Microparticle detection system
US-9581069-B2 · Feb 28, 2017 · US
US9719907B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9719907-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414911095-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 7, 2014 |
| Priority date | Aug 21, 2013 |
| Publication date | Aug 1, 2017 |
| Grant date | Aug 1, 2017 |
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A particulate detection system ( 1 ) for detecting the quantity of particulates S in a gas under measurement EG, including a detection section ( 10 ), a drive circuit ( 210, 240 ), and a control section ( 230, 202 ). The detection section ( 10 ) has an ion source ( 11 ) and a particulate electrification section ( 12 ). The drive circuit ( 210 ) includes an ion source drive circuit ( 210 ) for performing constant current control. The control section ( 230, 202 ) includes current convergence determination means S 2 -S 3 , S 5 -S 6 , and detection start means S 8 for starting detection of the quantity of the particulates S using the signal Is, detected by a detection circuit ( 230 ), after the gaseous discharge current Id has converged to an allowable range IR.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A particulate detection system for detecting the quantity of particulates contained in a gas under measurement flowing through a gas flow pipe, comprising: a detection section attached to the gas flow pipe; a drive circuit for driving the detection section; and a control section for controlling the drive circuit and detecting the quantity of the particulates, wherein the detection section includes an ion source for generating ions by means of gaseous discharge, and a particulate electrification section for mixing a portion of the gas under measurement with the ions to thereby produce electrified particulates which originate from the particulates within the gas under measurement and which carry the ions adhering thereto; the drive circuit includes an ion source drive circuit for performing constant current control such that the gaseous discharge current supplied to the ion source becomes equal to a predetermined target current; and the control section includes a detection circuit for detecting a signal corresponding to the quantity of the electrified particulates, current convergence determination means for determining whether or not the gaseous discharge current supplied from the ion source drive circuit has converged to a predetermined allowable range including the target current after operation of the ion source by the ion source drive circuit had been started, and detection start means for starting detection of the quantity of the particulates through use of the signal after the gaseous discharge current has converged to the allowable range. 2. A particulate detection system according to claim 1 , wherein the detection section includes a heater for heating the ion source; the drive circuit includes a heater energization circuit for energizing the heater; and the control section includes heater energization control means for causing the heater energization circuit to energize the heater until the gaseous discharge current converges to the allowable range. 3. A particulate detection system according to claim 2 , wherein the heater energization control means includes heater energization start means for causing the heater energization circuit to start the energization of the heater when the gaseous discharge current does not converge to the allowable range within a predetermined period of time after the operation of the ion source has been started. 4. A particulate detection system according to claim 2 , wherein the detection section includes a collection electrode for collecting floating ions which are a portion of the ions and which failed to adhere to the particulates when the ions was mixed with the gas under measurement, and an auxiliary electrode for assisting the collection of the floating ions by the collection electrode; the drive circuit includes an auxiliary electrode drive circuit for driving the auxiliary electrode; and the heater is configured to heat the auxiliary electrode in addition to the ion source.
in gas, e.g. smoke · CPC title
using electric, e.g. electrostatic methods or magnetic methods (by investigating individual particles G01N15/1031, G01N15/12) · CPC title
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