The invention relates to an expansion tank which is intended to be connected to a pipe system which is filled or is to be filled with a liquid, comprising a closed tank with at least one connection opening for a liquid pipe, the tank being provided with a main valve inside the tank, the main valve having a valve seat and a closure member which interacts with the valve seat and being designed to close off the connection opening at a defined difference between the pressure in the interior of the tank and the pressure in the connection opening and/or at a defined liquid level in the tank.
An expansion tank of this type known from, for example, CH-A-397190 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,301,275.
In the known expansion tanks the closure member of the main valve is a float body or connected to a float body. A drawback of the known expansion tanks is that in a situation wherein there is a high-speed liquid flow out of the expansion tank to the pipe system the closure member may dragged along with the liquid flow resulting in a closure of the main valve and a further drop of the pressure in the pipe system. When this happens the difference between the pressure in the interior of the expansion tank and the pressure in the connection opening may become higher than the pressure in the expansion when it was delivered ex works. This is undesirable, in particular when there is still a considerable amount of liquid in the expansion tank at the moment the main valve is closed. In that case it is difficult to bring the pipe system with expansion tank back into the normal operating conditions.
A difference between the pressure in the interior of the expansion tank and the pressure in the connection opening which is higher than the pressure in the expansion tank when it was delivered may also arise if so much gas has been released out of the pipe system into the tank that there is an excessive quantity of gas in the tank.
It is an object of the invention to provide an expansion tank of the above type which does not have the above mentioned drawbacks.
This object is achieved by an expansion tank which is intended to be connected to a pipe system which is filled or is to be filled with a liquid, comprising a closed tank with at least one connection opening for a liquid pipe, the tank being provided with a main valve inside the tank, the main valve having a valve seat and a closure member which interacts with the valve seat and being designed to close off the connection opening at a defined difference between the pressure in the interior of the tank and the pressure in the connection opening and/or at a defined liquid level in the tank, the tank being further provided with an additional valve in a channel extending through the closure member of the main valve from the interior of the tank to the connection opening, which additional valve is closed during normal operation of the expansion tank when connected to a pipe system filled with liquid and opens if the difference between the pressure in the interior of the tank and the pressure in the connection opening is higher than the original pressure in the expansion tank when it was delivered ex works.
With such an additional valve the difference between the pressure in the interior of the expansion tank and the pressure in the connection opening will drop to a level which is substantially equal to the pressure in the expansion tank when the tank was delivered ex works.
Preferred embodiments of the expansion tank according to the invention are defined in the subclaims.
The invention will be explained in more detail in the following description with reference to the drawing, in which:
a-c show a part of a first embodiment of an expansion tank according to the invention,
a-c show a part of a second embodiment of an expansion tank according to the invention,
a-d show a part of a third embodiment of an expansion tank according to the invention,
a-b show a part of a fourth embodiment of an expansion tank according to the invention.
In
In
a-c show a part of a first embodiment of an expansion tank 1 according to the invention. The expansion tank 1 is intended to be connected to a pipe system which is filled or is to be filled with a liquid, for example a heating system, as shown in
The expansion tank 1 is provided with a valve which is denoted overall by reference numeral 41. The valve 41 comprises a valve seat 42, which is connected to the connection opening 3 and a closure member 43. The valve seat 42 is of substantially cylindrical design. The closure member 43 is in disc form and is provided, on the side facing the valve seat 42, with a sealing ring 44 made from relatively soft material, such as rubber, which can interact with the end side of the valve seat 42 in order to close the valve 41. The closure member 43 is pressed away from the valve seat 44 by a compression spring 45. The closure member 43, for actuation of the valve 41, is provided, on the side facing towards the interior of the tank 2, with a cup-like element 46 which is fixed to the closure member 43 and is open towards the interior of the tank 2.
At the location of the closure member 43 in which there is a central passage 60, an additional valve 61 supplements the valve 41. By means of this additional valve 61 the interior of the tank 2 comes into communication with the connection opening 3 when the pressure difference between the interior of the tank 2 and the connection opening 3 becomes higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered ex works.
Such a high pressure difference may arise if so much gas has been released out of the pipe system into the tank 2 that there is an excessive quantity of gas in the tank 2, resulting in an excessively high gas pressure, which is higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered. The additional valve 61 provides for a discharge of the excess gas in the tank 2 to the connection opening 3.
A pressure difference between the interior of the tank 2 and the connection opening 3 which is higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered may also arise if the speed of liquid flowing out of the tank 2 into the pipe system is so high that the closure member 43 is dragged along with the liquid flowing out of the tank 2 resulting in a closure of the valve is closed and a further drop of the pressure in the pipe system.
Under normal operating conditions the additional valve 61 is closed by virtue of the fact that the spring 45 presses the closure member 63 of the valve 61 onto the sealing ring 44 and in this way closes off the passage 60. The spring 45 is dimensioned in such a manner that on the one hand it holds the valve 41 open when the pressure in the tank 2 and in the connection opening 3 is equal and on the other hand the valve 61 is opened by pressure in the tank 2 in the event that the pressure difference between the interior of the tank 2 and the connection opening 3 becomes higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered ex works.
Normal operation of the valve 41 is illustrated in
a shows the position of the valve 41 when the expansion tank 1 is delivered ex works. The tank 2 is then full of pressurised gas. The pressure of the gas presses the closure member 43 onto the valve seat 42, counter to the spring force of the spring 45, so that the valve 41 is closed. The additional valve 61 is also closed.
b shows the situation in which the expansion tank 1 is connected to a liquid-filled pipe system. The pressure in this pipe system is equal to the pressure in the tank 2, which is higher than the pressure of the gas in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered. The spring 45 ensures that the closure member 43 is pressed away from the valve seat 42, so that there is an open connection between the connection opening 3 (and therefore the pipe system) and the interior of the tank 2. Also in this situation the additional valve 61 is closed.
c shows how the valve 41 is closed as soon as the liquid level 47 has reached a minimum after a drop in the level. The weight of the liquid which has remained behind in the cup-like element 46 presses the closure member 43 onto the valve seat 42, counter to the spring force of the spring 45, and the valve is closed. The additional valve 61 is also closed.
When for one the reasons mentioned above (excessive quantity of gas in the tank 2 or liquid flowing out of the tank 2 at high speed) the valve 41 is closed and the pressure difference between the interior of the expansion tank 2 and the connection opening 3 is higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank was delivered the additional valve 61 is opened, counter to the spring force of the spring 45, and water or gas can flow out of the tank 2 to the opening 3.
a-c show a part of a second embodiment of an expansion tank according to the invention. In this embodiment the valve 51 is of a slightly different design as the valve 41 in the embodiment shown in
The expansion tank 1 has an additional valve. The additional valve is designed as a small valve 71 in a channel 72 in the body 56. The channel 72 extends from the top side of the body 56 to the region of the bottom side of the body 56 inside the sealing ring 54. The valve 71 has a valve seat 73, a closure member 74 and a spring 75 which presses the closure member 74 on the valve seat 73.
When the expansion tank 1 is delivered ex works the pressure of the gas in the tank 2 is sufficient to hold the valve 51 closed for the purpose of storage, transport and installation of the expansion tank.
The way in which the valve 51 operates in normal situations is illustrated in
In
b shows how the valve 51 closes when the body 56 on top of the closure member 53 of the valve 51 dries out as the liquid level 57 drops.
When for one the reasons mentioned above (excessive quantity of gas in the tank 2 or liquid flowing out of the tank 2 at high speed) the valve 51 is closed and the pressure difference between the interior of the tank 2 and the connection opening 3 is higher than the original pressure in the tank 2 when the expansion tank 1 was delivered the additional valve 71 is opened, counter to the spring force of the spring 75, and water or gas can flow out of the expansion 2 to the connection opening 3. This situation is shown in
a-d show a part of a third embodiment of an expansion tank 1 with an additional valve.
In
The valve 51 in
During normal operation of the expansion tank 2 the valve 51 is open and liquid can flow in and out of the expansion tank 2 (
When the liquid level 57 in the tank 2 drops to a level as shown in
When the valve 51 is closed as a result of liquid flowing out of the tank 2 at high speed the needle valve 88,91 will still be open as long as there is enough liquid in the tank 2 and the cup-like body 56 (
When the liquid level in the tank 2 and in the cup-like element 86 drops to the level shown in
The advantage of the embodiment of the expansion tank 1 of
If in the situation shown in
a-b show a part of a fourth embodiment of an expansion tank 1 with two additional valves.
The embodiment of
If, in the situation wherein the both the valve 51 and the additional valve 88,91 are closed, the pressure in the tank is still too high the second additional valve 93 is opened and liquid and/or gas can be discharged through the second additional valve 93 and the channel 94 to the connection opening 3, as shown in
In
It will be clear for a skilled person that within the scope of the claims the design of the various components of the expansion tank according to the invention may be varied.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1022985 | Mar 2003 | NL | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2979070 | Payne | Apr 1961 | A |
3082793 | Sugimura | Mar 1963 | A |
3148702 | Mercier | Sep 1964 | A |
3301275 | Brady | Jan 1967 | A |
4164242 | Sandau | Aug 1979 | A |
4386627 | Lachaux | Jun 1983 | A |
4742842 | Garneau et al. | May 1988 | A |
6682316 | Boke | Jan 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
397190 | Aug 1965 | CH |
1390095 | May 1988 | FR |
WO 0107356 | Feb 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040182945 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |