This invention relates to a barrel docking and opening apparatus; the relevant barrels comprise a main container part and a lid top of the container.
When opening such barrels for loading or decanting the content thereof precautions have to be taken if such content is toxic, radioactive, or otherwise hazardous, because then contamination will spread on the outside. The involved industries have designed many docking and opening devices for solving this problem. Some of them consist in working within enclosures, which are sealed or maintained at a vacuum in relation to the environment. Others include double-door mechanisms, wherein the barrel is mounted on an opening, which is then closed by a door leading to an insulated enclosure. The door covers the lid and seizes the same by interlocking the shapes thereof when it is open, thereby separating the lid from the container while separating the door from the opening and communicating the inside of the barrel with the inside of the enclosure. Gasket systems allow for the lid to form a closed cavity with the door so that contamination within the enclosure will not reach the upper side thereof. Also, further gaskets arranged between the opening of the enclosure and the container will maintain contamination within the enclosure and prevent it from reaching the outer side of the container. Thereby, the external surface of the barrel will stay clean. Such double-door devices are efficient and reliable, but it has to be acknowledged that they are complex in terms of composition, both regarding the mechanisms for joining the door to the lid and the required gaskets. It would often be desirable to have an apparatus which is much more simple, but useful under circumstances where slight contamination of the outside is tolerable.
Such an apparatus allowing for some minor contamination while, however, taking over some of the principles of the double-door mechanism, has been designed for flat lid petrol barrels. The rim of the container is lined on the inside by a gasket comprising two right-angled lips: a cylindrical interior lip bonded to the internal side of the container, and a planar lip joined to the bottom of the preceding one. The lid is introduced into the container by friction against the cylindrical lip until it comes into abutment at the planar lip. The docking apparatus comprises a flange for holding the container and a lid coupling door initially assembled with the flange. An interior ring of the flange, adjacent to the door, is contacted by the upper side of the cylindrical lip of the gasket when docking takes place. The door and the lid are then tight-fitting and can be coupled together. Next, the door is simply raised for pulling off the lid of the container and opening the barrel. By covering the lid, the door protects the upper side thereof from contamination, and the contact of the lower ring of the flange against the cylindrical lip of the gasket will maintain sealing provided by the flange and the container.
This design has the drawbacks of requiring locking via mechanical means between the door and the lid, of being applicable to specific barrels wherein the effort of pulling off the lid has to be significant as it is the gasket retaining the same by applying friction, and of requiring for the barrel to be positioned precisely under the flange as the ring in touch with the gasket must be perfectly centered therewith. Finally, this device is applicable only to flat lids.
The object of the invention is thus to create a docking apparatus without such drawbacks and applicable to a larger number of barrels, due to a lack of interaction between the docking device and a possible gasket between the container and the lid of the barrel.
According to a general aspect, this invention relates to a barrel docking and opening apparatus comprising a container and a top lid, the apparatus comprising a flange for clamping the barrel in an opening of the flange and an assembly for seizing and lifting the lid arranged above the flange, characterized in that the flange comprises a first inflatable gasket around the opening and which ensures clamping of the barrel, and the assembly comprises a mobile trap, which can be placed on the flange while enclosing the lid, and said trap comprises a second inflatable gasket overlapping the first inflatable gasket when the trap is placed on the flange and which ensures that the lid is seized.
The overlapping inflatable gaskets allow for the container and the lid to be inserted before being separated as soon as the trap is lifted from the flange, possibly without any mechanical locking between the trap and the lid. Contamination of the surfaces exposed to the outside environment is then limited to the space between the two gaskets, which is very small if these gaskets are contiguous.
The invention will now be described by means of the following figures under the different aspects thereof:
and
With reference to
The upper assembly 2 mainly comprises an upward curved trap 9, with the lid 5 entering in a cavity thereof. The trap 9 is articulated at the flange 1 by means of a hinge 10 having a horizontal axis. A second inflatable gasket 11, which is also circular, is arranged under the trap 9 while being immediately adjacent to the first inflatable gasket 8 when the apparatus is closed (state of
Another aspect of the invention is also apparent from
The operation of the apparatus can be described like this. First of all, a barrel 3 is hooked up under the same by a conveyor or any other transport means. The barrel 3 is elevated into the opening 6 until the joining portions of the lid 5 and the container 4 arrive in front of their respective inflatable gaskets 11 and 8. When inflated, these gaskets will fit tightly around them. When the trap 9 is raised, the lid 5 is then lifted from the container 4 and will follow the same. The barrel 3 being open, which is the state in
It is apparent that the apparatus is very simple. Contamination is limited to the surfaces exposed inside the enclosure 20 in the opening position of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 53930 | Jun 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/057217 | 6/10/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/7/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/150191 | 12/17/2009 | WO | A |
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5105966 | Fort et al. | Apr 1992 | A |
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7178810 | Kuhary | Feb 2007 | B1 |
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42 17 118 | Dec 1993 | DE |
203 08 805 | Oct 2003 | DE |
582028 | Feb 1994 | EP |
10-111398 | Apr 1998 | JP |
WO 9523617 | Sep 1995 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report issued Jul. 23, 2009, in International Application No. PCT/EP2009/057217. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110185678 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |