1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to fluid transfer devices, and more particularly to a dual injection airlift pump having both radial and axially peripheral air or gas injection.
2. Description of the Related Art
The general concept of the airlift pump has been known for quite some time. Airlift pumps generally comprise a vertically oriented tubular pump body through which the liquid that is being pumped passes. One or more air (or other gas) injection passages are provided in or with the pump body. The airlift pump contains no moving parts, but rather depends upon the injection of air (or other gas) into the pump interior to lift a liquid passing through the pump. The lighter air or gas bubbles upwardly through the liquid in the tubular pump body, increasing the buoyancy of the liquid and causing it to rise in the vertically oriented tubular body. Pumps operating by this principle do not produce high pressure heads, but are capable of moving volumes of liquid reasonably efficiently with relatively low energy input.
Nevertheless, there is room for increased efficiency with conventional airlift pumps. The conventional airlift pump includes a single stage of air or gas injection, generally by means of an externally disposed air delivery line that extends downward along the outside of the pump body to inject air into the bottom or inlet end of the pump. The provision of only a single point discharge for the air or gas entering the pump body results in a relatively narrow bubble stream through the liquid in the pump body, with such a narrow stream failing to add buoyancy and entrain the majority of the volume of liquid in the pump body. Moreover, the expanding gas bubbles at the lower end or inlet of the pump body tend to produce at least some restriction to liquid flow entering the pump.
Thus, a dual injection airlift pump solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The dual injection airlift pump comprises a hollow, tubular pump body having a lower or upstream portion and an upper or downstream portion, the liquid flowing through the pump body from its bottom or inlet end upward to exit its upper or outlet end. Air, or other gas, is injected into the pump body to add buoyancy to the liquid within the pump body and to entrain the liquid with the rising bubble flow within the pump, thereby causing the liquid to rise as well. The dual injection airlift pump preferably includes a lower air or gas injection area or portion, and an upper air or gas injection area or portion. Both of these air or gas injection areas preferably inject the air or gas in a symmetrical pattern into the liquid within the pump body, using either radially or axially oriented gas flow.
The lower portion includes an inner sleeve having a large number of radial passages therethrough, the air or gas passing through these passages in the sleeve in a radial direction to be distributed symmetrically through the liquid within the lower portion of the pump. The upper portion includes an impervious inner sleeve sealed to the pump wall at its lower end and open at its upper end. Air is injected through passages in the pump wall to flow in an axial direction between the pump wall and the impervious sleeve, where the air escapes through the open gap between the pump wall and the upper end of the sleeve. This axial peripheral gas flow provides some separation between the relatively dense liquid and the inner surface of the pump wall, thereby reducing hydrodynamic friction between the liquid and the surface of the pump wall. The upwardly directed axial peripheral gas flow, i.e., toward the downstream or outlet end of the pump, also assists in entraining the liquid, as well as adding further buoyancy to the liquid to further assist its upward flow through the pump. The result of the dual air injection and the specific direction of airflow results in significantly increased efficiency for the present airlift pump, in comparison to conventional airlift pumps.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
The dual injection airlift pump is a dual stage device having two levels or stages of air or other gas input to the pump body. One level or stage delivers the air or other gas radially into the liquid flow passage, and the other level or stage delivers the air or other gas into the liquid flow passage via an axially peripheral path for increased efficiency. The dual injection airlift pump may use air as the liquid entraining gas, or some other gas (e.g., nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium, etc.) as the liquid-entraining-gas, if desired. It will be understood in the following disclosure that the terms “air” and “gas” may be used interchangeably when referring to the air or gas used to entrain and add buoyancy to the liquid stream (e.g., water, oil, or other liquid) passing through the pump.
The lower portion 14 of the pump body 12 includes a large number of relatively small first gas flow passages or perforations 24 formed radially through the wall thereof in an even and symmetrically distributed circumferential array. The upper portion 18 of the pump body 12 has a plurality of second gas flow passages 26 extending radially through the wall thereof, also in an even and symmetrically distributed circumferential array. A first or lower gas delivery collar 28 concentrically surrounds the lower portion 14 of the pump body 12. A second or upper gas delivery collar 30 concentrically surrounds the upper portion 18 of the pump body. Each of the gas delivery collars 28 and 30 includes a plurality of circumferential gas delivery tubes 32 and 34 distributed symmetrically therearound and extending radially therefrom. The inner diameters of the two gas delivery collars 28 and 30 are sufficiently large as to provide a space between the collars 28, 30 and their respective portions 14 and 18 of the pump body 12, thereby defining first and second toroidal gas delivery plenums, respectively 36 and 38, between each collar 28, 30 and its respective pump body portion 14, 18, as shown in
The lower or first portion 14 of the pump body 12 has a first medial flange 40 attached thereto opposite its lower end 16. The upper or second portion 18 of the pump body has a second medial flange 42 attached thereto opposite its upper end 20. The two medial flanges 40 and 42 are quite similar (but not identical) to one another, but are in mirror image to provide for assembly of the two portions of the pump 10 by means of appropriate fastener assemblies 44, e.g., Allen bolts and nuts, etc. Again, the fasteners 44 are not shown in
It will be noted that the upper portion of the pump 10 includes an additional component, i.e., an impervious sleeve 50 disposed concentrically within the upper portion 18 of the pump body 12, as shown in
The elevation view in section of
Gas entering the lower or first delivery collar 28 by means of its delivery tubes 32 initially passes into the lower or first gas delivery plenum 36 between the first collar 28 and the lower or first portion 14 of the pump body 12. From the delivery plenum 36, the gas flows through the radially disposed small perforations 24 formed through the wall of the first portion 14 of the pump body 12 so that the gas is injected radially inward under pressure into the liquid flow passage 22 through the pump body 12 to entrain and add buoyancy to the liquid therein.
Gas entering the upper or second delivery collar 30 by means of its gas delivery tubes 34 initially passes into the upper or second gas delivery plenum 38 defined between the second collar 30 and the upper or second portion 18 of the pump body 12. From the delivery plenum 38, the gas flows through the second gas flow passages 26 formed through the wall of the second portion 18 of the pump body 12. However, it will be seen that this gas flow cannot flow directly radially inwardly into the liquid within the flow passage 22 through the pump body 12 due to the impervious sleeve 40 installed immediately within the second portion 18 of the pump body 12. Rather, the gas is forced to flow upward to the open upper end of the sleeve 40 (the sleeve 50 is shorter in height than the upper portion 18 of the pump body 12) along the narrow toroidal gas injection plenum 52 defined between the inner surface or wall of the second portion 18 of the pump body 12 and the outer surface of the sleeve 40, entering the liquid flow in an axial direction.
This dual stage or gas flow path for the dual injection airlift pump 10 provides significant increases in efficiency for the pump in comparison to conventional airlift pumps. The radially inward gas flow provided by the lower or first portion 14 of the pump body causes the gas to penetrate inwardly toward the center of the liquid in the flow path 22, thereby infusing the liquid with gas bubbles that rise in the liquid due to their lighter density. This tends to entrain the greater volume of liquid within the flow path 22, and further adds buoyancy to the liquid to cause it to rise through the pump body 12. The axial peripheral gas flow provided by the sleeve 40 in the upper or second portion 18 of the pump body 12 reduces contact of the liquid with the inner wall or surface of the second portion 18 of the pump body, thereby reducing hydrodynamic friction between the liquid and the wall of the second portion 18. The lighter gas also serves to entrain the liquid within the flow path and to add buoyancy to the liquid, but performs most of these function along or near to the inner surface of the second portion 18 of the pump body. The combination of the two gas flow paths into the liquid within the pump 10 therefore provides greatly improved efficiency in comparison to conventional airlift pumps.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120308407 A1 | Dec 2012 | US |