实时润滑油分析预测设备故障

O. Alabi, Robert J. Wilson, Urenna V. Adegbotolu, Surakat Kudehinbu, S. Bowden
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引用次数: 2

摘要

旋转和往复设备的油液状态监测通常是基于实验室的。技术人员或工程师收集润滑油样本,并将其送到实验室进行化学分析。在实验室进行分析后,结果被发送给工程师,以对机器的健康和/或状况做出决定。这个过程可能需要长达6周的时间,因此,分析可能最终只会每季度执行一次,而关键故障被先发制人的可能性很小。在实验室中进行的油品状态监测分析速度缓慢,这使得工程师们转而采用振动分析和热成像等实时监测方法。然而,润滑油的化学成分仍然是诊断机器健康的金标准。实时分析润滑油化学成分方法的自动化将为工程师提供有关特定机械部件的即时状况的数据,从而允许早期诊断早期故障。在本文中,我们提出了一种微流体技术,可以实时连续监测旋转和往复式设备润滑液的化学成分。该技术在实验室和现场环境中的结果与传统的实验室测量结果相当。微流体技术利用流体在微米尺寸通道内的流动,允许液-液扩散分离,否则可混溶的非水流体。结果表明,甲醇、己烷等几种流体可以选择性地提取润滑油中的目标组分。提取后,这些成分可以使用光学技术组合进行量化,例如紫外/可见,红外等。该微流控技术已被证明适用于多种含酸、碱性洗涤剂、沥青质/不溶性成分的润滑油。这项技术可能会彻底改变油品分析的方式,实现自动化,使分析过程快速实时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Realtime Lubricating Oil Analysis to Predict Equipment Failure
Oil condition monitoring for rotating and reciprocating equipment has typically been laboratory based. A technician or engineer collects a sample of lubricating oil and sends this to a laboratory for chemical analysis. After the laboratory has performed the analysis the results are sent to the engineer to make decisions on the health and/or condition of the machinery. This process can take up to 6 weeks, and consequently analysis may end up being performed only quarterly with little likelihood of critical failures being pre-empted. The slowness of oil condition monitoring analyses performed in laboratories has led engineers to substitute for real-time monitoring methods such as vibration analysis and thermography. Nevertheless, the chemical composition of the lubricating oil remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of machine health. The automation of methods for analysing the chemical composition of lubricating oil in real-time would provide engineers with data on the immediate condition of a particular piece of machinery, allowing the early diagnosis of incipient faults. In this paper, we present a microfluidic technique that can perform real-time continuous monitoring of the chemical composition of lubricating fluid from rotating and reciprocating equipment. Results from this technique both in laboratory and field environments are comparable to conventional laboratory measurements. The microfluidic technique exploits the flow of fluids within micrometre-dimensioned channel, permitting liquid-liquid diffusive separation between otherwise miscible non-aqueous fluids. It can be shown that several fluids e.g. methanol, hexane etc. can selectively extract target components in lubricating oil. Following an extraction, these components can be quantified using a combination of optical techniques, e.g. UV/Vis, Infrared etc. This microfluidic technique has been demonstrated for a range of lubricating oils with several acid, alkaline detergent, asphaltene/insoluble content. This technology can potentially revolutionise the way oil analysis is carried out, automating and making the process rapid and in real-time.
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