A new ultrasonic technique for the measurement of liquid level |
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Authors: | A.B. Gillespie M.O. Deighton R.B. Pike R.D. Watkins |
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Affiliation: | Instrumentation and Applied Physics Division, AERE Harwell, Oxfordshire, OX11 0RA, UK |
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Abstract: | A new design of pulse-echo ultrasonic liquid level gauge is described in which the ultrasonic pulse (here a Rayleigh or a Lamb wave) travels down a metal bar or strip towards the liquid surface, where, through a double mode-conversion process and a special reflecting structure, a strong echo is generated which travels back up the bar to the receiving transducer.The geometry of the special reflecting structure is outlined, and it is shown how this affects the basic accuracy of measurement. Inaccuracies arising from other effects like temperature variation, viscosity and poor signal-to-noise ratio are also discussed. Some mechanical variants, like using the wall of the tank in place of the metal bar carrying the ultrasonic wave and the use of corner reflectors as part of the reflecting structure, are also considered.A note in the Appendix briefly describes one method which has been used successfully for the generation of Rayleigh and Lamb waves. |
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Keywords: | ultrasonics level measurement surface waves |
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