The invention relates to a dump element for forming a spatial structure such as a filter or skeleton construction with such dumped dump elements. The invention also relates to a method for forming a spatial structure from dump elements. The invention further relates to a spatial structure formed from dump elements.
An example of a known dump element is a cube for forming, with such cubes, a filter construction for protecting breakwaters, dikes and the like from soil material washing out. By dumping a large number of these known dump elements in one or more layers, a protection from water movements is obtained. Another known form of such a dump element is manufactured from concrete and has a central portion and a number of legs projecting more or less radially from the central portion.
A drawback of these known dump elements is that the dump elements must be of very heavy design to prevent individual dump elements from becoming detached from the protective structure formed by these dump elements as a result of intensive water movements, for instance during storms.
The object of the invention is to improve the mutual connection between dump elements within a spatial structure.
To that end, according to the invention, a dump element according to claim 1, a method according to claim 12, and a spatial structure according to claim 14 are provided.
As the dump element according to the invention comprises a first and a second hook part, and a spacer between the first and the second hook part, which spacer holds the two hook parts spaced apart and interconnects them, two or more of such dump elements easily interlock due to hook parts and/or spacers mutually hooking around one another. It proves surprisingly difficult to detach thus interlocked dump elements from each other. This difficulty also arises when the interlocking has occurred, and increases according as the number of interlocked dump elements increases. As a rule, movements of interlocked dump elements lead to a further interlocking of the dump elements, which leads to a spatial structure forming an almost inextricable knot of dump elements.
Specific embodiments of the invention have been laid down in the subclaims.
In the following, the invention is further elucidated with reference to the Figures in the accompanying drawing.
The example shown in
The dump element 99 can be manufactured from various materials, for instance (reinforced) concrete, plastic, metal, et cetera. The hook parts 1, 2 and the spacer 3 can be solid or hollow and take various external shapes. They can, for instance, have circular or rectangular cross-sections but various other cross-sectional shapes (varying in longitudinal direction of the hook parts and/or spacers) are possible too. The hook parts 1, 2 and the spacer 3 can also be provided with various sorts of surface structures, projections and the like, and the transitions between the hook parts 1, 2 and spacer 3 can be reinforced in various manners, for instance by designing these transitions with reinforcing elements. Further, parts of the dump element 99 can be detachable from, or hinged relative to each other. The choice of such and other design variations generally depends on the intended use of the dump element 99.
It is noted that “elongated, curved” in the above-mentioned “first elongated, curved hook part” and “second elongated, curved hook part” is understood to mean that the hook part is an elongated body, whose longitudinal direction runs along a particular curvature. The curvature can, for that matter, be a gradual curvature and/or a (very) local curvature.
With the dump element 99 shown in
The transitions between bottom 16 of the first U-shaped part 1 and legs 14 and 15 of the first U-shaped part 1, and the transitions between bottom 26 of the second U-shaped part 2 and legs 24 and 25 of the second U-shaped part 2 can be reinforced in various manners, for instance by designing such transitions with reinforcing elements.
By way of illustration of only a few of the numerous other possible examples of embodiments of dump elements according to the invention, reference is made to the dump elements 199, 299 and 399 which are shown in
Preferably, the spacer links up to a portion of an end of at least one of the hook parts. As the respective end has a portion to which the spacer links up, the respective end is free to a lesser extent. Due to this feature of this exemplary embodiment therefore, the freedom of ends of the dump element is restricted. As interlocked dump elements with less free ends are generally unhooked less easily, the feature mentioned leads to a further strengthened, mutual connection between the dump elements within the spatial structure. With the example shown in
The dump element 99 shown in
It is preferred that the first surface 40 runs substantially parallel to the second surface 50 and the first surface 40 is spaced apart from the second surface 50. Owing to this spaced apart position, parts of a second dump element can gain access to the space between the first and the second plane, which promotes hooking around the first and second U-shaped part, and around the spacer. Owing to the parallel position mentioned, a favorable balance is achieved between, on the one side, parts of the second dump element obtaining easy access from various directions to the space between the first and the second plane and, on the other side, parts of a second dump element leaving said space with difficulty in various directions. Also, due to the parallel position, a compact shape of the dump element 99 can be obtained.
Preferably, the direction 60 (see
It is preferred that the spacer 3 is elongated and the spacer 3 and the bottoms 16 and 26 and the legs 14, 15, 24 and 25 of the first and the second U-shaped hook part 1 and 2 have substantially a mutually equal length. As a result, a compact shape of the dump element is obtained whereby, as a rule, several of such dump elements interlock more easily, yet unhook with difficulty. The good hooking capacity of such a dump element with such parts of substantially mutually equal length is further promoted by a suitable choice of thickness/length ratio of those parts. It has appeared that when substantially uniform thickness distributions of these parts are utilized, a particularly good hooking capacity is obtained with thickness/length ratios greater than 1/100, preferably greater than 1/13. A particularly good hooking capacity is further obtained if the referred-to thickness/length ratios are smaller than 1/3, preferably smaller than 1/8.
To obtain a compact and well manipulatable shape of the dump element, it is further advantageous if the spacer 3 and the bottoms 16 and 26 and the legs 14, 15, 24 and 25 of the first and the second U-shaped hook part 1 and 2 each lie substantially along a rib of one and the same imaginary cube 30, see
Preferably, the first and the second hook part 1 and 2 are substantially identical in shape, and the dump element can be reoriented from a first orientation to a second orientation such that the space taken up by the first hook part 1 in the second orientation substantially corresponds to the space taken up by the second hook part 2 in the first orientation, and that the space taken up by the second hook part 2 in the second orientation substantially corresponds to the space taken up by the first hook part 1 in the first orientation. This is the case with the dump element 99 shown in
The dump elements according to the invention can often be designed such that they are effectively nestable, for the purpose of, for instance, storage and transport. To that end, with the dump element 99 shown in
In the following, with reference to
b shows an example of a spatial structure 500 formed by a number of interlocked, dumped dump elements 499.
As a rule, upon dumping, random dump elements 499 interlock randomly. An advantage of the dumping elements interlocking more or less randomly through dumping is that the spatial structure 500 or 501 is obtained rapidly and effectively.
Further, a filler material can be brought into contact with at least a part of the dump elements. If the spatial structure is intended for, for instance, building up or reinforcing a core of a dike or dune, for instance earth and/or sand and/or gravel and/or the like can be included in the spatial structure. The interlocked dump elements 499 then ensure a strongly linking, mutual connection of the core of the dike or dune. Depending on the filler material used, such a core of a dike or dune can be well transmissive to water and readily admit vegetation on the body. Plants can be rooted solidly in the spatial structure.
With a spatial structure according to the invention, comprising a number of dump elements which each comprise a first elongated, curved hook part and a second elongated, curved hook part, hook parts of individual dump elements lying near each other interlock, with the hook parts intersecting in their longitudinal directions. The curved hook parts thus interlocking while intersecting provides the dump elements within the spatial structure with a strong mutual connection.
The spatial structures to be formed with the dump elements can be employed in many uses, such as (artificial) reef, supports for roads or buildings, preventing soil erosion, soil or mixture reinforcement, dam or flood barrier, guy rope, tarpaulin, floating island, pile head, pad foundation, (steep) slope, temporary road, concrete reinforcement, et cetera. In uses such as floating covering for liquid surfaces, the dump elements can for instance be designed to be hollow and/or in materials with a suitable specific weight. When used on, for instance, sea-floors, as sea-floor reinforcement or building of reefs, the dump elements may be lowered overboard while upon arrival at the bottom, they can interlock, assisted therein by the water currents and/or, for instance, divers.
It is noted that after the aforementioned, various modifications are possible. The dump element can, for instance, comprise one or more additional hook parts and one or more additional spacers between various hook parts. These and similar modifications are understood to fall within the framework of the invention as defined in the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1027553 | Nov 2004 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL2005/000802 | 11/18/2005 | WO | 00 | 5/16/2007 |