DocumentCode
1539438
Title
An absolute charge sensor of fluid electrification measurements
Author
Morin, A.J., II ; Zahn, M. ; Melcher, J.R. ; Otten, D.M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
26
Issue
2
fYear
1991
fDate
4/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
181
Lastpage
199
Abstract
A new instrument, the Absolute Charge Sensor (ACS), has been developed that measures the net charge density entrained in a fluid flow, independent of the fluid´s electrical properties, velocity, and any electrification processes within the instrument. Through a shielded sampling probe, the ACS periodically transfers a small volume of charged fluid to an electrically isolated Faraday cage with no fluid exiting. The charge density is calculated from the known filling flow rate and either the current or voltage, respectively measured by low or high impedance electrometers connected to the electrically isolated Faraday cage. The ACS overcomes the ambiguity in current or voltage measurements of probes placed into the fluid flow where it is impossible to separate contributions from impacting charge in the flow from charge separated at the probe interface by the very charge generation and transport processes that are under study. The instrument is typically operated to measure charge densities as low as a few μC /m3 using a sampling flow rate of 0.18 cm3 with a sampling period on the order of 1 min. A Couette charger apparatus that simulates flow electrification processes in transformers and fuel pumps has been used to test the ACS using transformer oil or gasoline. Result show good correlation between the ACS and continuous flow measurements
Keywords
charge measurement; electric sensing devices; electrometers; flow measurement; insulating oils; insulation testing; 1 min; Couette charger apparatus; absolute charge sensor; current measurement; electrically isolated Faraday cage; electrometers; filling flow rate; fluid electrification measurements; fluid flow; fuel pumps; gasoline; net charge density; sampling period; shielded sampling probe; transformer oil; transformers; voltage measurements; Charge measurement; Current measurement; Density measurement; Electric variables measurement; Fluid flow; Fluid flow measurement; Instruments; Probes; Sampling methods; Voltage measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9367
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/14.78316
Filename
78316
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