This invention relates to the field of underground utility access and more particularly to a composite manhole frame with molded-in electronic components.
Underground utility systems are used in cities across the world for infrastructure and maintenance. In order to do their job, municipal workers must enter the underground system in various locations across a city. Workers access these systems via manholes that are sealed with manhole covers. Manhole covers are often made of cast metals.
Many problems arise with the heavy, metal manhole covers. First, they are difficult and dangerous to lift and maneuver. Second, the manholes are a target for thieves that aim to salvage the metal for recycled scrap value. Third, gases produced in wastewater corrode the metal covers and frames weakening them or fusing them shut. Fourth, in some areas metal conducts extremely hot temperatures from steam transmission that burn pedestrians and their pets. Finally, a metal manhole cover can be lethal if a gas explosion launches the metal cover off of the manhole.
Another aspect of underground utility access systems is tracking, storing, and maintaining pertinent information about the systems. Useful information may include date of access, installation date, sewer depth, GPS location of manhole covers, manufacturing date, sewage flow rates, etc. A manhole cover including an electronic component allows municipal workers to track point-of-use information.
However, attaching the electronic component by fastening or adhering mechanically or chemically to the metal manhole cover degrades the properties of such. Fastening and/or adhering mechanically require machining or abrading the surface of the metal manhole cover. Boring and drilling holes into metal manhole covers/components reduce structural strength and provides further surface area for increased oxidation and weakening of the component. Molding or inserting electronic components into metal manhole covers will not function properly because of the metal interferes with radio signals emitted from the electronic components.
What is needed is a manhole frame with in-molded electronic components that can store and communicate important information for municipal workers.
The disclosed invention encapsulates an electronic component or components into a manhole frame using composite molding processes. The electronic component(s) communicate data that municipal workers will use to identify, track, and maintain such assets.
Producing a manhole frame using the disclosed materials and processes allows for electronic and mechanical components to be molded within the manhole frame instead of externally attached to the manhole cover as was done in the past. This reduces potential impact damage to the electronic component caused by snowplows, street sweepers, or other mechanical strikes; provides protection of the electronic components from chemical damage caused by sewer gases such as hydrogen sulfide; provides protection of the electronic components from weather elements such as ultraviolet light, rain, snow, and salt; and reduces incentives for theft. A lighter weight manhole cover reduces incidental damage caused by handling of the manhole cover or shocks caused by conduction with underground power lines. Further, such manhole covers enable radio frequency permeation and are more resilient to both high and low temperatures.
In one embodiment, a composite manhole frame is disclosed including a frame body made of a polymer and an electronic device having a transmitter. The electronic device is embedded within the frame such that information from the transmitter of the electronic device is readable through the frame.
In another embodiment, a composite manhole frame is disclosed including a frame formed of a polymer and at least one electronic component. The at least one electronic component placed within the polymer prior to curing of the polymer.
In another embodiment, a composite polymer manhole frame is disclosed including a frame body having a processor embedded there within and at least one sensor that is electrically interfaced to the processor for reading data from the at least one sensor. A transmitter is also embedded within the frame body. The transmitter is electrically interfaced to the processor for transmitting the data to a remote device.
The invention can be best understood by those having ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Throughout the following detailed description, the same reference numerals refer to the same elements in all figures.
Although any use is anticipated for the electronic/mechanical components 4, in one embodiment, the electronic/mechanical components 4 provide point-of-use information to municipal workers. Point-of-use information will eliminate wasted time searching through archives and travelling away from the asset to administrative offices. Storing point-of-use information will also reduce the frequency with which municipal workers need to open the composite manhole cover 2 to verify information about the underground utility system, thereby decreasing the chance of a workplace injury.
In some embodiments, identifying, tracking, and maintaining the assets and information is done with a central computer. In other embodiments, identifying, tracking, and maintaining the information is done with a handheld device. There is no restriction on the type of device or proximity range of the device used to read/write information to/from the electronic/mechanical components 4.
Referring to
Power is provide to the processor 30, sensors 34/38, and transceiver 32 by a power subsystem 36 that includes a device for power storage (e.g., a battery, super capacitor) and, in some embodiments, includes a solar collector 40 that is used to recharge the device for power storage.
In one exemplary usage scenario, back flow of sewage in sanitary system is detected by the sensor 34 and relayed to the processor 30 in the composite manhole cover 2 before the fluid level reaches the street. Another exemplary usage scenario includes detecting when a composite manhole cover 2 is opened by a tamper sensor 38 (e.g., a micro switch) so that steps can be taken to understand why one has accessed the manhole without authorization. Another example is using a sensor 34 to measure a gas concentration level inside the sewer, perhaps preventing accidental death from fatal exposures to hydrogen sulfide gas.
Referring to
In some embodiments, the RFIDs include a factory programmed identification value that uniquely identifies each particular RFID 10.
In some embodiments, the RFID 10 is coated with a polymer insulator 14 that protects the RFID 10 and other components from abrasion, high pressure, and high temperatures that are present during the composite molding process. The polymer insulator 14 coats electronic/mechanical components 4 before insertion into the composite manhole cover 2. Examples of materials used for the polymer insulator 14 include, but are not limited to, unsaturated polyester, vinyl ester, epoxy, or a blend of these, with a compatible monomer to dissolve the polymer in solution. Compatible monomers include, but are not limited to, styrene, vinyl toluene, diallyl phthalate, and bisphenol A.
In some embodiments, the RFID 10 requires no power source 12, utilizing radio frequency energy emitted by an RFID reader (not shown for brevity reasons). In some embodiments, the RFID requires power from a power source 12 (e.g., a battery, super capacitor) and, in some embodiments, includes a solar collector 40 as in
Methods of making a composite manhole cover 2 include glass fiber reinforced plastic (GFRP) techniques like polymer concrete, cast polymer, resin transfer molding, resin infusion, filament winding, gun chopped fiberglass and resin that is applied directly by an applicator, a brush, roller, hand spreader, or sprayer—often referred to as spray-up layup.
Newer, high volume methods called sheet molding compounds (SMC), thick molding compounds (TMC), and bulk molding compounds (BMC) have been used to mold composites in less time than GFRP methods.
The composite manhole cover 2 is made of a fiber reinforced thermosetting resin compound. Examples of thermosetting resin compounds include: polyester resin, polyurethanes, phenol-formaldehyde resins, urea-formaldehyde, benzoxazines, epoxy resin, diallyl-phthalate, polyimides, furan, silicone, and vinyl ester. Before the compound has set and formed the composite manhole cover 2, a composite mixture is prepared. The composite mixture is made with three major components: resins, fibers, and fillers. The three major ingredients account for ninety to ninety-five percent of the composite by weight. The remaining five to ten percent includes mold release agents, chemical initiators, pigments, thickeners, shrink control additives, and inhibitors.
Resins are supplied in a liquid form so that the fibers, fillers, and other additives blend in a homogeneous way. Resins are made with unsaturated polyesters, vinyl esters, epoxies, and blends of these.
In embodiments using glass fiber reinforcements, glass fibers are made from a low-alkali borosilicate glass formulation known as “E glass.” E glass is melted and blended then cooled and solidified. The solid glass forms strands of fiber that are collected in spools. These spools are used to form various weaves, chopped strands, mats, rovings, ropes, or other presentations. All presentations of the glass fiber give the composite manhole cover 2 stronger mechanical properties and are selected based on geometry and end-use application.
Fillers are added to the composite mixture to reduce cost, increase the viscosity, and give the composite manhole cover 2 properties such as flame retardance, corrosion resistance, increased density, low shrinkage, hardness, and electrical properties. Fillers are inorganic minerals. Suitable fillers include calcium carbonate, aluminum trihydrate, clay, calcium sulfate, barium sulfate, and silicates. These fillers are formed by milling, grinding, and/or precipitating the minerals into particles and separating the particles into a range of sizes. Suitable filler particle sizes range from one micron to one hundred microns.
Mold release agents are added to the composite mixture to ensure that the composite manhole cover 2 does not stick to the mold surface after curing. In some embodiments, the mold release agents are fatty acids. Exemplary fatty acids include calcium stearates, zinc stearates, and magnesium stearates. In other embodiments, alkyl phosphates are used.
Initiators are added to the composite mixture to start the chemical reaction resulting in cross-linking of the resins. In some embodiments, initiators are organic peroxides like diacyl peroxides, peroxy esters, diperoxy ketals, dialkyl peroxides. Some organic peroxides are activated with heat and pressure while some organic peroxides are activated with photo initiators.
Optionally, it is desirable to change the color or provide ultraviolet resistance for the composite manhole cover 2. In some embodiments, pigments are added to the composite mixture to create colors and impart ultraviolet resistance. An exemplary pigment is carbon black.
Thickeners are used to increase the viscosity of the composite mixture. Exemplary thickeners are calcium oxide, calcium hydroxide, magnesium oxide, magnesium hydroxide, fused silica, and water.
In some embodiments, shrink control additives are included in the composite mixture. Shrink control additives reduce the contraction of the composite mixture during the curing process. This is accomplished with thermoplastic additives like polyethylene, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, cellulose acetate and butyrate, polycaprolactone, polyvinyl acetate, polymethyl methacrylate, and thermoplastic polyesters.
In some embodiments, inhibitors are included to prevent premature curing. Suitable inhibitors include hydroquinone, parabenzoquinone, tertiary butyl catechol, tertiary butyl hydroquinone, and 2,6-ditertiary butyl-4-methyl phenol.
Now turning to a discussion of preparing the composite mixture for production of the composite manhole cover 2.
First, the liquid and small volume additive constituents (e.g. resins, initiators, inhibitors, pigments, shrink control agents) are blended in a high shear, high speed dispersions to create a homogenous liquid slurry.
Next, in embodiments using the BMC method, the liquid slurry is blended with the fibers and fillers in a low shear mixer. In embodiments using the SMC or TMC method, the liquid slurry is added directly to the other ingredients and blended with rollers that squeeze the materials together.
The composite mixture is inserted into the mold manually, robotically, by a gravity system, by a vacuum pull, by a pump, or with a pneumatic sprayer.
In some embodiments, a higher strength rating is required (e.g. airport runways). In these embodiments, an extra reinforcement of fiber glass roving, pultrusion, glass prepregs, or other higher strength support may be placed in the cavity of the mold before adding the composite mixture.
Next, the electronic/mechanical components 4 are added to the composite mixture.
After the composite mixture and any electronic/mechanical components 4 are in the mold, curing is initiated. Depending on the embodiment, the electronic or mechanical components that are added to the mold optionally include RFID 10, power source 12, processor 30, transceiver 32, sensors 34/38, power subsystem 36, and solar collector 40.
In some embodiments, the composite mixture is cured under high temperature and pressure (approximately 270 to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and 500 to 1500 pounds per square inch). In other embodiments, the composite mixture is cured at ambient temperature and pressure.
After curing is complete, the composite manhole cover 2 is extracted from the mold cavity. The end product is a composite manhole cover 2, optionally including electronic components and/or mechanical components (electronic/mechanical components 4).
Being held within a composite material that does not significantly impact radio frequency transmission, the electronic/mechanical components 4 (e.g. transceiver 32, RFID 10) readily communicate with external devices electronic/mechanical components 4 (not shown for brevity reasons). In some embodiments, this communication includes, but is not limited to, information such as serial number, GPS location, manufacturing date, installation date, inspection date, sewer depth, flow direction, connections, inlets, drop pipes, lift stations, offsets, riser rings, cone type, manhole wall material, installer, inspector, processing station identification, maintenance date, photographs, and other pertinent information to the municipality or owner.
In some embodiments, the RFIDs 10 have user memory. It is anticipated that in some embodiments, the data will be transferred and stored on an external device and/or downloaded to a remote computer. Some examples of data stored in the user memory will be predetermined while some types of data will be determined by the municipality or owner of the composite manhole cover 2. In addition to static identification data, the system will allow entry of variable data inputs, for example current condition of the manhole and composite manhole cover 2, sewer effluent levels and other observations and measurements recorded during a scheduled preventive maintenance review, programmed register, or corrective/containment action.
Municipalities also invest in Capital Asset Tracking (CAT) and/or geographic information system or (GIS) software that maps the location and topography of the municipal assets throughout the city. Information gathered by the electronic/mechanical components 4 is uploaded onto current CAT/GIS software platforms (eg. Arc Gis, Cityworks, Cartograf) in a “.xml” file format so that cities can have up to date condition and status reports on these specific assets stored on their current computer system.
In some embodiments, the composite manhole cover is installed with a composite manhole frame 7. The composite manhole frame 7 is made, for example, using the same process as described above for the composite manhole cover 2. The composite manhole frame 7 is typically installed in an opening of a street atop a riser (not shown for brevity reasons), though there is no restriction as to how the composite manhole frame 7 be installed.
Referring to
In the examples shown in
In some embodiments, the composite manhole frame 7 has a flange 5 on which the composite manhole cover 2 rests.
In
In some embodiments, the electronic/mechanical components 4 are molded into the frame only and not into the composite manhole cover 2.
Equivalent elements can be substituted for the ones set forth above such that they perform in substantially the same manner in substantially the same way for achieving substantially the same result.
It is believed that the system and method as described and many of its attendant advantages will be understood by the foregoing description. It is also believed that it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construction and arrangement of the components thereof without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention or without sacrificing all of its material advantages. The form herein before described being merely exemplary and explanatory embodiment thereof. It is the intention of the following claims to encompass and include such changes.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/820,595, filed Nov. 22, 2017, which is a continuation of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/432,941, filed Dec. 12, 2016.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15820595 | Nov 2017 | US |
Child | 16047104 | US | |
Parent | 62432941 | Dec 2016 | US |
Child | 15820595 | US |