1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates generally to an underwater breathing device and, in particular, to an exhalation valve for use in an underwater breathing device that is configured to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user.
2. Description of Related Art
An underwater breathing device enables a user to continue breathing even after the user's mouth and/or nose is submerged in water. Some underwater breathing devices, such as scuba and snuba breathing devices, are configured to provide a submerged user with air from a compressed-air source. Other underwater breathing devices, such as a conventional snorkel, are configured to provide a user with air from the atmosphere.
A conventional snorkel generally includes a breathing tube through which air can be inhaled from the atmosphere. The breathing tube is typically configured with two ends. One end of the snorkel is intended to remain above the surface of the water. The other end of the snorkel is intended to be submerged under the surface of the water. The end of the breathing tube that is intended to be submerged generally includes a mouthpiece. In practice the user inserts a portion of the mouthpiece into his mouth and thereby creates a seal between the user's airway and the breathing tube. The user then submerges his mouth and the mouthpiece under water while maintaining the other end of the breathing tube above the surface of the water, thereby enabling the user to inhale atmospheric air while submerged in water. At the same time, the breathing tube enables the user to exhale through the user's mouth without breaking the seal between the user's mouth and the mouthpiece. Generally, the air exhaled by a user exits the snorkel through the same breathing tube through which the user inhales atmospheric air.
One problem that a user can encounter while using a conventional snorkel is increased fatigue due to the compressive forces of the ambient water in which the user is submerged. During normal inhalation and exhalation, a user expends effort inflating and deflating his lungs. When a user is submerged in water, however, the compressive forces of the ambient water around the user's chest force the user to expend more effort than usual in order to inflate his lungs and tend to cause the user to expend less effort than usual to deflate his lungs. This reduced-effort exhalation tends to cause the user to exhale faster than normal and down to smaller residual lung volumes than normal such that there is less time between each inhalation, resulting in more frequent inhalation. More frequent inhalation can cause the user's inhalation muscles to fatigue relative to normal inhalation and exhalation, which can result in a smaller functional lung capacity, the possibility of atelectasis, and increased breathing difficulty.
Another problem that a user can encounter while using a conventional snorkel is difficulty breathing due to water being present in the breathing tube of the snorkel. Water can sometimes enter a conventional snorkel through one or both ends of the breathing tube. This water can cause difficulty breathing when it accumulates to the point where the water interferes with the passage of air in the breathing tube and/or the water is inhaled by the user. In addition, the presence of water in the breathing tube of the snorkel can cause a distracting gurgling or bubbling noise as air passes by the water during inhalation and/or exhalation.
A need therefore exists for an underwater breathing device that eliminates or reduces some or all of the above-described problems.
One aspect is an exhalation valve that may be used in an underwater breathing device. The exhalation valve is potentially configured to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user of the underwater breathing device. The exhalation valve may include a plate defining an exhalation port and at least one chamber port, an exhalation conduit connected to the exhalation port, and a flexible membrane that is sealable against a surface of the plate. A lower portion of the exhalation conduit may be divided by a septum which divides the exhalation conduit and the exhalation port into a first exhalation port connected to a first exhalation conduit and a second exhalation port connected to a second exhalation conduit. The flexible membrane may be sized and positioned to be capable of sealing the first exhalation port and the second exhalation port. The flexible membrane can be configured to have a fully-sealed position, a partially-sealed position, and an unsealed position. In the fully-sealed position, the flexible membrane seals the first and second exhalation ports such that substantially no air nor water can flow through the first nor the second exhalation ports. In the partially-sealed position, the flexible membrane seals the second exhalation port but does not seal the first exhalation port such that air and water can flow from the chamber port(s) through the first exhalation port and substantially no water can flow from the second exhalation conduit through the second exhalation port. In the unsealed position, the flexible membrane does not seal the first nor second exhalation ports such that air and water can flow from the chamber port(s) through the first and second exhalation ports.
Another aspect is an exhalation valve that may include a plate defining a chamber port or ports and an exhalation conduit connected to the plate with each of the chamber ports having a sidewall oriented substantially parallel to the orientation of a sidewall of the exhalation conduit. Further, the first exhalation port and the first exhalation conduit may be substantially crescent-shaped and the second exhalation port and the second exhalation conduit may be substantially marquise-shaped. Moreover, a volume defined by the first exhalation conduit may be less than a volume defined by the second exhalation conduit. In addition, the flexible membrane may further include a first protrusion formed on the flexible membrane that is sized and positioned such that the first protrusion extends into the first exhalation conduit when the flexible membrane is in the fully-sealed position. Also, the flexible membrane may further include a second protrusion formed on the flexible membrane that is sized and positioned such that the second protrusion extends into the second exhalation conduit when the flexible membrane is in the fully-sealed position or in the partially-sealed position. The first protrusion may be sized and positioned to bias against a sidewall of the first exhalation conduit as the flexible membrane transitions to the fully-sealed position in order to dampen vibration in the flexible membrane. The second protrusion may be sized and positioned to bias against the septum as the flexible membrane transitions to the fully-sealed position or into the partially-sealed position in order to dampen vibration in the flexible membrane. Further, the largest open dimension of the chamber port(s) may be smaller than the largest open dimension of the second exhalation port.
Yet another aspect is an underwater breathing device that may be configured to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user of the underwater breathing device. The underwater breathing device may include a chamber and a valve. The chamber may include a breathing port and an exhalation port. The chamber may be configured such that when air is being exhaled through the breathing port into the chamber in a manner that restricts air from simultaneously escaping through the breathing port, there is no unrestricted passageway out of the chamber through which air can exit the underwater breathing device and, as a result, the exhaled air creates an exhalation pressure within the chamber. The valve may include a plate defining an exhalation port, an exhalation conduit connected to the exhalation port, and a flexible membrane that is sealable against a surface of the plate. A lower portion of the exhalation conduit may divided by a septum which divides the exhalation conduit and the exhalation port into a first exhalation port connected to a first exhalation conduit and a second exhalation port connected to a second exhalation conduit. The flexible membrane may be sized and positioned to be capable of sealing the first exhalation port and the second exhalation port. The flexible membrane may be configured such that an opening force, comprising any exhalation pressure within the chamber, biases the flexible membrane in a first direction and a closing force biases the flexible membrane in a second direction, the first direction being substantially opposite the second direction. The flexible membrane may be configured to have a fully-sealed position, a partially-sealed position, and an unsealed position. In the fully-sealed position, the flexible membrane seals the first and second exhalation ports such that substantially no air nor water can flow through the first and second exhalation ports. In the partially-sealed position, the flexible membrane seals the second exhalation port but does not seal the first exhalation port such that air and water can flow from the chamber port(s) through the first exhalation port and substantially no water can flow from the second exhalation conduit through the second exhalation port. In the unsealed position, the flexible membrane does not seal the first and second exhalation ports such that air and water can flow from the chamber port(s) through the first and second exhalation ports.
A further aspect is that the closing force of an underwater breathing device may include ambient water pressure when at least a portion of the underwater breathing device is submerged in water. In addition, the opening force of an underwater breathing device may further include a biasing pressure of the flexible membrane. Moreover, a volume defined by the second exhalation conduit may be at least twice the volume defined by the first exhalation conduit.
Yet another aspect is an underwater breathing device configured to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user of the underwater breathing device. The underwater breathing device may include a chamber and a valve. The chamber may include a breathing port and an exhalation port. The chamber may be configured such that when air is being exhaled through the breathing port into the chamber in a manner that restricts air from simultaneously escaping through the breathing port, there is no unrestricted passageway out of the chamber through which air can exit the underwater breathing device and, as a result, the exhaled air creates an exhalation pressure within the chamber. The valve may be configured to restrict airflow from the chamber through the exhalation port such that, when the chamber is submerged in water, any exhalation pressure within the chamber combined with a biasing pressure of the valve biases the valve in a first direction and ambient water pressure biases the valve in a second direction, with the first direction being substantially opposite the second direction. The valve may be configured to have a fully-sealed position and an unsealed position. When in the fully-sealed position, substantially no air nor water can flow through the exhalation port. The valve may be disposed in the fully-sealed position when any exhalation pressure within the chamber combined with a biasing pressure of the valve is substantially less than the ambient water pressure. When in the unsealed position, air and water can flow from the chamber through the exhalation port. The valve may be disposed in the unsealed position when any exhalation pressure within the chamber combined with a biasing pressure of the valve is substantially greater than the ambient water pressure.
Still another aspect is an underwater breathing device that includes a valve configured to have a partially-sealed position. When in the partially-sealed position, air and water can flow from the chamber through the first exhalation port but not through the second exhalation port. The valve may be disposed in the partially-sealed position when any exhalation pressure within the chamber combined with a biasing pressure of the valve is substantially equal to the ambient water pressure.
These and other aspects of example embodiments of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description of example embodiments.
The appended drawings contain figures of example embodiments to further clarify the above and other aspects of the present invention. It will be appreciated that these drawings depict only example embodiments of the invention and are not intended to limit its scope. These example embodiments of invention will be described and explained with additional specificity and detail through the use of the accompanying drawings in which:
Example embodiments of the invention are generally directed toward an exhalation valve for use in an underwater breathing device. The exhalation valve is configured to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user of the underwater breathing device and to minimize or eliminate a gurgle that can occur upon exhalation if water is present in the path of the exhaled air. Example embodiments of the present invention, however, are not limited to underwater breathing devices. It will be understood that, in light of the present disclosure, the structures disclosed herein can be successfully used in connection with any device that is intended to produce positive end-expiratory pressure in the airway of a user or to reduce a gurgle in any such device. For example, the structures disclosed herein can be employed in scuba or snuba equipment to provide positive end-expiratory pressure, or may be used in connection with ventilator tubing for patients in a hospital to reduce a gurgle in said tubing.
Additionally, to assist in the description of the exhalation valve, words such as top, bottom, front, rear, right, left and side are used to describe the accompanying figures, which are not necessarily drawn to scale. It will be appreciated, however, that the example embodiments of the present invention disclosed herein can be located in a variety of desired positions within an underwater breathing device or other device—including various angles, sideways and even upside down. A detailed description of the exhalation valve for use in an underwater breathing device now follows.
As discussed below and shown in the accompanying figures, the exhalation valve may be used in connection with an underwater breathing device such as a scuba or snuba regulator, or a snorkel. For example, the exhalation valve may function in connection with an inhalation valve of a snorkel, or the exhalation valve may be combined with the inhalation valve. The exhalation valve may be placed at the top or the bottom of the breathing conduit of a snorkel, whether the snorkel includes only a single breathing conduit, or includes both an inhalation channel and an exhalation channel. The exhalation valve is generally configured to open when the user of the snorkel exhales to allow the exhaled air to exit the snorkel. The exhalation valve is also generally configured to close when the user of the snorkel is not exhaling, as during inhalation or between breaths. Where the snorkel includes both an inhalation channel and an exhalation channel, the closed exhalation valve may prevent exhaled air remaining within the exhalation channel from passing back into the inhalation channel, thereby directing the exhaled air through the proper exhalation channel. It may also prevent water present in the exhalation channel from entering the inhalation channel, thus avoiding the aspiration of water by the user of the snorkel.
Turning now to
As disclosed in
The connecting tube 108 connects a bottom end of the main tube 106 to the junction 110. The exhalation valve 112 is generally enclosed within the junction 110 and allows air to be exhaled out of the snorkel though the exhalation exit port 104. The bottom cap 114 is attached to the bottom of the junction 110 and allows ambient water pressure from the water into which the snorkel 100 is partially submerged to interact with an exhalation valve 112, as discussed elsewhere herein. The mouthpiece 116 is attached to the top of the junction 110 and allows a user to breathe in air that entered the snorkel 100 through inhalation valve 102 and breathe out air that can exit the snorkel through the exhalation valve 112 and the exhalation exit port 104.
As disclosed in
The positive end-expiratory pressure produced by the exhalation valve 112 may reduce the overall work of underwater breathing. Further, the positive end-expiratory pressure may help to preserve lung volumes by reducing inhalation muscle fatigue caused by underwater breathing. In addition, the positive end-expiratory pressure may also improve the gas exchange function of alveolar air sacs and related structures in the lungs. Moreover, the positive end-expiratory pressure may also reduce the resting respiratory rate of a user during underwater breathing. Additionally, the positive end-expiratory pressure may also lengthen comfortable single-breath dive times by protecting lung volumes and improving alveolar gas exchange.
With reference now to
The plate 202 also defines an exhalation port 206. The lower mount 200 also includes an exhalation conduit 208 connected to the exhalation port 206. As disclosed in
As disclosed in
Also disclosed in
With reference now to
With reference now to
With reference now to
a. Inhalation
With reference first to
During inhalation, as disclosed in
As disclosed in
b. Beginning Stage of Normal Exhalation
With reference now to
c. Later Stage of Normal Exhalation
With reference now to
The combination of the exhalation pressure 128 with the biasing pressure 310 may be necessary in situations where the ambient water pressure 128 is excessively high to counteract solely with the exhalation pressure 128. For example, where a user of the snorkel swims along the surface of a body of water, the flexible membrane 300 may be submerged at a depth of about 28 cm while the center of the user's lungs may only be submerged at a depth of about 13 cm. In this situation, the flexible membrane 300 may be configured to exert a biasing pressure 310 equivalent to or in the range of the depth difference between the centroid of the user's lungs and the flexible membrane 300. In this example, the biasing pressure 310 may be between about 10 cm water pressure and about 15 cm water pressure in order to account for the difference between the water pressure acting on the user's lungs and the water pressure acting on the flexible membrane 300. This would provide between about 0 cm water pressure and about 5 cm water pressure as positive end-expiratory pressure to the user, which may be physiologically comfortable for many users. A modest exhalation pressure increase relative to the depth of the centroid of the user's lungs may be accomplished by employing the example exhalation valve disclosed herein. It is understood that these depths are only estimates and may vary depending on the size and/or swimming technique of the user.
As disclosed in
In addition,
As disclosed elsewhere herein, the septum 210 may be off-center within the exhalation conduit 208 and may also be curved. The combination of being off-center and being curved results in the first exhalation conduit 214 having a slim crescent-shaped profile, which causes the velocity of the air 150 traveling through the first exhalation conduit 214 to be relatively high. Once the water 170 is pushed by the air 150 into the first exhalation conduit 214, the relatively high air velocity of the air 150 within the first exhalation conduit 214 results in the water 170 being pushed all the way to the top of the septum 210. Once the water 170 arrives at the top of the septum 210, a substantial portion of the water 170 can spill over the septum 210 into the second exhalation conduit 218, where the water will be trapped pending a forceful exhalation by the user, as discussed below in connection with
With reference now to
d. Forceful Exhalation
With reference now to
In the unsealed position disclosed in
With reference now to
In order to dampen this noise and vibration, the first protrusion 306 of the flexible membrane 300 is sized and positioned to bias against a sidewall of the first exhalation conduit 214 as the flexible membrane transitions to the fully-sealed position in order to dampen vibration in the flexible membrane 300. Similarly, the second protrusion 308 of the flexible membrane 300 is sized and positioned to bias against the septum 210 as the flexible membrane transitions to the fully-sealed position or transitions to the partially-sealed position in order to dampen vibration in the flexible membrane 300.
As disclosed in
Although this invention has been described in terms of certain example embodiments, other example embodiments are possible. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is intended to be defined only by the claims which follow.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/437,113, entitled “Exhalation Valve For Use In An Underwater Breathing Device,” filed on May 18, 2006, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/453,462, entitled “Underwater Breathing Devices And Methods,” filed on Jun. 3, 2003, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/385,327, filed Jun. 3, 2002. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/437,113 also claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/683,477, entitled “Valves, Baffles, Shortened Snorkels, Stealth Snorkels, Snorkel Equipment Combined with Scuba Equipment,” filed on May 21, 2005, and U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/728,193, entitled “Snorkel Valve,” filed on Oct. 19, 2005. This application also claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/890,795, entitled “Membrane Flow Contour Feature,” filed on Feb. 20, 2007. Each of these applications is hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60890795 | Feb 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11437113 | May 2006 | US |
Child | 12034617 | US |