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13 - Magnetic Resonance Flowmeters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2016

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Summary

Introduction and Some Early References

In the first edition of this handbook, I mentioned that flowmeters depending on magnetic resonance (MR) had been suggested, but that I was not aware of an instrument on the market. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR now, apparently preferably referred to as MR) essentially marks the fluid and measures transit times (Genthe 1974; King and Rollwitz 1983). Gol'dgammer, Terent'ev and Zalaliev (1990) showed that the magnetic resonance signal amplitude of a gas-liquid mixture in diamagnetic fluids depended on the liquid content regardless of the physicochemical properties of the medium and conditions of flow. This linearity was destroyed if paramagnetic centres were added to the fluid. De Jager, Hemminga and Sonneveld (1978) described their experimental data from water flow velocity measurements in the range of 0.5 to 5 mm/s by means of nuclear magnetic resonance using a sequence of inhomogeneous 180° pulses and a gradient in the stationary magnetic field. MR had been used in liquid-gas flows to measure the mean velocity of the liquid averaged over the liquid volume and also the average of the liquid fraction (Kruger, Birke and Weiss 1996). The combination provided the mass flow of the liquid. In tests using water as the liquid, the authors claimed to determine the mass flow to within ±5%.

Scott (1982), in “Developments in Flow Measurement–1”, comments that “Sensing of the flow relies on the application initially of a magnetic field to the nuclei of hydrogen or fluorine in the flow and the subsequent (downstream) removal of this influence. The nuclei enter the magnetic section with their individual magnetic orientations completely random and leave with their nuclear orientations aligned in the direction of the magnetic field. In the detector section which follows they approach a tagger coil and then a receiver coil. The former injects a short high intensity burst of radio frequency waves into the meter. This demagnetises a ‘window’ in the magnetised fluid and the window is discerned by the detector coil as a momentary drop in output signal. A knowledge of the distance between the tagger and the receiver, coupled with a time-of-flight measurement between them leads to the mean flow velocity.” The reader is referred to Scott's book for early references to this technique.

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Flow Measurement Handbook
Industrial Designs, Operating Principles, Performance, and Applications
, pp. 408 - 418
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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