Title: Continuous Thermal Monitoring
1 Continuous Thermal Monitoring
- EXERTHERM
-
- Mitigating risk for
- power critical organisations
- The
- Next Technology Step
-
2 Continuous Thermal Monitoring
Whats The Problem ?
- Bad joints, connections are not detected via
metering or load measurement - Best detection method is thermal
- Infrared inspection has become universally
accepted for detecting faults
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- Mission Critical High Downtime Cost
- Financial Services
- Telecommunications
- Data Centers
- Media
- Shipping
- Large scale manufacturing
- Utilities
- Petro/chemical
- Medical
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- Throughout all these diverse industries the
common denominator is - POWER
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- Hunting
- the
- Mighty Milliwatt
6 Continuous Thermal Monitoring
- What is a Mighty Milliwatt (MmW)?
- Small amounts of resistive energy losses
converted to heat from electrical circuit
elements in high power electrical systems,
usually at connections, manifested as temperature
rise above ambient. - 0.001 Watt in resitive energy lost by circuits
using kiloWatts to megaWatts of power, or less
than 0.0001 of the energy transmitted
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qhr x A x (T - TA) 1 x 1 x 1 .007
Btu/hr Ft2 144 Convert to Watts
.007 3.4 .002 Watts
2 Milliwatts
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- What Creates a Mighty Milliwatt ?
- P I2 x R Heat Dissipated as MmW
- Calculate R for 2MmW (1F Rise)
- For 100 Amp Cable
- P .002 I2R (100)2R
- R .002 .002 .0000002 ?
- (100)2 10,000
- 2_____
? -
10,000,000 - An OHM Meter Wont Work Too Well!!
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- What Can a Mighty Milliwatt Do?
Suppose the connection loosens with time and
oxidation to R I ? ? For 100 Amp
Circuit Power I2 R (100)2 (1) 10,000 w
10kw
Mighty MilliWatt turns into 10 kW, enough energy
to melt 1 ounce of copper in 0.6 seconds -gt
Catastrophic Failure
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When the Resistive Loss exceeds a threshold
value, the temperature increase causes rapid and
irreversible increase in R, triggering positive
feedback system that leads to Complete Failure of
the connection
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If the cause of the resistive loss is not
corrected at a safe threshold, there is a risk
that the runaway positive feed back will occur.
megawatts
kilowatts
watts
milliwatts
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How do we find Mighty MilliWatts?
- If the cause of the resistive loss is not
corrected at a safe threshold, there is a risk
that the runaway positive feed back will occur.
The radiation component is detectable by
infrared radiation methods of sufficient
sensitivity and reliability as temperature rise
above ambient.
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- Continuous monitoring is required
?T prop P prop I2 R
Temperature rise is very sensitive to load.
Factor of 3 in Load changes
?T by factor of 10
- Scheduled scans will not be at the peak load for
all locations. - Scheduled scans will not detect the moment of
truth. - Scheduled scans will not provide rate-of-change
data.
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- Requirements for Continuous Monitoring
- Small, reliable IR (non-contact) sensors
inherently measuring temperature rise above
ambient. - Variable FOV / distance from target
- Negligible metallic cross-section (non
conductive) - Self-powered
- Local signal conditioning outside of electrical
panels. - Wired or wireless data transmission to monitoring
computer. - Appropriate software / integration capability
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- Having examined the physics behind why
continuous thermal monitoring is required on
mission critical electrical equipment, defined
an outline specification of what is required,
lets now examine how we have evolved at this - Next Technology Step
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- Technology Step 1
- Non switch off periodic inspection
- The Joe Factor
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- Conventional
- Entails periodic switch off ( 3- 5yr) human
intervention, also commonly used the Joe
Factor. - Often effective, but unacceptable for mission
critical equipment in todays environment.
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- TECHNOLOGY STEP 2
- Infrared Thermal Imaging
- No switch off
- No human intervention
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- BUT not the Perfect solution.
- Periodic 1 or 2 days out of 365 reliant on a
large degree of luck - Need the problem to have developed to a point
where detectable, but not to point of failure. - Remaining safety issues when live scanning is
undertaken
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- Inspection is OUTSIDE the enclosure, thus not
actually inspecting the equipment. - Can only inspect equipment immediately adjacent
to the enclosure wall
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- Technology Step 3
- Thermal Windows
- Mesh/ screen or Crystal
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- They can significantly improve IR transmission
However..
- Mesh dissipates heat think fireguard
- Crystal varies but typically cuts 30
- Better the crystal more delicate, thus trade
off - Both need direct line of sight
- Still periodic not continuous
- Can add significant cost
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- Conclusion
- Thermal imaging was a huge technology step
forward, allowing more objective, recordable,
non-switch off inspection. - Thermal windows provided a further
technology step, improving the inspection
accuracy
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- Preventative v Predictive
- Preventative time based inspection or
maintenance - Predictive continuous, utilises trend analysis,
alarms to predict failure BEFORE the event
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- What other measures are carried out to
mitigate risks /costs of power failure - Over specification based on design load (often
50) - Dual redundancy
- UPS often more than 1
- Fire detection suppression
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- Technology Step 4
- The Infrared Thermocouple
FOV 11 31 housing
FOV 71 101 housing
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ExerTherm IR sensor, plastic body, threaded,
with 2 plastic lock nuts plastic bracket
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- Key Features
- Self powered Unique - no drift
- Plastic body non conductive
- Lifetime calibration No maintenance
- Measures rise above ambient or actual
- UL certification
- Major safety benefit
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- Lets spend a moment looking at
- SAFETY
- In the USA between 1992 gt 2002 there were
- 894 FATALITIES
- an average of 81 per year.
- Contact with transformers, wiring,
live electrical components - Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
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-
- Its a Dangerous place out there !
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- Figures relate to events in construction with
direct contact to transformers, breakers, live
terminations / cable etc. - Clearly not all relate to maintenance, but
there will be many of you looking at this who can
directly relate a fatality or serious accident to
live IR scanning / maintenance with protective
panels removed. -
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- Latest figures are better defined providing
breakdown between goods producing / service. The
latter accounted for -
- 2003 16 fatalities
- 2004 11
- 2005 22
- Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
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- The objective was to get INSIDE the panel, but
IR technology was not available thus live
scanning was implemented. - Now the IR technology is available the
removal of protective panels for live scanning is
no longer necessary. Costs can be cut, lives /
injuries saved, whilst the objective is achieved.
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Key Features
- MTBF 1k yr Ultra reliable
- Low cost Affordable technology
- Differing FOV Air gap compliance
- Infrared Non-contact does not
compromise design / safety - Suitable for HV, MV, LV
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Key Features
- Sensor provides non-linear mV output
- Data acquisition cards available which both
linearise and condition the signal - Making it suitable for noisy electrical
environments - Sensors enable a variety of predictive systems
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Software Integration
- Stand alone proprietary software
- Alarm relay to existing BMS
- Protocol conversion to virtually any protocol
- New data acquisition cards which provide output
protocol in Modbus, Profibus, BACnet, DeviceNET
utilise existing bus cable
38Continuous Thermal Monitoring
- Can be designed into new installations
- or
- Retro-fitted to existing installations at next
suitable shutdown
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- What is normally monitored ?
- Basically, what do you periodically thermally
image? - Critical joints connections i.e. ACBs, MCCBs,
PDUs, shipping breaks, bus bar sections (not
every joint) - Key word is critical
-
-
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Monitoring shipping joints on PDU,
utilising the plastic bracket system
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Cable sensors
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Financial Drivers
- Can potentially provide FCO with circa 20 extra
life on major capital asset (have data) - Plus savings from extending maintenance
shutdowns by 2 gt 3 yrs, provides significant
savings - Plus major safety risk reduction ( removal of
panels for live imaging), avoids high cost
litigation -
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- SUMMARY
- New ExerTherm IR technology has provided the
- NEXT TECHNOLOGY STEP
- Continuous 24/7 thermal monitoring, Inside the
enclosure to Predict failures BEFORE they happen
45 Continuous Thermal Monitoring
- Why take a Snapshot
- when
- you can now have the
- Whole Picture ?
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-
46 Continuous Thermal Monitoring
- To obtain further information on Continuous
Thermal Monitoring for mission critical equipment
contact -
- Bob Kern
bkern_at_powerserviceconcepts.com - www.psc-exertherm.com
- OR Ross
Kennedy - ross_at_Qhigroup.com
- www.exertherm.com
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-