The invention relates to a compensation element for joining components made of fusible plastics which is, at least in sections, configured as a conically shaped hollow cylinder, comprising at least one heating element which, when supplied energy, heats at least some regions of the inner surface or the outer surface of the compensation element or of both surfaces, for producing a welded joint with said components.
Such compensation elements, also referred to as heating sleeves or welding sleeves, have been known for a long time. They are mainly provided for producing inseparable joints between plastic pipes or plastic pipes and their fittings.
For example, FR-A-1 416 217 shows how two pipes may be welded by means of a conical sleeve which comprises a heating element. The pipes themselves comprise conicities mating to the conicity of the heating sleeve both on its inner side and on its outer side.
DE-A-24 19 893 discloses a pipe joint with the aid of a double sleeve, the inner sides thereof being configured in the shape of a truncated cone. The pipes to be joined are pushed into said double sleeve from its both ends and are welded together by means of a conical joining element, which is referred to as a welding joint or welding member, however, is not described in detail.
In an approach according to DE-A-34 22 074, a pipe and a sleeve are conically calibrated, similar as in FR-A-1 416 207, wherein the tolerance gap between pipe and sleeve is dimensioned according to the size of a heating sleeve which is to be inserted at a later date.
JP-B-52 066 532 also shows a conical welding sleeve, wherein a continuous slit provides that it can be modified in its radial dimension.
Another conical welding sleeve, which may be formed having perforations or as a mesh, is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,061,503.
A compensation element or a sleeve, respectively, of the kind set forth in the introductory is in particular known from WO 02/11973 and serves to join a pipe of a fuel line with a fuel tank. The compensation element contains said heating element both on its outer surface and its inner surface and is introduced into an angular gap between the components to be joined together, whereupon the welding occurs.
DE 10 81 288 discloses a method for joining a pipe and a sleeve by means of interposition of a wedge-shaped welding sheath. A conical outer surface of the sheath is thereby fitted into the conical inner surface of the sleeve, so that after positive sticking together of pipe, sleeve and sheath, the sheath extends some millimeters beyond the sleeve. During the welding process, the sheath is pressed into the conus of the sleeve by means of a gripper.
Such compensation elements have perfectly proven their worth for small pipe diameters. For larger pipe diameters, however, which may be absolutely in the magnitude of 1,000 mm or above, the manufacturing tolerances are so broad that gaps between components occur which complicate, if not prevent a fluid-tight welding, and this despite of the conicity of the sleeve which, also without preceding calibration of the components to be joined, provides for a certain tolerance compensation. The problem gets worse, if, for example, a pipe is irregular.
This problem is solved by a sleeve technique which uses a compensation element having the features of claim 1. Preferred embodiments are subject matter of the reference subclaims. Methods for joining components made of fusible plastics, wherein the compensation element according to the invention are used, are subject matter of claims 11 to 14.
The compensation element of this sleeve technique is characterized in that, starting from each outer edge, cuts are made substantially in axial direction, wherein at least a portion of said cuts extends close to or beyond a plane of the compensation element that guarantees flexibility. In order to avoid that in the event of an unfavorable arrangement of the cuts a region surrounding said compensation element remains which adversely affects the flexibility of the compensation element, a plane that guarantees flexibility is defined beforehand, which comprises, as a sectional area with the compensation element, a complete circle or a complete ellipse, the surface normal thereof, therefore, being parallel to the center axis of the hollow body or forming a certain angle therewith. For manufacturing reasons, also concerning the manufacturing of said cuts, the surface normal of the plane that guarantees flexibility will run regularly parallel to the center axis of the hollow body, so that it is itself parallel to the outer edges of the hollow body. For example, the plane that guarantees flexibility may be the equatorial plane of the hollow body.
It is always essential that a part of said cuts extends at least close to or beyond the plane that guarantees flexibility. By thus purposeful guidance of the cuts in axial direction, the compensation element becomes sufficiently flexible, so that it may so-to-say travel within said pipe to close any occurring gaps. In this manner, the alleged disadvantage with respect to a standard sleeve welding process, namely dual welding, i. e. welding on both sides of the compensation element, is compensated for, so that the welding period becomes rather shortened due to the smaller gap.
Furthermore, even special pipes, such as multilayer pipes, composite pipes etc., which due to their design compensate or bridge respectively, only small gaps by thermal expansion, can easily be welded by the new sleeve technique.
According to a preferred embodiment, the cuts starting at a first outer edge are arranged offset in a circumferential direction of the compensation element with respect to cuts starting at a second outer edge, further preferred even in an alternating manner, wherein alternating a cut from said first outer edge runs to or beyond the plane that guarantees flexibility, when a cut starting from said second outer edge, again a cut starting from the first outer edge, etc.
The cuts can be arranged running vertically to the respective outer edge or running obliquely thereto. They can have a same or a different length, for example it can be provided that only every other or every third of the cuts extends from one of the outer edges beyond the plane that guarantees flexibility.
Further, the shaping of the cuts is at the most subjected to manufacturing limits. They can be linear or curved, they may comprise the same width or a varying width along their course. It has turned out that best results are achieved, if the cuts are formed having a keyhole-like contour.
Metal grids, metal strands, metal particles or metal wires are suitable as heating element, but also a layer or a conductor made of electrically conducting plastics, wherein the application of energy occurs by means of current flow or induction or microwave technology.
Preferably, the at least one heating element is a helical heating element or heating spiral, so that an established technology can be worked with. To provide a sufficient heating area, it is suitable to guide the heating spiral as a meander between the cuts. This may be done by guiding the meander in a manner that the main length of the wires extends essentially in the direction of the equatorial plane, or that the main length extends essentially perpendicularly thereto.
The heating element can thereby be formed as a bifilar element, wherein the contact terminals for supplying with energy are located close to another.
Plural heating elements can be used, which can be supplied with energy independently from another.
The compensation element is preferably used in conjunction with an outer sheath to provide for a sleeve, wherein the sleeve herein is to be understood as a component for uninterruptedly joining for example two pipes. The outer sheath is principally variable in length and can therefore be versatilely used. It can for example also serve to join a non-wound T-piece with a pipe. The outer sheath can also be configured in such a way that the sheath angles are arranged at an angle with respect to another. Further, the ends of the sheaths can, as the outer sheaths, comprise different inner diameters. For branching plural pipelines, Y- or T-shaped sheaths are possible. On the outside as well as on the inside in said outer sheath an abutment can be formed, for example in form of a ring flange, which provides that the components assume a defined position within the outer sheath. For high pressure applications, reinforcement of the outer sheath with fibers is suitable. The outer sheath and the compensation element consist themselves of fusible plastics which is compatible with fusible plastics of the component.
A method for joining components made of fusible plastics comprises the following steps:
Steps c) and d) can be performed simultaneously or even interchanged.
In this method, step c) can consist of substeps
Similarly, step d) can consist of substeps
Thereby, the possibility exists to support the adaption of components by axially shifting the wedge-shaped compensation element by means of heat introduction, without rounding clamps being required. Furthermore, peeling the ovality, as in the prior art, having the disadvantage that the component will be weakened, is no longer required.
Another method for joining components made of fusible plastics, which may be used for repair and subsequent installation, comprises the following steps:
“Sliding on completely” thereby means that said outer sheath together with both compensation elements are located on said first component.
If, for example, a pipeline must be repaired, the region showing a leakage can be ripped out, subsequently a respective sleeve is slid on both exposed pipe ends. A repair piece is then brought between said both pipe ends, subsequently the sleeves are slid, as described in step d), on the abutment sides of pipe ends and repair piece. Shifting of the compensation elements, so that they become wedged, can occur mechanically or hydraulically. In place of said repair piece, a T-piece or another component may be inserted.
In the following, the invention will be explained with reference to the accompanying drawing, wherein:
The drawings are schematical representations and are not necessarily drawn to scale.
The basic geometry of a compensation element 4 which can be used as sliding sleeve, is shown in a longitudinal section view in
Whenever in the following the terms “bottom edge” and “top edge” are discussed, these shall respectively mean the outer edges of the compensation elements, which are at the bottom or at the top, respectively, when viewing the figures of the drawings. Therefore, the bottom edge of the compensation element is the edge having the larger radius of the conically shaped hollow body, the top edge is the edge having the smaller radius.
While in the embodiment of
As already explained in the introductory, it is important that nowhere at the hollow body a closed, continuous “ring” will be produced which could hardly be deformed. The embodiments of
Another embodiment is shown in
In the embodiments of a compensation element according to the present invention as shown before the cuts have been illustrated as elongated slots having parallel limiting walls. Principally, different configurations of the slots are possible, they can flare to the bottom edge or to the top edge of the hollow body, comprise different widths etc. It has been proven particularly advantageous to configure a cut in the manner as shown in
This enables, as illustrated in
A further possibility to guide heating elements 58, 58′ in form of heating wires meander-like between cuts 70, 72, is illustrated in
The features disclosed in the foregoing description, in the claims and/or in the accompanying drawings may, both separately and in any combination thereof, be material for realising the invention in diverse forms thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 014 049 | Mar 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/001870 | 3/8/2008 | WO | 00 | 1/5/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/113488 | 9/25/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3061503 | Gould et al. | Oct 1962 | A |
4387845 | Mefferd | Jun 1983 | A |
4436988 | Blumenkranz et al. | Mar 1984 | A |
4695335 | Lyall | Sep 1987 | A |
4836586 | Martin | Jun 1989 | A |
5752725 | El-Sobky | May 1998 | A |
6925152 | Steinlage et al. | Aug 2005 | B2 |
20030168853 | Mueller et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 081 288 | May 1960 | DE |
2 419 893 | Nov 1974 | DE |
3422074 | Jan 1986 | DE |
37 20 577 | Feb 1988 | DE |
102 11 703 | Sep 2003 | DE |
1 416 207 | Sep 1965 | FR |
1 416 217 | Sep 1965 | FR |
2 648 077 | Dec 1990 | FR |
2648077 | Dec 1990 | FR |
1 473 232 | May 1977 | GB |
2 425 337 | Oct 2006 | GB |
6002797 | Jan 1994 | JP |
11270771 | Oct 1999 | JP |
WO 9848207 | Oct 1998 | WO |
WO 9913256 | Mar 1999 | WO |
WO 9922170 | May 1999 | WO |
WO 0211973 | Feb 2002 | WO |
Entry |
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Machine Translation of FR 2648077 A1, Dec. 1990. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100101718 A1 | Apr 2010 | US |