Using typical smart or conventional products all of the following must be considered:
|
|
| 1. |
The specific gravity of the process; |
| 2. |
Precise location of 0% and 100%; |
| 3. |
Specific gravity of the capillary fill fluid or sealing liquid (for impulse tubing); |
| 4. |
Vertical height of capillary or impulse piping; |
| 5. |
Exact orientation of the transmitter to the vessel; |
| 6. |
Vertical distance between the flanges. |
Depending on the application, the vessel may be open (referencing atmosphere), or closed (under some blanket pressure).
Elevation is typically used when the vessel is closed. To
reference blanket pressures, a low side wet leg or remote seal
must be used. The low side pressure creates a negative force
on the transmitter equal to the vertical height times the specific
gravity of the fill fluid.
Suppression is positive pressure created on the high side of the transmitter typically due to a zero point above the transmitter. It is normally employed in an open vessel referencing atmosphere. This is a positive pressure equal to the vertical distance between the 0% point and the transmitter times the specific gravity of the liquid.
Elevation/suppression distance almost never agrees with the P&ID because actual piping (or remote seal capillaries) do not form exacting angles in the field. In most cases, the precise vertical height is not known until the unit is installed.
Span is the vertical distance of the process times the specific gravity: Figure 1. 10.5 * 0.9 = 9.45 mH
2O (31.5 inH
2O).
Calibration range is the calculated 0 and 100% taking into consideration positive and negative pressures. In figure 1, the following applies:
0% = H - L
(4.5 x 0.8) - (15 x 0.8)
3.6 - 12 = -8.4 mH
2O (-28 inH
2O)
100% = H - L
(4.5 x 0.8) + (10.5 x 0.9) - (15 x 0.8)
3.6 + 9.45 - 12 = 1.05 mH
2O (3.5 inH
2O)
The calibration range is:
-8.4 to 1.05 mH
2O (-28 to 3.5 inH
2O)
The information required to perform the calculation is not readily available. It exists in vendors instruction manuals, P&ID's, but not until the unit is actually installed will all the variables be known because the process piping and capillaries do not form exacting angles in the field.