GE PT878GC Manual De Usuario

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Features and Capabilities
1-5
April 2004
Theory of Operation
The TransPort is a transit-time ultrasonic flowmeter. When 
ultrasonic pulses are transmitted through a moving liquid or gas, 
the pulses that travel in the same direction as the fluid flow 
(downstream) travel slightly faster than the pulses that travel 
against the flow (upstream). The TransPort uses various digital 
signal processing techniques, including cross-correlation, to 
determine transit times and then uses the difference in transit 
times to calculate flow velocity.
During operation, two transducers serve as both ultrasonic signal 
generators and receivers. When mounted on a pipe, they are in 
acoustic communication with each other, so that each transducer 
can receive ultrasonic signals transmitted by the other transducer. 
Each transducer thus functions as a transmitter generating a 
certain number of acoustic pulses, and as a receiver for an 
identical number of pulses.
The flowmeter measures the time interval between transmission 
and reception of the ultrasonic signals in both directions. When 
the gas in the pipe is not flowing, the transit-time downstream 
equals the transit-time upstream. When the gas is flowing, the 
transit-time downstream is less than the transit-time upstream. 
The difference between the downstream and upstream transit-
times is proportional to the velocity of the flowing gas, and its 
sign indicates the direction of flow.