Design and Characteristics of the

High-Performance Pressure Port (DigiPort)

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The high performance Pressure Port (DigiPort) was originally designed and developed for the Paroscientific MET3A Meteorological System to minimize dynamic pressure errors under windy conditions. Due to superior performance in adverse weather conditions, Paroscientific has incorporated the DigiPort in the MET4 and MET4A Meteorological Systems. It is also offered as an option with other Paroscientific barometric products. The static pressure port is engineered to provide barometric accuracy of better than ± 0.08 hPa in strong winds, all wind directions, pitch or tilt angles up to 25 degrees, rain, and freezing conditions. This pressure port is the best engineering solution available for measuring ambient pressure under a variety of environmental conditions. It outperforms open ports, single ports, single disks, shrouded pipes, closely spaced dual-disks, multi-hole probes, probes incorporating spheres or cones, and swiveling pitot tubes with static pressure inlets.

  Pressure Port Design Considerations

There are many high-accuracy applications for measuring atmospheric static pressure in outdoor settings. These include weather stations, digital altimeter setting indicators at airports, ocean buoys, and installations to measure pressure fluctuations around buildings, infrasound pressure fluctuations, and turbulence from airplanes.

Wind produces a dynamic pressure Q (also called impact pressure) that rises as ½ r v2, where r is the density of air and v is the wind speed. Even low wind speeds produce considerable dynamic pressure, reaching 0.1 hPa at winds of 4 m/s (8 knots), and rising quadratically to values of 2.5 hPa at a wind speed of 20 m/s (40 knots).

 Dynamic pressure

Under dynamic pressure, it is very difficult to measure static ambient pressure. Open pressure ports, i.e. open pipes, are unsuitable for high-accuracy measurements. One solution is to place a perpendicular port in the center of a single disk, which is oriented horizontally into the wind. However, small pitch changes of the wind (or tilt of the port, e.g. on an ocean buoy) still produce large pressure errors of magnitude {sine(pitch) * Q}. At 10 degrees pitch, the errors reach 0.4 hPa at a wind speed of 20 m/s (40 knots). Placing the pressure port out of the wind is not a good solution either. The obstacle that blocks the wind creates unpredictable turbulence and generally lowers the air pressure by the Bernoulli effect (which states that an increase in flow over an obstacle must be accompanied by a corresponding decrease in pressure). On windy days, the pressure in buildings, or in ship enclosures, etc. is generally considerably lower than the actual static pressure. Thus placing the barometers inside airports or weather stations is usually not optimal. Besides, the action of heating and air-conditioning systems, and the opening and closing of doors also perturb the static pressure inside a building.

  High Performance Pressure Port (DigiPort) Design  

The DigiPort is largely immune to wind effects by an ingenious arrangement of holes that cancel the dynamic air pressure. This is achieved by a dual-layer arrangement of holes that face up and down on two inner disks, which are placed between two larger outer disks. The outer disks provide some channeling direction, but are spaced wide enough to avoid Bernoulli effects from increased air flow velocity between closely spaced dual plates. In addition, the outer disks protect the pressure holes from direct rain. If precipitation enters the inner disks, it is simply drained by the holes facing down, and does not enter the pressure lines leading to the sensor. The entire disk arrangement is circular, thus independent of wind direction (omni-directional). The relatively large size of the pressure holes prevents the port from plugging up under freezing conditions or from biological contamination. The disks are made from lightweight aluminum, surfaced with a reflective white paint, and can easily be cleaned.

  Characteristics of the DigiPort

Material

Aluminum with white surface

Outer disk diameter

18 cm

Outer disk spacing

7 cm

Wind dependence at 5 m/s (10 knots)

Less than 0.01 hPa

Wind dependence at 10 m/s (20 knots)

Less than 0.03 hPa

Wind dependence at 20 m/s (40 knots)

Less than 0.12 hPa

Wind pitch or tilt range

-25 to 25 degrees (negligible pressure errors)

Wind speed tested

0 to 60 m/s (120 knots)

Rain

Holes protected from rain and self-draining

Condensation

Flow-restricted drain port below sensor enclosure

Ice and biological contamination

Multiple holes keep port open

 
  Test Data

Paroscientific, Inc., performed tests in the Kirsten Wind Tunnel of the Aeronautical Laboratory at the University of Washington (UW), Seattle.

Additional wind tunnel data on the performance of the DigiPort was kindly provided by:

-  National Data Buoy Center; wind tunnel tests performed at NOAA, Stennis Space Center, MS (NOAA)

-  Japan Meteorological Laboratory (JMA)

The first graph shows several data sets recorded in wind tunnels of different laboratories showing the dependence of sensor pressure on wind speed. The data identifies the DigiPort as the "MET3A Pressure Port". The same port is used on the MET4 and MET4A Meteorological Systems. The DigiPort is also offered as an option with other Paroscientific barometric products. The agreement between data sets is very good. The pressure change follows a quadratic curve of dP = a v2, where a = -0.00029 (pressure units in hPa, wind speed in m/s), as determined by a least-squares fit of the data shown.

DigiPort Data and Port Design comparison.

  Port Data   

The second graph shows how much better the DigiPort (MET3A port) performs as compared to closely spaced dual disks, open pipes, or single plates at small pitch angle.

   Conclusions
Accurate measurements of barometric pressure require an environmentally rugged pressure port design that minimizes pressure errors under dynamic wind conditions. Wind tunnel and field tests of Paroscientific's DigiPort dual pressure-port arrangement show superior performance over all other ports. Barometric readings with the DigiPort easily meet the requirements of GPS Meteorology, Weather Stations, Digital Altimeter Setting Indicators, High-Resolution Measurements of Atmospheric Waves, and Aircraft Wake-Turbulence Detection.

©2007 Paroscientific, Inc.