Noninvasive ultrasound measurement of temperature distribution in refractories of coal and biomass gasifiers

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Title Noninvasive ultrasound measurement of temperature distribution in refractories of coal and biomass gasifiers
Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Engineering
Department Chemical Engineering
Author Jia, Yunlu
Date 2015-08
Description A gasifier's temperature is the primary characteristic that must be monitored to ensure its performance and the longevity of its refractory. One of the key technological challenges impacting the reliability and economics of coal and biomass gasification is the lack of temperature sensors that are capable of providing accurate, reliable, and long-life performance in an extreme gasification environment. This research has proposed, demonstrated, and validated a novel approach that uses a noninvasive ultrasound method that provides real-time temperature distribution monitoring across the refractory, especially the hot face temperature of the refractory. The essential idea of the ultrasound measurements of segmental temperature distribution is to use an ultrasound propagation waveguide across a refractory that has been engineered to contain multiple internal partial reflectors at known locations. When an ultrasound excitation pulse is introduced on the cold side of the refractory, it will be partially reflected from each scatterer in the US propagation path in the refractory wall and returned to the receiver as a train of partial echoes. The temperature in the corresponding segment can be determined based on recorded ultrasonic waveform and experimentally defined relationship between the speed of sound and temperature. The ultrasound measurement method offers a powerful solution to provide continuous real-time temperature monitoring for the occasions that conventional thermal, optical, and other sensors are infeasible, such as the impossibility of insertion of temperature sensors, harsh environment, unavailable optical path, and more. Our developed ultrasound system consists of an ultrasound engineered waveguide, ultrasound transducer/receiver, and data acquisition, logging, interpretation, and online display system, which is simple to install on the existing units with minimal modification on the gasifier or to use with new units. This system has been successfully tested with a 100 kW pilot-scale downflow oxyfuel combustor, capturing in real-time temperature changes during all relevant combustion process changes. The ultrasound measurements have excellent agreement with thermocouple measurements, and appear to be more sensitive to temperature changes before the thermocouples response, which is believed to be the first demonstration of ultrasound measurements segmental temperature distribution across refractories.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Gasifier; Noninvasive; Refractory; Temperature Distribution; Ultrasound
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Yunlu Jia 2015
Format application/pdf
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 27,496 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/3853
ARK ark:/87278/s64b68mv
Setname ir_etd
ID 197404
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s64b68mv
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