Progress Towards a Gas-Flow Standard using Microwave and Acoustic Resonances.
Flow Meas Instrum
; 692019.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32116415
We describe our progress in developing a novel gas flow standard that utilizes 1) microwave resonances to measure the volume, and 2) acoustic resonances to measure the average gas density of a collection tank / pressure vessel. The collection tank is a 1.85 m3, nearly-spherical, steel vessel used at pressures up to 7 MPa. Previously, using the cavity's microwave resonance frequencies, we determined the cavity's pressure- and temperature-dependent volume V BBB with the expanded uncertainty of 0.022 % (coverage factor k = 2, corresponding to 95 % confidence level). This was the first step in developing a pressure, volume, speed of sound, and time (PVwt) primary standard. In the present work, when the shell was filled with argon, measurements of pressure and acoustic resonance frequencies determined the "acoustic mass" M acst that agreed with gravimetric measurements within 0.04 %, even when temperature gradients were present. Most of these differences were a linear function of pressure; therefore, they can be reduced by further research. We designed and implemented a novel positive feedback system to measure the acoustic resonance frequencies. Using the measurements of V BBB, pressure, and acoustic resonance frequencies of the enclosed gas (nitrogen or argon), we calibrated 3 critical flow venturis that NIST has used as working standards for over 10 years. The two independent flow calibrations agreed within the long-term reproducibility of each CFV, which is less than 0.053 %. Furthermore, the feasibility of a dynamic tracking technique using this feedback loop was tested by comparing ΔM acst computed under no-flow conditions and ΔM acst computed by the rate of fall or rise during a flow. This was done for flows ranging from 0.11 g/s to 3.9 g/s.
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2019
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Article