مضخة وقود
مضخة الوقود fuel dispenser، هي آلة تستخدم في محطة الوقود لضخ الگاسولين، الديزل، الغاز المضغوط، CGH2، HCNG، الغاز المسال، LH2، وقود الايثانول، الوقود الحيوي مثل وقود الديزل الحيوي، الكيروسين، والأنواع الأخرى من الوقود المستخدمة في المركبات. وتعرف مضخات الوقود أيضا باسم طلمبة البنزيل،[1] مضخة النفط (في بلدان الكومنولث)، أو مضخة الگاز أمريكا الشمالية).
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التاريخ
في 5 سبتمبر 1885، باع سيلڤانوس باوزر، مخترع أول مضخة بنزين أمريكية، أول مضخة إلى جيك گمپر، مالك محطة وقود في فورت وين، إنديانا. المضخة كانت تحتفظ ببرميل واحد من البنزين، واستخدمت صمام رخامي وسقاطة خشبية. وقد بناها في حظيرة باوزر، وحصل على براءة اختراعها في 1887.
التصميم
تعمل المضخة عن طريق آلة شفط هواء صغيرة توجد داخل فوهة أنبوب الضخ والتي تقوم بسحب الوقود من الخزان الموجود في محطة الوقود ومن ثم توصيله إلى خزان الوقود في السيارة عن طريق الأنبوب. عند امتلاء خزان وقود السيارة بالبنزين ترتد قطعة صغيرة داخل الأنبوب مما يؤدي إلى اختلال الضغط الداخلي في آلة الشفط وإلاق فتحة الضخ آليا. وتسمى عملية الغلق نتيجة لاختلال الضغط الداخلي بتأثير ڤنتوري نسبة إلى مكتشفها الفيزيائي الإيطالي جيوڤاني باتيستا ڤنتوري.[3]
أنابيب الشفط
Nozzles are attached to the pump via flexible hoses, allowing them to be placed into the vehicle's filling inlet. The hoses are robust to survive hardships such as being driven over, and are often attached using heavy spring or coil arrangements to provide additional strength.
The nozzles are usually color coded to indicate which grade of fuel they dispense, however the color coding differs between countries or even retailers. For example, a black handle in the UK indicates that the fuel dispensed is diesel. In the US, diesel pumps commonly use green hoses and green slipcovers over the nozzle.
الخلط
In some countries, pumps are able to mix two grades of fuel together before dispensing; this is referred to as blending or mixing. Typical usages are in a "mix" pump to add oil to petrol for two-stroke motorcycles, to produce an intermediate octane rating from separate high and low octane fuels, or to blend hydrogen and compressed natural gas (HCNG).
قياس التدفق
One of the most important functions for the pump is to accurately measure the amount of fuel pumped. Flow measurement is almost always done by a 4 stroke piston meter connected to an electronic encoder. In older gas pumps, the meter is physically coupled to reeled meters (moving wheels with numbers on the side), while newer pumps turn the meters movement into electrical pulses using a rotary encoder.
مقاييس الگازولين
Gasoline is difficult to sell in a fair and consistent manner by volumetric units. It expands and contracts significantly as its temperature changes. A comparison of the coefficient of thermal expansion for gasoline and water indicates that gasoline changes at about 4.5 times the rate of water.
In the United States, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) specifies the accuracy of the measurements in Handbook 44. Table 3.30 specifies the accuracy at 0.3% meaning that a 10-US-gallon (37.9 L; 8.3 imp gal) purchase could vary between 9.97 US gal (37.7 L; 8.3 imp gal) and 10.03 US gal (38.0 L; 8.4 imp gal) as to the actual amounts at the delivery temperature of the gasoline.
The reference temperature for gasoline volume measurement is 60 °F (16 °C). Ten gallons of gasoline at that temperature expands to about 10.05 US gal (38.0 L; 8.4 imp gal) at 85 °F (29 °C) and contracts to about 9.83 US gal (37.2 L; 8.2 imp gal) at 30 °F (−1 °C). Each of the three volumes represents the same theoretical amount of energy. In one sense, ten gallons of gasoline purchased at 30°F is about 3.2% more potential energy than ten gallons purchased at 85°F. Most gasoline is stored in tanks underneath the filling station. Modern tanks are non-metallic and sealed to stop leaks. Some have double walls or other structures that provide inadvertent thermal insulation while pursuing the main goal of keeping gasoline out of the soil around the tank. The net result is that while the air temperature can easily vary between 30°F and 85°F, the gasoline in the insulated tank changes temperature much more slowly.
Temperature compensation is common at the wholesale transaction level in the United States and most other countries. At the retail consumer level, Canada has converted to automatic temperature compensation and the United States has not. Where automatic temperature compensation is used, it can add up to 0.2% of uncertainty for mechanical-based compensation and 0.1% for electronic compensation, per Handbook 44.
There are many fewer retail outlets for gasoline in the United States today than there were in 1980. Larger outlets sell gasoline rapidly, as much as 30,000 US gal (113,562 L; 24,980 imp gal) in a single day, even in remote places. Most finished product gasoline is delivered in 8 to 16 thousand gallon tank trucks so two deliveries in a 24 hour period is common. The belief is that the gasoline spends so little time in the retail sales system that its temperature at the point of sale does not vary significantly from winter to summer or by region. Canada has lower overall population densities and geographically larger gasoline distribution systems, compared to the United States. Temperature compensation at the retail level improves the fairness under those conditions.
Higher energy prices have raised awareness of this issue for consumers. At the same time, alternative fuel applications are now reaching the retail market and accurate comparisons between them in normal usage are needed. Eventually the basis for retail sales will change from volume units in liters or gallons to energy units such as the BTU, joule, therm, or kWh so that electricity, liquids, liquefied gases and compressed gases can all be sold and taxed uniformly.[original research?]
In some regions, regular required inspections are conducted to insure the accuracy of fuel dispensers. For example, in the US state of فلوريدا, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services conducts regular tests of calibration and fuel quality at individual dispensers. The department also conducts random undercover inspections using specially designed vehicles that can check the accuracy of the dispensers. The department issues correction required notices to stations with pumps found to be inaccurate.[4] Most other US states conduct similar inspections. In Canada, inspections are regularly conducted by the federal government department Measurement Canada. Inspection dates and test results are required, by law, to be displayed on a sticker on fuel dispensers for consumers to see. Under a recently proposed legislation by the House of Commons (C-14: Fairness at the Pumps Act), fines for a vendor with a modified fuel dispenser or poorly maintained dispenser would be up to $50,000. However, virtually all pumps that fail inspection in Canada do so for general calibration errors caused by use over time. Intentional modification for the purpose of deceiving consumers is extremely rare.
مكونات الاتصال
The technology for communicating with gas pumps from a point of sale or other controller varies widely, involving a variety of hardware (RS-485, RS-422, current loop, and others) and proprietary software protocols. Traditionally these variations gave pump manufacturers a natural tie-in for their own point-of-sale systems, since only they understood the protocols.[5]
An effort to standardize this in the 1990s resulted in the International Forecourt Standards Forum, which has had considerable success in Europe, but has less presence elsewhere. ("Forecourt" refers to the land area on which the fuel dispensers are located.)
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القطع التلقائي في توزيع الوقود
The shut-off valve was invented in Olean, New York in 1939 by Richard C. Corson. At a loading dock at the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company, Corson observed a worker filling a barrel with gasoline and thought it inefficient. The sound of a toilet flushing later gave him the idea for a "butterfly float." After developing a prototype with his assistant, Paul Wenke, Corson gave the suggestion to the company who later filed for a patent in his name. The initial intent of the device was to "allow a person to fill more than one barrel [of gasoline] at the same time."[6] This mechanism eventually developed into the modern gasoline pump cut-off valve.[7]
Most modern pumps have an auto cut-off feature that stops the flow when the tank is full. This is done with a second tube, the sensing tube, that runs from just inside the mouth of the nozzle up to a Venturi pump in the pump handle. A mechanical valve in the pump handle detects this change of pressure and closes, preventing the flow of fuel.[8][9]
مكونات أخرى
A modern fuel pump will often contain control equipment for the vapor recovery system, which prevents gasoline vapor from escaping to the air. in the UK for example any new forecourt with a predicted throughput in excess of 500 M3 per month is required to have active vapour recovery installed,
التصميمات المبكرة
Petrol pump in Vienna, Austria.
A 1991 photograph of a fuel pump in Ömossa village, Kristinestad,Finland.
Display of various antique gas pumps at Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany.
Antique diesel pump located at Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum, Konz, Germany.
Old الاتحاد السوڤيتي gas pumps.
Antique "Mobilgas" pumps, manufactured by Tokheim, located in Wilton, Connecticut, USA.
Two types of Shell gas pumps at Soulsby Service Station in Mount Olive, Illinois, USA.
الضبط
Since fuel dispensers are the focal point of distributing fuel to the general public, and fuel is a hazardous substance, they are subject to stringent requirements regarding safety, accuracy and security. The exact details differ between countries and can depend to some extent on politics.
For example in countries fighting corruption, such as Mexico,[10] gas pumps may be more stringently monitored by government officials, in order to detect attempts to defraud customers.
Typically, individual pumps must be certified for operation after installation by a government weights and measures inspector, who tests that the pump displays the same amount that it dispenses. Measurement Canada is the federal agent responsible for pump regulations in Canada and stickers are displayed the pumps.
الكود الموحد
Unicode 5.2 introduces the symbol ⛽ (U+26FD FUEL PUMP) to the Miscellaneous Symbols set. It is representable in HTML as
or ⛽
.
⛽
انظر أيضا
- نظام الوقود السريع
- نظام التخزين المتتالي
- HCNG dispenser
- Point of sale electronic system connected to fuel dispensers for processing sale transactions
المصادر
- ^ Mark Gwynn (2005). "When people become words" (PDF). Ozwords. Australian National Dictionary Centre.
But one doesn't have to be an Australian to enter the Australian lexicon — take bowser 'petrol pump' (in Australia), which is named after a company established by U.S. inventor and entrepreneur S.F. Bowser (ت. 1938).
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ignored (help) - ^ "Sept. 5, 1885: Pay at the Pump". وايرد.
- ^ kumailplus
- ^ "Bureau of Petroleum Inspection". Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
- ^ http://www.ifsf.org/Software/IFSF%20Management%20Intro%20-%20V3.01.pdf IFSF Management Intro, sec 1.1 Background history
- ^ http://www.google.com/patents?id=N5VFAAAAEBAJ&printsec=abstract&source=gbs_overview_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
- ^ Sampson, Julia (April 26). "Did you know? Gas Pump shut-off valve was invented in Olean". Olean Times Herald. pp. Front Page.
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mismatch (help) - ^ http://www.pa.msu.edu/sciencet/ask_st/122591.html
- ^ http://editorial.autos.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1116074&topart=hybrids
- ^ Not Quite Measuring Up at Mexico's Gas Pumps - Los Angeles Times
وصلات خارجية
- Hosed at the Pumps: an Ottawa Citizen investigation in to Canadian fuel pump accuracy, with a searchable database on inspection records. By journalists Glen McGregor, Jessey Bird, Doug Schmidt, and Barb Pacholik.
- How does a gas pump know to shut itself off? from The Straight Dope