Sélection de la langue

Search

Sommaire du brevet 1218876 

Énoncé de désistement de responsabilité concernant l'information provenant de tiers

Une partie des informations de ce site Web a été fournie par des sources externes. Le gouvernement du Canada n'assume aucune responsabilité concernant la précision, l'actualité ou la fiabilité des informations fournies par les sources externes. Les utilisateurs qui désirent employer cette information devraient consulter directement la source des informations. Le contenu fourni par les sources externes n'est pas assujetti aux exigences sur les langues officielles, la protection des renseignements personnels et l'accessibilité.

Disponibilité de l'Abrégé et des Revendications

L'apparition de différences dans le texte et l'image des Revendications et de l'Abrégé dépend du moment auquel le document est publié. Les textes des Revendications et de l'Abrégé sont affichés :

  • lorsque la demande peut être examinée par le public;
  • lorsque le brevet est émis (délivrance).
(12) Brevet: (11) CA 1218876
(21) Numéro de la demande: 458118
(54) Titre français: SYSTEME D'ECHANTILLONNAGE POUR ORGANES DE CONTROLE DE LA QUALITE DE L'EAU
(54) Titre anglais: SAMPLING SYSTEM FOR WATER QUALITY SENSORS
Statut: Périmé
Données bibliographiques
(52) Classification canadienne des brevets (CCB):
  • 73/103
(51) Classification internationale des brevets (CIB):
  • G01N 1/16 (2006.01)
(72) Inventeurs :
  • NAKAHORI, ICHIRO (Japon)
  • OZAWA, JUNICHIRO (Japon)
  • YAMAUCHI, SHIRO (Japon)
  • MAEDA, MITSUO (Japon)
  • NAKAYAMA, SHIGEKI (Japon)
(73) Titulaires :
  • MITSUBISHI DENKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA (Japon)
(71) Demandeurs :
(74) Agent: RICHES, MCKENZIE & HERBERT LLP
(74) Co-agent:
(45) Délivré: 1987-03-10
(22) Date de dépôt: 1984-07-04
Licence disponible: S.O.
(25) Langue des documents déposés: Anglais

Traité de coopération en matière de brevets (PCT): Non

(30) Données de priorité de la demande: S.O.

Abrégés

Abrégé anglais





ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE

A samplying system for use in the analysis of
water samples using quality sensors includes a device for
intermittently supplying cleaning water containing ozone to
the sensors, valves, pumps and related piping for cleaning
the same.

Revendications

Note : Les revendications sont présentées dans la langue officielle dans laquelle elles ont été soumises.


The embodiments of the invention in which an
exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined
as follows:

1. In a sample system including means for directing
water samples to at least one water quality sensor for
analysis, the improvement comprising:
means for supplying ozone-containing cleaning
water to areas of said system which come into contact with
said water samples,
said samples being taken at more than one sampl-
ing point and being sequentially directed to a plurality
of said sensors, and
said sample system further including sampling
pump means proximate each said sampling point, and cleaning
pump means for directing said cleaning water through said
areas.





Description

Note : Les descriptions sont présentées dans la langue officielle dans laquelle elles ont été soumises.


EYE
-- 1 --
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a sampling system
for use with water quality sensors used for monitoring
the quality of water being treated in water purification
or sewage treatment plants.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig. 1 is a schematic representation of the
- conventional sampling system;
Fig. 2 shows a sampling system for a water
quality sensor according to one embodiment of the present
invention;
Fig. 3 shows one embodiment of the intermittent
ozone generator used in the sampling system of Fig. 2; and
Figs. 4 to 6 show other embodiments of the sample

in system of the present invention.
A sampling system for use with water quality sensors is currently used in water purification or sewage
treatment plants because 1) it facilitates the maintenance
and management of the sensors, 2) the construction of the
sensors requires it, and 3) great economy is realized by
measuring the quality of water at many points using a
single sensor. An example of a conventional sampling
system is shown in Fig. 1, wherein the numeral 1 indicates
a sampling port, 2 is a sampling pump, 3 is a sensor, 7 is
a cleaning water tank, 6 and 7 are both automatic pipe
cleaner elements, 8 is a sampling pump motor control
center, and 9 and 10 are each drain pits. The automatic


1218B76
-- 2 --

1 pipe cleaner 6 consists of a pipe cleaning ball supplier

pa, cleaning control valves 6b, 6c and Ed, and a cleaning
control panel ye, whereas the cleaner 7 consists of a ball
collector pa and cleaning control valves 7b and 7c.
Water sampled at port 1 with pump 2 is directed to sensor
3 through valve Boyle collector pa and valve 6b, and is
thereafter discharged into pit 10. In this sampling
mode, cleaning valves 6c, Ed and 7b are closed. In a
pipe cleaning mode, sampling pump 2 is first stopped and
cleaning pump 5 is actuated. At the sample time, cleaning

valves, 6c and 7b are opened, and the cleaning water in
tank 4 is directed through pump 5, valve -6c, ball supplier
pa, ball collector pa and valve 7b and is discharged
into pit 9. In this cleaning mode, pipe cleaning balls
are delivered from supplier pa and as they are carried

along by the cleaning water traveling to ball collector
pa, the balls clean the intermediate piping. Valve pa
controls the flow of the cleaning water and directs any
returning flow to- pit 10. The sequence of the above
steps is controlled by control panel ye and control

center 8.
The conventional sampling system has the follow-
in defects: lo the balls must be supplied and collected
manually; 2) cleaning with the balls is possible only when
the piping has smooth inner walls, and 3) the balls cannot
pass through the sensor, valves and the piping around it,




'
- . ; .

12~8876
-- 3

1 the sampling pump or sampling port, so these areas cannot
be cleaned with the balls. For these reasons, much labor
is needed in cleaning operations and frequent periodical
cleaning is necessary.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Therefore, one object of the present invention
is to provide a device for keeping the sampling system and
water quality sensors clean over an extended period.
Another object of the invention is to provide
a device that causes ozone-containing sterilizing water
to flow continuously or intermittently through the sampling
system not only to prevent the deposition of
contaminants (e.g. algae, organic matter and sludge) on
various parts of the system but also-to clean off any
contaminant.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

One embodiment of the sampling system according
to the present invention is shown in Fig. 2, wherein the
numeral lo represents a sampling port A, lb is a sampling
port B, pa and 2b are sampling pumps, 3 is a sensor, 4 is
- a submerged sensor, 5 is a water receiving tank, 6 is a




-

12~876

--4--




drain pipe connected to the water receiving tank, 7 is a
cleaning water tank, 8 is a cleaning pump, and 9 is an
automatic sampling system cleaner. At 10 is shown is an
intermittent ozone generator whose construction is shown in
Fig. 3, ha and fib are cleaning water drain valves, 12 is
a sampling pump motor center, and 13 is a drain pit.
The automatic sampling system cleaner 9 includes
an ejector pa for injecting ozone into water used for
flushing the system, an ejector pump 9b, cleaning control
valves 9c, Ed, ye and 9g, and a cleaning control panel of.
One embodiment of the intermittent ozone generator
10 is shown in Fig. 3, wherein aye indicates an ozonizer,
10b is a column filled with silica gel for adsorbing ozone,
10c is an oxygen circulating blower, eye and 10d are circular

lion control valves, 10f is a refrigerator for the adsorbing
column, 10g is a tank fillet with hot brine used to resorb
ozone from the silica gel, 10h is a brine supply pump, 10i
is an ozone injection valve, and 14 is an oxygen container
from which oxygen is supplied to ozone generator 10.
Referring to Fig. 2, water sampled at sampling
port lo using the pump pa is directed through valves ha,
9c and Ed to sensor 3 and sensor 4 submerge* in the tank 5.
The water is then discharged into drain pit 13 through an
overflow mechanism in tank 5. Before sampling water at
port lb, the pump pa is stopped, valves ha and 9c are

1~18876



closed, and drain valve 6 is opened to discharge theater sampled at port lay Then, pump 2b is actuated and
valves fib and 9g are opened to sample water at port lb.
Sampling at port lo alternates with the sampling at port lb
in the manner described above. Throughout the sampling mode,
valve ye remains closed.
Let us assume that sampling at point B has been
completed and that pump 2b is stopped and valves fib and 9g
are closed. To start the cleaning mode, the sampling pump
pa is stopped and at the same time, valves 9c and ha are
closed Then, the cleaning pump 8 is actuated and valve ye
is opened. At this time, drain valve 6 remains closed.
Then, the intermittent ozone generator 10 and ejector pump go
are actuated, and ozone is injected from ejector pa into
the cleaning water in tank 7. Ozone-containing cleaning water
is then forced by pump 8 and sent toward sensor 3 and :
submerged sensor 4 through valve Ed to clean off any deposits
fouling the sensors. By opening drain valve 6, the inside
of tank 5 and valve 6 can also be cleaned.
Next, valves 9c and ha are opened whereas
valves Ed and 6 are closed. This causes the ozone-contain-
in water to pass through valves 9c and ha and be disk
charged into sampling port lo through pump pa. Then,
valves 9c and ha are closed and valves 9g and fib are
opened to supply the cleaning water through sampling port

~2~8876
--6--




lb through pump 2b. By this procedure, the sampling piping
and pumps pa and 2b are cleaned. After the cleaning
operation, valve ye is closed and pump 8, ejector pump 9b
and the intermittent ozone generator 10 are stopped. The
entire cleaning sequence is controlled by the control
panel of end control center 12.
Referring to Fig. 3, the operation of the inter-
mitten ozone generator 10 will now be described. Oxygen
from container 14 is oceanside in ozonizer aye by silent
discharge and is forced into the adsorbing column 10b by
circulation blower 10c through valve 10d. In the adsorbing
column, ozone is selectively adsorbed by the silica gel.
To increase the efficiency of adsorption, the adsorption :
column is cooled with the refrigerator 10f. Oxygen that has
not been adsorbed on the silica gel is forced by the blower
10c and directed to the ozonizer through valve eye. The
ozonizer is continuously operated and the ozone produced
gradually builds up in the adsorbing column. The adsorbed
ozone can be resorbed by forcing hot brine from brine tank
10g into the adsorbing column 10b by means of pump 10h, with
valves eye and 10d being closed and the adsorbing column
evacuated by ejector pa. The resorbed ozone is ejected
into water to form ozone-containing water to be again used as
cleaning water.
The intermittent ozone generator used in the

lZ11~76
--7--




embodiment of Fig. 2 may be replaced by an ordinary ozone
generator to effect the present invention in a simpler form
which is illustrated in Fig. 4. In the embodiment of Fig. 4,
ozone produced by ozone generator 10 is directly fed to
the cleaning water tank 7 where it is introduced into the
water to form ozone-containing cleaning water. The operation
of this ozone generator is substantially the same as that
of the generator shown in Fig. 3.
The present invention is very effective for use
in the case where water is sampled at two or more points,
and different types of sensors are used. The desired areas
can be cleaned successively with a single cleaning system,
as shown in Fig. 5. The embodiment of Fig. 5 relates to the
case where sampling at many points of a single body of water
It is carried out, but the same principle applies to the case
where sampling is performed on a plurality of such bodies.
Fig. 5 includes a cleaning sampling control panel
of capable of controlling sampling at spots lay lb and to,
a panel of instruments 16 for analyzing the quality of the
sampled water based on the data from sensors pa, 3b and 3c,
a data selection panel 17 for keying the data from the
sensors with the sampling spots, and a telemetering station
18 for recording the obtained data or sending it to a remote
station. The embodiment of Fig. 5 relates to the sequential
control of two or more sampling systems, and the principle

~2~876



of controlling one specific sampling system is the same as
that described in connection with Fig. 2.
In another embodiment of the present invention,
a plurality of sampling pumps can be integrated into one
pump which also serves as a cleaning pump, such as simplified
system being shown in Fig. 6, which includes a sampling/
cleaning pump 8. In a cleaning mode, cleaning water from
tank 7 is directed to sensor 4 through valves ye and Ed,
with valves 9c and oh closed. The water cleans sensor 4, as
well as water receiving tank 5 and drain valve 6 in the manner
describe din connection with Fig. 2. Subsequently, valve Ed
is closed and valve oh is opened to flush the cleaning water
through valves oh and ha, or fib or tic to clean the
sampling piping as well as these valves.
The present invention provides an effective device
preventing the buildup of foul matter in a water quality
sampling system which also cleans off any foul buildup
automatically. The device enables very simple cleaning of
the sampling system and sensors, which has conventionally
involved much labor and has been considered a very dirty
job. Through the cleaning of sensors and associated piping
and valves, the invention contributes greatly to the main-
tenancy and management of the sensors, and hence the precise
control of various factors (e.g. chemical dosing, MUSS and
DO the water of being treated in water purification and
sewage treatment plants.


Dessin représentatif

Désolé, le dessin représentatatif concernant le document de brevet no 1218876 est introuvable.

États administratifs

Pour une meilleure compréhension de l'état de la demande ou brevet qui figure sur cette page, la rubrique Mise en garde , et les descriptions de Brevet , États administratifs , Taxes périodiques et Historique des paiements devraient être consultées.

États administratifs

Titre Date
Date de délivrance prévu 1987-03-10
(22) Dépôt 1984-07-04
(45) Délivré 1987-03-10
Expiré 2004-07-04

Historique d'abandonnement

Il n'y a pas d'historique d'abandonnement

Historique des paiements

Type de taxes Anniversaire Échéance Montant payé Date payée
Le dépôt d'une demande de brevet 0,00 $ 1984-07-04
Titulaires au dossier

Les titulaires actuels et antérieures au dossier sont affichés en ordre alphabétique.

Titulaires actuels au dossier
MITSUBISHI DENKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA
Titulaires antérieures au dossier
S.O.
Les propriétaires antérieurs qui ne figurent pas dans la liste des « Propriétaires au dossier » apparaîtront dans d'autres documents au dossier.
Documents

Pour visionner les fichiers sélectionnés, entrer le code reCAPTCHA :



Pour visualiser une image, cliquer sur un lien dans la colonne description du document. Pour télécharger l'image (les images), cliquer l'une ou plusieurs cases à cocher dans la première colonne et ensuite cliquer sur le bouton "Télécharger sélection en format PDF (archive Zip)" ou le bouton "Télécharger sélection (en un fichier PDF fusionné)".

Liste des documents de brevet publiés et non publiés sur la BDBC .

Si vous avez des difficultés à accéder au contenu, veuillez communiquer avec le Centre de services à la clientèle au 1-866-997-1936, ou envoyer un courriel au Centre de service à la clientèle de l'OPIC.


Description du
Document 
Date
(yyyy-mm-dd) 
Nombre de pages   Taille de l'image (Ko) 
Dessins 1993-08-04 6 122
Revendications 1993-08-04 1 19
Abrégé 1993-08-04 1 9
Page couverture 1993-08-04 1 14
Description 1993-08-04 8 277