The present invention relates to a device for protecting a container and to a container equipped with this device.
It has become commonplace for use to be made of composite materials in order to produce containers intended to contain a fluid under pressure. These containers may be vats, tanks or bottles, and may be made in particular of glass, aramide or carbon fibers embedded in a matrix. This type of container generally comprises a cylindrical side wall and rounded ends, commonly known as “domes”, and a connecting piece located at the top of one and/or other of the domes.
These composite materials have numerous advantages for this application but do, however, have the disadvantage of having highly varying resistance to knocks and droppages of the containers, depending on the nature of the fibers used. In particular, containers produced by carbon-fiber filament winding are highly sensitive to such knocks or droppages.
The bases of the domes are the thinnest parts of the wall of a container and are therefore the weakest. A knock on or droppage onto one of these domes produces delamination of the internal layers of composite material, which leads to a drop in the mechanical ability of the container to withstand the pressure of the fluid and therefore leads to a risk of this container bursting.
To solve this problem, it has been envisioned, for a container obtained by winding fibers, to place a protective insert made of a knock or impact absorbing or deadening material, particularly polyurethane foam, on each dome of this container, then for this insert to be covered with an external winding of reinforcing fibers embedded in a matrix.
This method is satisfactory on the whole, but retains various drawbacks, namely:
Either one of these two types of droppage therefore carries the risk of causing the aforementioned internal delamination of the base of the dome.
The present invention sets out to overcome these drawbacks by providing a protective device which is simple and inexpensive to implement, does not make the container significantly heavier, and affords this container perfect protection in the event of droppage, regardless of the angle that the axis of this container makes with the impact surface.
To this end, this protective device comprises:
This device is therefore produced independently of the container, that is to say without fitting a protective insert and winding fibers round it when manufacturing the container. As a result of its shape which envelopes at least the entirety of the dome, and as a result of the space between said shell and the wall of the container being completely filled, the device spreads perfectly uniformly the impacts that the container may suffer, with the compressible material possibly compressing in order to deaden this knock at the time of this impact.
What this means is that this device allows the dome of the container to be protected efficiently regardless of the angle formed, at the time of impact, between the axis of this container and the impact surface.
The shell may be made in particular of synthetic resin, particularly of thermoplastic resin such as acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene or polycarbonate, while said compressible material may be expanded polystyrene, a polyurethane or polyethylene foam, or any other expanded synthetic material.
Advantageously, the device is shaped to cover not only the entirety of the dome of the container but also the portion of the side wall of the container that is adjacent to the base of this dome.
The enveloping of this portion enhances the protection of the container against “horizontal” droppages.
The device may have a roughly constant thickness, that is to say that the shell may thus “follow” the wall of the container; however, as a preference, this shell has, at the end corresponding to the side wall of the container, a wall roughly parallel to the axis of the container and, at the end corresponding to the top of the dome of the container, a wall perpendicular to this axis, these two walls meeting in the form of a rounded zone.
Through this shape, the device has a thickness which is markedly increased where it faces the thinnest part of the dome, this further improving the protection afforded to the container against “oblique” droppages.
Advantageously, when the device is intended to equip a container comprising a connecting piece situated at the top of a dome, it comprises an annular projection, the height of which is such that it extends beyond the free end of this connecting piece when the device is placed on this dome.
In the event of a “vertical” droppage, this projection makes it possible to perfectly protect the connecting piece against any direct impact.
The device may be fixed to the container non-removably, by any appropriate means, for example by bonding; it may equally be mounted removably on this container, so that the wall of the latter can be periodically inspected.
According to one preferred embodiment of the invention which can be used on containers comprising a connecting piece, this connecting piece is threaded at its free end and the device is shaped to surround this connecting piece in such a way that the exterior face of the shell is set back from the threaded free end of the connecting piece, and comprises a tapped ring which can be screwed onto said connecting piece and bear against said shell in order to mount the device on the dome.
To allow a good understanding thereof, the invention is described once again hereinbelow with reference to the appended schematic which, by way of nonlimiting example, depicts one preferred embodiment of the device to which the invention relates.
The tank 1 is of the type intended to contain a fluid under pressure, and comprises of wall 5 made of composite material, an interior lining wall 6 and a metal connecting piece 7 for connecting this tank 1 to the installation that needs to be supplied with fluid.
The connecting piece 7 comprises a tubular part 7a, which is threaded and tapped at its free end, and a circular base 7b. The tapping in the part 7a allows the aforementioned connection while the thread allows the screwing-on of a tapped ring 8 for removably mounting the device 2 on the tank 1. The base 7b is sandwiched between the walls 5 and 6 to make sure that the connecting piece 7 is mounted firmly on the tank 1.
The device 2 comprises an external shell 10 which envelopes the entirety of the dome 1b and a portion of the wall 1a adjacent to the base of this dome 1b, and a filling 11 made of a compressible material occupying all of the space delimited by the exterior face of the wall 5, the part 7a of the connecting piece 7 and the interior face of the shell 10.
The latter is made of a puncture-resistant material, particularly a thermoplastic resin such as acrylonitile-butadiene-styrene or polycarbonate. At the end corresponding to the wall 1a, it has a wall 10a roughly parallel to the axis of the tank 1 and, at the end corresponding to the top of the dome 1b, it has a wall 10b perpendicular to this same axis, these walls 10a and 10b meeting in a rounded region 10c. The result of this structure is that the filling 11 is thick where it faces the part of the dome 1b at the end corresponding to the wall 1a, in which part this dome 1b has its smallest thickness.
The shell 10 further comprises an annular projection 12, the height of which is such that it extends beyond the free end of the connecting piece 7 and the ring 8 when the device 2 is mounted on the tank 1.
The material of which the filling 11 is made is capable of deadening a knock or an impact thanks to its compressibility, it being possible for this material to be expanded polystyrene, polyurethane foam or any other expanded synthetic material.
Because of its shape which envelopes not only the dome 1b but also said portion of the wall 1a, and because of the filling 11 which occupies the entirety of the space between said shell 10 and the wall of the tank 1, the device 2 spreads perfectly any impact that this tank may suffer.
The connecting piece 7 and the ring 8 allow the device 2 to be mounted removably on the tank 1, so that this device 2 does not form any impediment to inspecting the wall of this tank 1.
The invention also provides a device that makes it possible to overcome the drawbacks of the corresponding devices of the prior art because it is simple and inexpensive to employ, does not make the container significantly heavier, and affords this container perfect protection in the event of a droppage, regardless of the angle formed between the axis of this container and the impact surface.
It goes without saying that the invention is not restricted to the embodiment described hereinabove by way of example but that, on the contrary, it encompasses all alternative forms of embodiment thereof. Thus, in the case of small-sized containers such as bottles, the exterior side face of the projection 12 could be in the continuation of the wall 10a.
This application is a continuation application of, and claims full benefits of, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/936,093, filed on Mar. 26, 2002, now abandoned which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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3349940 | Cornelius | Oct 1967 | A |
4573603 | Starling et al. | Mar 1986 | A |
4815605 | Brissier et al. | Mar 1989 | A |
4867348 | Dorfman | Sep 1989 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040026437 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09936093 | Mar 2002 | US |
Child | 10636014 | US |