Title: Flame sensor
Abstract: A UV flame sensor is formed on a multilayer printed circuit board. The circuitry of the sensor includes a photodiode for detecting an input signal, an amplifier for amplifying the input signal, a FET for providing automatic gain control, and at least one capacitor for providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier. The capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in the PCB. Furthermore, the PCB is designed so that there are guard bands disposed on each layer of the PCB at identical positions, and tracks of equal potential disposed in identical locations on the interior layers of the PCB. These guard bands and tracks are identically shaped. A method of producing the flame sensor is also described.
Patent Number: 7,019,306 Issued on 03/28/2006 to Stebbings
| Inventors:
|
Stebbings; Keith R. (Bradford, NH)
|
| Assignee:
|
Ametek, Inc. (Paoli, PA)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
611384 |
| Filed:
|
July 1, 2003 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
250/372 |
| Current Intern'l Class: |
G08B 17/12 (20060101) |
| Field of Search: |
250/372,554
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 3689773 | Sep., 1972 | Wheeler.
| |
| 5264708 | Nov., 1993 | Hijikata.
| |
| 5995261 | Nov., 1999 | Asous.
| |
| 6013919 | Jan., 2000 | Schneider et al.
| |
| 2002/0154592 | Oct., 2002 | Tanaka et al.
| |
| Foreign Patent Documents |
| 0 558 766 | Sep., 1992 | EP.
| |
| 0 588 766 | Sep., 1992 | EP.
| |
| 0 942 232 | Mar., 1999 | EP.
| |
Primary Examiner: Porta; David
Assistant Examiner: Taningco; Marcus
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Hayes Soloway P.C.
Parent Case Text
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This Application is related to co-pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application
entitled "Flame Sensor" filed on Dec. 9, 2002 and accorded the Ser. No. 60/431,819,
which is entirely incorporated herein by reference.
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A UV flame sensor comprising electronic circuitry formed on a multi-layer
Printed Circuit Board (PCB), said electronic circuitry including:
a photodiode detecting an input signal;
an amplifier amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal;
a transistor providing automatic gain control; and
at least one capacitor providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier;
wherein said capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in said PCB,
and said flame sensor further comprises at least one guard band on each layer of
the PCB, wherein said guard bands are disposed at substantially identical positions
in each said layer of the PCB.
2. The UV flame sensor of claim 1, wherein the sensor is adapted to operate at
temperatures of up to 125° C.
3. The UV flame sensor of claim 1, wherein the PCB has at least one interior layer.
4. A UV flame sensor comprising electronic circuitry formed on a multi-layer
Printed Circuit Board (PCB), said electronic circuitry including;
a photodiode detecting an input signal;
at least one capacitor providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier; and
wherein said capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in said PCB,
and said flame sensor further comprises at least one guard band on each layer of
the PCB, wherein said guard bands are disposed at substantially identical positions
in each said layer of the PCB.
5. The UV flame sensor of claim 1, further comprising a low pass filter.
6. The UV flame sensor of claim 1, wherein the guard bands on each said layer
of the PCB are substantially identically shaped.
7. The UV flame sensor of claim 4, wherein the tracks on each said layer of the
PCB are substantially identically shaped.
8. The UV flame sensor of claim 1, wherein said sensor has a response time of
less than 25 milliseconds.
9. A UV flame sensor comprising:
a housing; and
electronic circuitry formed on a multi-layer PCB and disposed within said housing;
wherein said circuitry includes:
a photodiode detecting an input signal through said lensing;
an amplifier amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal;
a transistor providing automatic gain control; and
wherein said capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in said PCB,
and the PCB has at least one interior layer, and said flame sensor further comprises
tracks of equal potential disposed at substantially identical locations on each
of the interior layers of the PCB.
10. The UV flame sensor of claim 9, wherein the sensor is adapted to operate
at temperatures of up to 125° C.
11. The UV flame sensor of claim 9, wherein the PCB has at least one interior layer.
12. A UV flame sensor comprising:
a housing; and
electronic circuitry formed on a multi-layer PCB and disposed within said housing;
wherein said circuitry includes:
a photodiode detecting an input signal through said lensing;
an amplifier amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal;
a transistor providing automatic gain control; and
at least one capacitor providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier; and
an amplifier amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal;
a transistor providing automatic gain control; and
at least one capacitor providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier;
wherein said capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in said PCB,
said flame sensor wherein the PCB has at least one interior layer, and said flame
sensor further comprises tracks of equal potential disposed at substantially identical
locations on each of the interior layers of the PCB.
13. A UV flame sensor comprising:
a housing; and
electronic circuitry formed on a multi-layer PCB and disposed within said housing;
wherein said circuitry includes:
a photodiode detecting an input signal through said lensing;
an amplifier amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal;
a transistor providing automatic gain control; and
at least one capacitor providing stability to the output signal of the amplifier; and
wherein said capacitor is formed from a capacitance laminate buried in said PCB,
and said flame sensor further comprises at least one guard band on each layer of
the PCB, wherein the guard bands on each said layer of the PCB are substantially
identically shaped.
14. The UV flame sensor of claim 12, wherein the tracks on each layer of the
PCB are substantially identically shaped.
15. The UV flame sensor of claim 9, further comprising a low pass filter.
16. The UV flame sensor of claim 9, wherein the sensor has a response speed of
less than 25 milliseconds.
17. A method for producing a UV flame sensor, said method comprising:
fabricating a PCB with at least three layers, at least one of said layers being
an interior layer, and said layers having guard bands, ground planes, and tracks;
placing the guard bands in identical positions on each said layer of the PCB;
mimicking tracks of equal potential on the interior layers of the PCB;
burying a capacitance laminate on the interior layers of the PCB;
disposing on said PCB a photo diode for detecting an input signal, an amplifier
for amplifying said input signal and providing an output signal, and a transistor
providing automatic gain control; and
using the capacitance laminate buried on the interior layers of said PCB to form
at least one capacitor so as to provide stability to the output signal of the amplifier.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is generally related to a device and method for detecting flames.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Most fire detection technology for detecting the presence of a flame of burning
hydrocarbon fuel focuses on detecting heat, smoke (particle matter) or flame (light),
i.e., the three major characteristics of fire. All of these characteristics also
have benign sources other than fire, such as heat from steam pipes, particle matter
from aerosols, and light from the sun. Other factors further confound the process
of fire detection by masking the characteristic of interest, such as air temperature,
and air movement. In addition, smoke and heat from fires can dissipate too rapidly
or accumulate too slowly for effective detection. In contrast, because flame sensors
are optical devices, they can respond to flames in less than a second.
In an exemplary application, the flame of burning hydrocarbon fuel is the augmentor
flame (afterburner pilot flame) in a gas turbine engine, the loss of which requires
an automatic engine control to prevent fuel flow to the afterburner; otherwise,
dangerous fuel levels can accumulate within seconds of the turbine engine losing
its ignition flame. Failure can result in an overpressure condition leading to
engine damage. In this scenario, an optical flame sensor is adapted to transmit
a flameout condition, which quickly alerts the engine control system to make critical
adjustments, e.g., adjusting fuel flow to prevent a potentially catastrophic situation.
Optical flame sensors can detect infrared (IR), Ultraviolet (UV), or a combination
of UV and IR radiation. A UV flame sensor typically detects radiation emitted in
the 200 to 400 nm range. Optical sensing devices incorporating a UV detector to
sense the presence of the augmentor flame in gas turbine engines sense UV radiation
emitted from the augmentor flame against the background of hot metal, in a high
temperature environment and under heavy vibration.
Disadvantages of UV flame sensors known in the art include the presence
of leakage currents and/or parasitic capacitances for a necessary feedback capacitance
in the pre-amplifier stage coupled with an inability to survive high temperature
operating conditions. For example, not all capacitors that feature a low dissipation
factor are rated for high temperature environments. Also, high temperatures can
cause preamplifier input offset errors. Moreover, many UV flame sensors suffer
from an insufficient sensitivity to low levels of UV light, due to losses at various
components, e.g., the Printed Circuit Board (PCB), feedback capacitor, and amplifier inputs.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a UV flame sensor that receives optical energy
within the UV spectrum and outputs an analog signal proportionate to the intensity
of the optical energy detected, permits operability in high-temperature environments
(125° C. and higher), and is sensitive to low levels of UV light.
By way of example, a flame sensor consistent with the present invention comprises
a housing with associated lensing, electronic circuitry, and an electrical connector.
In one embodiment, a flame sensor consistent with the present invention employs
a buried capacitance laminate within the PCB to achieve the lowest possible leakage
current losses for a necessary feedback capacitance in the pre-amplifier stage.
A flame sensor consistent with the present invention employs a PCB routing having
carefully-placed tracks, guard bands and ground planes to reduce parasitic capacitance
and leakage currents. If desired, a FET may be employed in the pre-amplifier stage
for automatic gain control for high signal levels.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a functional block diagram depicting an exemplary detector board and
output board consistent with the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a schematic illustrating of an exemplary detector board consistent
with the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a schematic illustrating an alternative embodiment of a detector board
consistent with the present invention;
FIG. 4 illustrates an exemplary PCB layout of the detector board of FIG. 3;
FIG. 5 is another illustration of the exemplary PCB layout of the detector board
of FIG. 3;
FIG. 6 is a wiring diagram illustrating the top layer of the exemplary multilayer
PCB corresponding to the layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 7 is a wiring diagram illustrating the second layer of the exemplary multilayer
PCB corresponding to the layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 8 is a wiring diagram illustrating the third layer of the exemplary multilayer
PCB corresponding to the layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 9 is a wiring diagram illustrating the bottom layer of the exemplary multilayer
PCB corresponding to the layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 10 is a layout diagram illustrating the layout of the photodiode on the
bottom of the detector board in the exemplary multilayer PCB corresponding to the
layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 11 is an exemplary design specification for the detector board in the exemplary
multilayer PCB corresponding to the layout of FIG. 5;
FIG. 12 is a schematic illustrating an exemplary output board assembly consistent
with the present invention;
FIG. 13 is an exemplary PCB layout of the output board assembly of FIG. 12; and
FIGS. 14-17 are exemplary views of a flame sensor assembly consistent with
the invention, including housing, circuitry, and electrical connector.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
With reference now to FIGS. 1 and 2, in one embodiment, a flame sensor consistent
with the present invention comprises a housing with associated lensing, electronic
circuitry, and an electrical connector. The electronic circuitry comprises two
PCBs: a detector board and an output board.
The detector board employs a photodiode
1 to detect the presence of light
within the UV spectrum and convert such optical energy into an analog signal proportionate
to the intensity of the optical energy detected. As shown in FIG. 2, the photodiode
is connected to both a virtual ground and the inverting input of operational amplifier
2.
Amplifier
2 both amplifies the signal received by the photodiode
and changes the current signal output of the photodiode into a voltage signal.
The output of the amplifier
2 is connected to the devices that provide the
automatic gain control
3, capacitors
20,
21, and
22,
which stabilize the signal output from the amplifier
2, and resistor
34
and capacitor
23, which form a low pass filter
4 to reduce the occurrence
of noise in the signal output by the detector board.
The automatic gain control devices
3 form a feedback loop from the amplifier
2 output to the amplifier
2 input, and include a transistor
40,
and resistors
30,
31,
32 and
33. When transistor
40
is on, the circuit provides the highest amount of possible gain to the signal from
photodiode
1. Likewise, when the transistor is off, the lowest amount of
gain to this signal is provided.
Capacitors
20,
21, and
22 provide stability to the
signal output of amplifier
2. These capacitors are formed from a buried
capacitance laminate positioned on the inner layers of a multilayer PCB, e.g.,
as shown in FIGS. 7 and 8, and together with the placement of guard bands on each
of the layers, allow the PCB to achieve the lowest possible leakage current losses
for a necessary feedback capacitance in the Pre-Amplifier stage of the circuit,
e.g., as shown in FIG. 2. Primarily, these embedded capacitors allow a flame sensor
consistent with the instant invention to operate at temperatures for which other
types of capacitors with low dissipation factor are not rated.
The layout of the PCB in the instant invention provides several advantages, namely,
with respect to the placement of the guard bands
100, the ground planes
101, and the tracks
102. The guard bands are placed in identical
positions on each of the layers, and tracks of equal potential are exactly mimicked
on the inner layers of the PCB. Thus, the placement of these elements with respect
to the various layers, shown in FIGS. 6,
7,
8, and
9, allows
the PCB to minimize any leakage current and to insure that negligible amounts of
additional capacitance are introduced into the circuitry.
FIGS. 1,
12, and
13 illustrate an exemplary output board.
FIGS. 3,
4, and
5 illustrate other exemplary embodiments of the
detector board circuit and layout, and allow for the addition of the elements marked
with an asterisk to additionally aid in compensating for any output errors in the circuit.
The exemplary embodiments described above and illustrated in the Figures allow
for performance enhancements not found in the prior art. First, the sensor can
operate in temperatures as high as 125 degrees Celsius, and is highly sensitive
to low levels of UV. While high heat may cause a change in the output of the op-amp,
the selection of a low offset op-amp, compensation networks at the input of the
op-amp, and the control of the PCB layout to reduce differentials between op amp-inputs,
effectively diminishes any reduced circuit performance due to heat. Further, high
sensitivity in the circuit is effectuated via the placement of the guard bands
and ground planes and the use of buried capacitance.
Furthermore, by using laminate capacitors, recognizing the desire to
achieve the smallest RC time constant possible while still maintaining device stability,
and using great care in the layout to minimize stray capacitive losses, improved
response speed to a change in flame status can be achieved. The response speed
of a flame sensor is an important factor in the detection of the lean blowout oscillatory
behavior of a flame. Lean blowout behavior is defined as the point in which the
ratio of the amount of air supplied to the amount of fuel supplied is so large
that a self-sustaining combustion process can no longer continue. When lean blowout
behavior exists, a certain oscillatory signature of the flame can be detected.
The detection of the signature could prevent flashback, which can be harmful to
combustion equipment.
FIGS. 14-17 are exemplary views of a flame sensor assembly consistent with
the invention, including housing
102, circuitry
104, and electrical
connector
100.
Although the present invention has been set forth in terms of the embodiments
described herein, it is to be understood that such disclosure is purely illustrative
and is not to be interpreted as limiting. Consequently, without departing from
the spirit and scope of the invention, various alterations, modifications, and/or
alternative applications of the invention will, no doubt, be suggested to those
skilled in the art after having read the preceding disclosure. Accordingly, it
is intended that the present invention be interpreted as encompassing all alterations,
modifications, or alternative applications as fall within the true spirit and scope
of the invention.
*