The field of the present invention is air operated pumps.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,399,168; 7,063,516; 6,435,845; 6,357,723; 6,257,845; 5,957,670; 5,169,296; 4,247,264 disclose air driven and air controlled pumps. Various one-way valves for pumped medium are disclosed in these patents. Actuator valves used in such pumps are also disclosed in the foregoing and are specifically addressed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,125,229; 6,102,363; 4,549,467. The air valves for these pumps operate using a pilot valve system that senses pump position and initiates shifting of the pump through a directional control valve. U.S. Pat. No. 5,378,122 discloses an air driven pump which is controlled by a solenoid that times shifts independently of the position of the pump in its cycle. U.S. Pat. No. 7,517,199 discloses an air driven pump which is controlled by an electronic controller.
The invention is directed to an air operated pump using compressed air to draw fluid medium through an pump chamber having an inlet and an outlet. The pump chamber includes a bladder and valves to either side of the bladder. A control valve provides communication to a venturi alternating between a source of compressed air and an exhaust to atmosphere. The venturi is in communication with the control valve, the source of compressed air and the bladder to both contract and expand the bladder using compressed air.
Various combinations of the following embodiments are contemplated. Such elongate chamber pumps may find specific utility in drawing pumped medium upwardly through limited access such as a small access port or ports. Albeit quite widely applicable, the pumps can find specific utility in pumping viscos materials hard to draw through a tube. They also find advantage under conditions where all air driven pumps offer reliability, safety and convenience. A principle object of the invention is to provide an elongate pumping mechanism. Other and further objects and advantages will appear hereinafter.
All variations of the preferred embodiments are driven through control valves that are the same. The pneumatic systems for the inlet chambers into the elongate pumps are also the same. Pneumatic valves and one-way valves are disclosed for use in the elongate pump chambers. The bladder may take on various configurations.
Of possible pneumatic valves, pinch valves are disclosed in the preferred embodiments. In this arrangement, the control valve is in communication with a pinch valve downstream of a bladder as well as the venturi; and the throat port of the venturi is both in communication with the bladder and a pinch valve upstream of the bladder. Further, the communication between the venturi throat port and the bladder may be restricted such that the operation of the bladder occurs more slowly than the operation of the upstream pinch valve to minimize flow back through the closing upstream pinch valve. The control valve alternates between the supply of compressed air and exhausting to atmosphere. A third position between these two extremes may be employed where all components are pressurized during the shifting of the control valve.
In a variation of the embodiments with pinch valves or one-way valves, the elongate pump chamber may be duplicated in series; and each successive chamber segment is driven at 180° out of phase with the prior chamber segment. Further, the pinch valves and bladders may be made of equal length such that a different effect is achieved as each of these elements then alternates in function between a pinch valve and a bladder as pressure and release alternate through the elongate pump chamber.
The same control valve may also drive more than one pump chamber. With two pump chambers, two venturi may be similarly coupled to the control valve, to the source of compressed air and to the bladders. The chambers may be arranged and controlled with the bladders alternating to provide a more continuous flow. In this instance, the coupling of the second chamber with the control valve is reversed.
Looking to
The pneumatic system for the elongate pump includes a venturi 34 having an inlet end 36, an outlet end 38 and a venturi throat port 40. The venturi 34 is in communication with the source of compressed air 10 at the inlet end 36 and in communication with the control valve 12 through the controlled valve port 28 at the outlet end 38. The venturi 34 is in communication with an upstream pinch valve 42 and a bladder 44 of the pumping unit through the venturi throat port 40. Finally, the control valve 12 is in communication with a downstream pinch valve 46 through the controlled valve port 30.
The pumping unit includes an elongate pump chamber 48 with the upstream pinch valve 42. The downstream pinch valve 46 is displaced from the upstream pinch valve 42 to provide a cavity therebetween for the bladder 44. The valves 42 and 46 may also be air driven valves other than pinch valves to open and close the inlet and the outlet to the elongate pump chamber 48. A restriction 50 is located in the communication between the venturi throat port 40 and the cavity defined by the bladder 44. The bladder(s) 44 may take on any configuration to effect a variable volume within and allow flow through the chamber 48. Compare the embodiment of
A piston 52 attached at one end of the valve spool 16 moves the valve spool 16 in shifting from end to end of the valve 12. An external air source 54 alternating between pressure and exhaust is in communication with a cavity 56 on one side of the piston 52 while a cavity 58 on the other side of the piston 52 is in communication with the source of compressed air 10. The pressure area on the outer side of the piston 52 open to cavity 56 is larger than the annular pressure area on the inner side of the piston 52 open to cavity 58. Therefore, with the far end of the valve spool 16 open to atmosphere, the pressure supplied by external air source 54 can be equal to the source of compressed air 10. This pneumatic mechanism for driving the control valve may alternatively include a solenoid actuated valve spool 16 driven by a timer or controller.
Turning to the operation of the pump in
With the valve 12 fully shifted as seen in
Once the bladder 44 has had time to contract, as illustrated in
The control valve 12 is shown fully shifted in
The downstream bladder 62 does not need to draw pumped fluid into the outlet section of the pump chamber 48 using reduced pressure generated by the venturi 34 under normal operating circumstances. Rather, the expansion of the inlet bladder 44 with the inlet pinch valve 42 closed and the downstream pinch valve 46 open forces the pumped fluid, which had previously been drawn into the inlet section of the pump chamber 48, into the outlet section of the pump chamber 48. The downstream bladder 62 is open to vent through the valve port 30 as the bladder 44 is pressurized through valve port 28 to provide room for the incoming pumped fluid to the outlet section.
As the pumped fluid is forced into the outlet section of the pump chamber 48, the further downstream pinch valve 64 remains closed. Once the outlet section of the pump chamber 48 is charged, the valve spool 16 shifts to close the downstream pinch valve 46, open the further downstream pinch valve 64 and pressurize the downstream bladder 62. Pumped fluid flows from the pump chamber 48 as the downstream bladder 62 is pressurized. As noted above, the center land 32 is narrower than the inlet port 31 in the control valve 12. Thus, all pinch valves 42, 46, 64 are closed by pressure for an instant during the shifting of the control valve 12. This reduces backflow through the pump chamber 48 during shifting of the valve spool 16.
The series can be repeated for more than two sections of the chamber 48 with each succeeding section in the series operating at 180° out of phase with the prior section. Only the inlet section employs the venturi 34. Alternatively, the pinch valves and bladders may be made of equal length such that a different effect is achieved. When of equal length, each of these elements then alternates in function between a pinch valve and a bladder as pressure and vent to atmosphere alternate through the elongate pump chamber 48. Only the second element from the inlet is preferably subject to vacuum to draw pumped fluid into the elongate pump chamber. Any four adjacent bladders in any length series of more than four bladders will have two operating as pinch valves and two operating as bladders. At the same time, one of the bladders acting as such expands in the elongate pump chamber to advance flow and the other acting as such retracts to receive flow. This operation then moves up one bladder unit at a time through the elongate pump chamber.
A second embodiment of a pump is illustrated in
Two venturi 76, 78 are employed to actuate the two bladders 80, 82. The same principle of venturi operation controlling the bladder 44 in the first embodiment is now employed to both expand and contract each bladder 80, 82 in
The bladders in each of these embodiments may be as shown in
The components and configurations of any of the embodiments in
Thus, an air driven pump is disclosed which employs a bladder to propel fluid through an elongate chamber. While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein.
The present application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/934,563, filed Jan. 31, 2014, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Entry |
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International Search Report dated Sep. 11, 2015, PCT/US15/13685—Jan. 30, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150219089 A1 | Aug 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61934563 | Jan 2014 | US |