What kinds of Flow Controllers exist?
The sensor type largely determines the kinds of flow controllers that are available.
Flow Controllers based on the thermal principle
Flow controllers that operate according to the
thermal principle employ the heat capacity of gases or liquids to control their mass flow rate. Bronkhorst has several of these thermal mass flow controllers available, each with their own sensor technique:
- Flow controllers using a bypass sensor (as in the EL-FLOW Select and IN-FLOW series), which is ideal for clean and dry gas applications.
- By using the Constant Temperature Anemometry (CTA) principle with the sensor inline in the main flow (as in the MASS-STREAM, LIQUI-FLOW and MASS-VIEW series), for example for robust applications with slightly moist gases or for liquids.
- By using a MEMS chip-based sensor for gas flow control. FLEXI-FLOW devices control gas flow rates and measure temperature as well as pressure. Sensors from the highly compact IQ+FLOW series are ideal for use in confined spaces.
Flow Controllers using the Coriolis principle
Flow controllers working via the
Coriolis principle (such as the Bronkhorst
mini CORI-FLOW series) use a direct relationship between fluid
mass flow rate and
mass inertia. They operate fluid independently, which means that they can be used for varying and unknown mixtures. Moreover, with these Coriolis-based flow controllers there is no need for conversion when the device is used for other liquids.
Flow Controllers with ultrasound technique
Bronkhorst
ES-FLOW flow controllers control volumetric liquid flow rates through
ultrasound. Their sensors measure the flow velocity and multiplied by the tube cross-section inside the device, this results in volumetric liquid flow rates.
Flow Controllers using positive displacement principle
A gear pump can be considered a volumetric flow controller according to the positive displacement principle. A motor causes gears to rotate, and the space between the teeth of two interlocking rotating gears determines the stroke volume. Successive strokes generate a continuous fluid flow.
Some flow controllers are particularly suitable
for gases, and some specifically
for liquids. Moreover, there are
flow controllers available which are independent of fluid properties, and which can therefore control the flow rate of gases as well as liquids.