This application claims priority from Italian Utility Model Application No. 202016000029313 filed on Mar. 21, 2016, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to an apparatus for actuating a valve.
More particularly, the present invention relates to a new, single-piston, compact, pneumatic rotary actuator, incorporating a fixing system and a position detector.
This new actuating apparatus has been designed to obtain a compact shape with profiles that prevent the deposit of dirt particles.
Moreover, the present apparatus provides the use of few simply and inexpensively assembled components.
The present apparatus has an advantageous, but not exclusive, application in the fields requiring a zero or a reduced dirt particles deposit, such as e.g. the food industry. The particular shape of the apparatus allows the installation of the control electric valve in the actuator. The air ducts are arranged in the actuator casing, and are obtained directly during the die-casting of the casing (i.e. without subsequent machining operations). Always thanks to this complex shape, the space housing the position detectors of the rotating shaft could be integrated in the overall shape (without any risk of breakage).
In the field of valve actuators, single-piston actuating apparatuses are well known. Usually, single-piston apparatuses do not have continuous profiles because the fixing of the various components does not allow it. In these cases, the control electric valve of the actuator is only close to the actuator and some pneumatic connections are required to drive the actuator.
It is also well known that the most sophisticated versions of single-piston actuators use an electric valve of the “namur” type (with no pneumatic fittings), normally fixed to the rear head of the actuator or on the bottom of the actuator.
However, also in such a case, an outer pneumatic connection is required to send compressed air to the front head of the actuator.
Moreover, the device for detecting the position of the shaft for opening/closing the valve is usually inserted in a plastic box added to the actuator.
Moreover, known solutions integrate in the actuator a niche for the position control or an actuator coupling system, but both of them are never present in a single-piston monoblock system.
Moreover, even more advanced solutions available on the market, in which the compressed air ducts are integrated in the cylinder casing, have the drawback that the control electric valve protrudes with respect to the overall shape of the apparatus, and is therefore subject to possible breakage and to the hazardous entrance of dust, which can even seriously damage the electric valve and the actuator operation.
Furthermore, well-known problems in the apparatuses currently available on the market are:
Therefore, the object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for actuating a valve that is free from the aforesaid drawbacks and, at the same time, is easy and inexpensive to manufacture.
In other words, the present invention provides a compact, single-piston, monoblock actuator with a complex shape integrating the actuator fixing system and hiding in its overall shape the control electric valve with the air ducts integrated in the actuator casing.
Moreover, it provides a space inside the overall space (outline) to insert the shaft position detectors.
Due to the low number of components, a possible air loss is considerably reduced, as well as any possible clearance between the actuator and the outlet shaft.
The ducts integrated in the actuator casing shorten the compressed air path and therefore the consumption of compressed air required for the actuation, thus speeding up the actuator response times.
The integration of the position control system, of the actuator coupling bracket and of the electric valve help to reduce the number of dust stagnation areas and therefore the potential moulds or bacteria sources.
The present invention refers to an apparatus for actuating a valve; the apparatus comprising:
For a better understanding of the present invention, it is now described a preferred embodiment, purely as a non-limiting example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the attached figures, number 100 indicates as a whole an apparatus for actuating a valve according to the teaching of the present invention.
The apparatus for actuating a valve 100 (not shown) includes:
The valve device 80 is supplied with compressed air in a known manner.
In the present context, it is assumed that the valve device 80 takes the form of a box-like body lacking any fitting element.
The valve device 80 is fixed (by known and not shown means) to the front face 50b of the actuator device 50 on the side of the opening/closing mechanism 70.
As shown in
The valve device 80 (
Advantageously, but not necessarily, as shown in
The casing 75, besides being laterally closed by said cover 53, is frontally closed by an at least partially transparent cover 77 (fixed to the casing 75 through a removable attachment system, such as, e.g. a coupling system, a snap-on system, or more simply by means of screws 78). The operation of this at least partially transparent cover 77 will be explained below.
The valve device 80 is in fluid communication with the first chamber 52A by means of a first duct 55A, and, alternatively, with the second chamber 52B through a second duct 55B (
At least one of the two ducts 55a, 55B has a variable section along its path.
As shown in
Moreover, the second chamber 52B is delimited on the one side by the inner surface of the cover 53, and on the other side by one of the two faces of the piston 51.
Both ducts 55a and 55B are formed in the cylinder 52.
Each duct 55A, 55B can become, from time to time, the compressed air supply duct or the compressed air exhaust duct.
More specifically, if the compressed air, controlled by the valve device 80, enters the first chamber 52A flowing into the first duct 55A, the air contained in the second chamber 52B will leave through the second duct 55B and the piston 51 will move according to an arrow (F1); vice versa, if the compressed air, always controlled by the valve device 80, enters the second chamber 52B flowing into the second duct 55B, the air contained in the first chamber 52A will leave through the first duct 55a and the piston 51 will move according to an arrow (F2) (whose direction is opposite to the one of (F1)).
All the compressed air loading/unloading operations in the two chambers 52A, 52B are controlled by the valve device 80, which in turn is controlled by an electronic control unit (not shown).
As shown in
The rod 58 (
To prevent any leakage of compressed air, the area of the guide 58a facing the first chamber 52A is equipped with a seal 58B (
At least a portion of the rod 58 is provided with a rack 58C, which, in use, meshes with a toothed sector 59, which is part of a bushing 60 provided with a coupling toothing 61 with a valve (not shown).
The bushing 60 at least partially protrudes from the portion of the casing 75 belonging to the opening/closing mechanism 70, and said bushing 60 is further contained in a flanged sleeve 66, also protruding from an opening 75a formed in the casing 75 (
The rack 58C, the toothed sector 59 and the bushing 60 for actuating the valve belong, to all the effects, to the opening/closing mechanism 70.
Obviously, the direction of instantaneous rotation of the bushing 60 is given by the direction of movement of the rod 50 and in particular of its rack 58c (
Moreover, the bushing 60 is coupled to a shaft 90 that extends on the opposite side with respect to the flanged sleeve 66.
The free end of the shaft 90 is provided with a device 95 (
The indicator device 95 is provided with at least one needle 96A, 96B that, after the rotation, stops on a writing (CLOSE or OPEN) indicating the state of the valve (not shown), i.e. if the valve is “open” or “closed”.
Thanks to the fact that the cover 77 is at least partially transparent, a user can easily check from the outside, at any time, the opening/closing of the valve.
The whole indicator device 95 is contained in a space (SPI) which is completely integrated in the casing 75 (
As shown in greater detail in
In fact, by screwing, more or less, the limit element 97 in the threaded hole 75b, an operator can establish how much the free end 58d of the rod 58 can be moved before it abuts on the free end 97a of the limit element 97.
This obviously allows a consequent adjustment of the angle of rotation of the toothed sector 59, and then of the valve opening/closing.
The main advantages of the apparatus for actuating a valve according to the present invention are the following:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20201629313 | Mar 2016 | IT | national |
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