FLUID FLOW TECHNOLOGY THAT MEASURES UP
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY/MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
ORIGINATING TECHNOLOGY/ NASA CONTRIBUTION
From 1994 to 1996, NASA’s Marshall Space Flight
Center conducted a Center Director’s Discretionary
Fund research effort to apply artificial
intelligence technologies to the health management
of plant equipment and space propulsion systems.
Through this effort, NASA established a business
relationship with Quality Monitoring and Control
(QMC), of Kingwood, Texas, to provide hardware
modeling and artificial intelligence tools. Very
detailed and accurate Space Shuttle Main Engine
(SSME) analysis and algorithms were jointly created,
which identified several missing, critical instrumentation
needs for adequately evaluating the engine health
status. One of the missing instruments was a liquid
oxygen (LOX) flow measurement. This instrument
was missing since the original SSME included a
LOX turbine flow meter that failed during a ground
test, resulting in considerable damage for NASA.
New balanced flow meter technology addresses this
need with robust, safe, and accurate flow metering
hardware.
Marshall and QMC engineers performed extensive
modeling and analysis of the SSME system, and determined
that the existing instrumentation was not sufficient
to fully evaluate the SSME health status primarily
relating to turbine blade failures. With existing
instruments, the best system models have approximately
2.5-percent error and actual data show that very
significant hardware failures produce an efficiency
change of less than 1 percent, which is within
the error band, making many failures impossible
to detect. The need for a direct LOX measurement
with less than 1-percent error was clear, but the
way to do it was not, since the SSME hardware and
environmental requirements are extreme. To meet
the SSME LOX flow need, the group required a meter
that would operate in different fluid physical
states; accommodate wide variations in temperature,
pressure, vibration, and flow conditions; measure
flow with less than 1-percent error; and provide
a mechanically robust system with low probability
of failure. In addition to these strict requirements, other desired features included operation
in different fluid mediums (liquid hydrogen, liquid
oxygen, kerosene, etc.); operation in any gravity
environment; simplified, long-lasting meter calibration;
minimal intrusion into the flow path; and the ability
to measure, condition, or limit flow within the
same design.
With all of these requirements in mind, the balanced
flow meter technology was conceived, created, and
tested through the Marshall Technology Investment
Projects program. The combination of unique hardware
design and unique algorithms met all of the objectives
in laboratory experimentation. Testing to harsher
environments, in different fluids, and in bi-phase
situations is continuing.
PARTNERSHIP
Based upon its work with NASA, QMC founded A+FlowTek,
also of Kingwood, Texas, to commercialize the balanced
flow meter technology. Together, A+FlowTek
and NASA patented the Balanced Flow Meter, with
the company receiving exclusive licensing rights.
PRODUCT OUTCOME
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| 7.5-inch Kerosene Rocket Engine Flow Plate with an 81-percent open area. |
The Balanced Flow Meter determines the fluid flow
rate in piping, channel, and conduit systems. It
provides highly accurate flow metering, flow limiting,
or flow conditioning in any fluid flow system.
As a flow meter, the technology provides flow measurement
with minimal intrusion into the flow path and requires
no moving parts. Additionally, this technology
is LOX-safe and the hardware is robust enough for
consideration as an engine LOX flow meter. As a
flow limiting device, the technology can simulate
facility and engine fluid flow loads. The technology’s
sizing is more accurate than the currently used
orifice plate technology, and it takes much less
space and cost compared to Venturi flow technology.
Finally, as a flow conditioning device, the balanced
flow technology may improve engine performance
by conditioning fluid flow profiles around elbows,
combustion chambers, and pump inlets.
Fluid flow measurements such as these are used
extensively in the processing industries for refineries
and chemical, power, and pharmaceutical plants.
Chevron and Sloss Industries are among the companies
already using the Balanced Flow Meter technology
in their industrial plants with good results.
The Balanced Flow Meter’s applications to NASA’s
liquid propulsion systems and test facilities are
numerous. Possible near-term NASA applications
include using the technology as a flow limit device
to simulate the engine loads during Stennis Space
Center facility verifications. Once the concept
is proven in the appropriate environments, there
could be thousands of NASA applications for this
promising technology.