurality of openings to facilitate the passage of fluid within the conduit.
The present invention is directed to a flow conditioner in the form of a static mixer and straightener plate positioned upstream of a flow meter whose accuracy is improved thereby. Any number of static mixers can be employed in the practice of the present invention. As a means of describing this invention and as disclosing its preferred embodiment, the static mixer shown in detail in
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The size and positioning of openings 31 within plate 30 is a matter of broad discretion. Generally, such openings vary between approximately 0.375 to 0.675 inches and, again, their size and positioning is predicated upon anticipated viscosity and volumetric flow rates passing through conduits 22 and 27. The openings are of a size and density to substantially eliminate any fluid profile resulting in the fluid being distributed evenly across the conduit.
To summarize, flow conditioner 10 completely eliminates the velocity profile of fluid flowing within the conduit as well as segregating the resulting flow into parallel streams, thus optimizing repeatability and minimizing the meter factor. The proposed solution requires zero pipe diameters upstream of the present device and only 3 pipe diameters downstream to the meter. Again, this solution isolates the meter from any upstream disturbances, thus optimizing repeatability. Tests have shown the standard deviation of meter factors across a range of flows is reduced by 77 percent compared to using only the flow straightener plates of prior art.
Claims
1. A flow conditioner for a fluid traveling through a conduit, said conduit having a longitudinal axis and substantially circular cross-section, said fluid conditioner comprising a static mixer element and plate, said static mixer element positioned upstream of said plate, wherein said plate is substantially circular and substantially perpendicular to said longitudinal axis, and substantially covering the cross-section of said conduit and having a plurality of openings to facilitate the passage of said fluid within said conduit, said openings being of a size and density to substantially eliminate any fluid profile resulting in said fluid being distributed evenly across said conduit, and further comprising a fluid flow meter, said fluid flow meter receiving and discharging fluid flowing within said conduit having been acted upon by said flow conditioner.
2. A flow conditioner for a fluid traveling through a conduit, said conduit having a longitudinal axis, circular cross-section and straight run downstream of a flow disturbance feature, said flow conditioner comprising a static mixer element and plate, said static mixer element positioned upstream of said plate wherein said plate is substantially circular and substantially perpendicular to said longitudinal axis and substantially covering the cross-section of said conduit and having a plurality of openings to facilitate the passage of said fluid within said conduit, said openings being of a size and density to substantially eliminate any fluid profile resulting in said fluid being distributed evenly across said conduit, and further comprising a fluid flow meter, said fluid flow meter receiving and discharging fluid flowing within said conduit having been acted upon by said flow conditioner, said static mixer element and plate being positioned within said straight run and, in combination, reducing the distance between said plate and flow disturbance feature upstream of said straight run and reducing the distance between said plate and said fluid flow meter as compared to a flow conditioner devoid of said combination.
3. The flow conditioner of claim 2 wherein said flow disturbance feature comprises an elbow in said conduit.
4. The flow conditioner of claim 2 wherein said flow disturbance feature comprises a valve.
5. The flow conditioner of claim 2 wherein said flow conditioner is located within zero pipe diameters of said flow disturbance in at approximately three pipe diameters of said meter.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 19, 2012
Publication Date: Jul 26, 2012
Applicant: Komax Systems, Inc. (Huntington Beach, CA)
Inventor: Robert Smith (Seal Beach, CA)
Application Number: 13/424,281
International Classification: B01F 5/06 (20060101); B01F 15/02 (20060101);