Technology Takes Magmeters from Four to Two - Control Engineering Asia

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Technology Takes Magmeters from Four to Two

Enabling the operational benefits of two-wire magnetic flow meters while maintaining the performance levels associated with traditional four-wire devices. Rivai Tirtasudira explains how.

The two-wire instrument offers greatly reduced power
Compared to the traditional four-wire magnetic flow meter, the
two-wire instrument offers greatly reduced power consumption and
significant savings in operational cost.

Magnetic flow meters are used to measure the flow rate of conductive fluids. The magmeter (as it is often called) gets its name from the magnetic field generated within the flow tube that produces a signal proportional to the flow. This principal employs Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction: as a conductive liquid flows through the flow tube, an electromotiveforce is generated, which is proportional to the flow velocity.

A magmeter can be used for many flow applications in various industries. Some of the advantages of the magmeter are: Minimal pressure loss and easy maintenance because of no obstruction or moving part in the flow tube; Suitable for corrosive fluid due to awide range of wetted parts materials.

The traditional four-wire magmeter can achieve high accuracy and fast response by means of a dedicated power supply cable that is separate from the signal cable used for current output. It requires power, sometimes as much as 30 W, to generate themagnetic field.

The two-wire magmeter was introduced more than a decade ago with the objective of reducing the total cost of ownership. It uses just a pair of wires for current output and power supply. With direct connection to the DCS module, it significantly reduces wiring and lower installation cost by an amount in the region of US $1,000-1,600 per 100 m of cable length per unit.

As well as the power consumption of the two-wire device being only one to four percent of the four-wire magmeter, which significantly reduces operational cost, wiring footprints are reduced and opportunities are opened up to connect to more digital devices for collection of data from smart sensors. In other words, more devices can be connected in the plant to providevaluable process information.

Dual frequency excitation requires power reduction
Although superior (noise immunity, accuracy, stability) to the AC
and pulsed DC excitation methods, dual frequency excitation
requires power reduction and software optimization to overcome
the higher power consumption itentails.

Although the benefits of using a two-wire magmeter surpass those of a four-wire, the two-wire devices have had issues with meeting the process automation sector's minimum performance requirements in areas such as measurement accuracy and stability,and as such, have not been well accepted in the marketplace.

The need for significant power to excite the coil regardless of the flow rate also makes the reading of the traditional two-wire magmeter unstable, especially in slurry or low conductivity liquid. In the past, effort has been made to store the power to improve it but users experienced slow responses in batch application whenusing lower frequency excitation to conserve power.

Key technologies

As many companies now need to reduce their instrumentation costs, flow meter suppliers such as Yokogawa are being called upon to develop higher performance two-wire devices. The company's ADMAG AXR magnetic flow meter uses technologies that are capable of minimizing electric noise to a level comparable to that of four-wire type, thereby achieving the necessary highmeasurement accuracy and stability.

Noise reduction

The main contributors to noise are: Slurry noise – the solidscontained in the slurry fluid hit on the surface of the electrodes contained in the slurry fluid hit on the surface of the electrodesand generate the noise; Flow noise – the friction between the lowfluid and electrode surface generate the noise; Noise generatedby the conductivity change.

Valuable noise reduction can be achieved 
Valuable noise reduction
can be achieved via a mirror
finished lining (that reduces the
flow turbulence) plus a noise
cancellation electrode system.

Theoretically, noise level decrease with higher frequency, so called 1/f characteristics. This means the flow noise level can be decreased and S/N ratio can be improved, by applying a high excitation frequency.

With dual frequency excitation method, a magnetic field is generated (excitation) by supplying a current with high and low frequency components through the flow meter coil. Having the advantages of low frequency excitation (stability) and high frequency excitation (noise resistance), this method offers greater accuracy and stability than the single frequency excitation method and addresses disadvantages of AC (high power consumption) and pulsed DC (slow response time) excitation methods.

The drawback of dual frequency excitation method is it conducts high-speed CPU processing to execute complex algorithms, thus increasing the power consumption. Though this may not pose much difficulty in the four-wire magmeter, it is a challenge for the two-wire device.

But through drastic power reduction and software optimization, the use of dual excitation frequency has enabled the next generation of two-wire magmeters to deliver high flow noise immunity, accuracy and stability under flow condition changes, and to be applied to control loop applications.

Further noise reduction can be achieved by smooth finishing of the flow meter internal circumference lining. Ordinarily, the rough surface lining generates additional flow turbulences causing the flow noise to become bigger. A mirror finished lining improve the smoothness and therefore reduces the flow noise. Additionally, a noise cancellation electrode system with a larger and special treated surface area will minimize the flow noise.

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