gilden
Chemical
- Jul 10, 2003
- 18
We have a level measurement problem that seems trivial but until now no valuable solution has been found. We need to measure the level in a small glass reactor (jacketed) of 20 L (diam. 20 cm, height 70cm). The reactor has filterplate at the bottom. Solvent (DMF) is pumped in the reactor at the top by means of a distribution ring with tiny holes, all directed towards the reactorwall. At the same time liquid is drained from the bottom by means of a 2nd positive displacement pump. The level is to be kept constant by controlling the speed of the pumps by means of a level probe. The medium to measure is a polystyrene swollen in DMF. Differential pressure measurement does not work (the depression created by the pump disturbs the measurement). Capacitance measurement does not work since the medium is not conductive enough. Radar and guided radar level measurement have the disadvantage that dead zones are present at the top (and the bottom), which is inconvenient in such a small reactor, and that the liquid droplets passing the radarwaves might also disturb the measurement. Does somebody know another technique that could work in this application? I am personally thinking about a float level sensor, but I do not know whether such small floats exist and I am not sure whether the float itself will not get stuck by the swollen polystyrene beads (getting in between the float and the guide tube. Does somebody have experience with such systems? Please keep in mind the dimensions of the reactor.