The present invention relates to a floating craft such as a ship fitted with means for recovering polluting fluid in the event of an emergency, and to a method for recovering this fluid.
Patents FR2849640, FR2869012 and FR2878225 belonging to the applicant describe various systems for recovering a polluting fluid from inside the tanks of a ship in distress, that is to say a ship that has run aground or sunk.
These systems use the principle of expelling the polluting fluid from the tank under the effect of injecting seawater into the tank.
In these systems of the prior art, the ship must be fitted with specific means dedicated to the operations for recovering the polluting fluid: the installation of these specific means requires additional deck piercings, and generates increased complexity and increased costs relative to a standard ship not provided with such recovery means.
The invention provides a ship fitted with means for recovering polluting fluid requiring fewer additional deck piercings or even none at all.
This invention provides a floating craft such as a ship comprising at least one tank of polluting fluid and at least one salvage connector communicating with said tank, notable in that this connector is connected to said tank by connecting means whereof at least a portion is assigned to at least one function which is operational outside salvage situations.
By virtue of these features, the connector is connected to a member which, in normal times, is used for other functions on the floating craft.
In other words, this means that it is not necessary to provide ducts specifically reserved for the operations of recovering polluting fluid in the event of an emergency: in this way, it is possible to dispense with piercing the deck of the floating craft with additional ducts, and to limit the increased complexity and costs related thereto.
According to other optional features of the floating craft according to the invention:
The present invention also relates to a method for extracting a polluting fluid situated in at least one tank of a floating craft such as a ship in distress, notable in that the user pumps said fluid through at least one duct which is assigned at least partly to at least one function which is operational outside salvage situations.
The present invention also relates to a method for extracting a polluting fluid situated in at least one tank of a floating craft such as a ship in distress, notable in that the user injects an expulsion fluid such as seawater into said tank through at least a first duct and in that the user recovers said polluting fluid through at least a second duct, at least one of these two ducts being assigned at least partly to at least one function that is operational outside salvage situations.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear in the light of the following description and on examination of the appended figures in which:
Reference is now made to
This bunker comprises two ventilation ducts 7a and 7b piercing the deck 3 and each surmounted on the one hand by a vent 9a, 9b and on the other hand by a connector 11a, 11b fitted in a T-connection to these ducts.
An exemplary embodiment of such a connector can be seen in
In this first variant, the two ducts 7a and 7b are ducts which exist independently of the question of recovering fluid situated inside the bunker 1 in the event of an emergency; it is however possible to envisage that the diameter of these two ducts is different from that of the ducts that are used routinely for ventilating the bunker 1.
The variant of
This second variant is particularly well-illustrated in
In the variant that can be seen in
In the variant that can be seen in
An overflow duct 27 is moreover provided, this duct making it possible to draw off into a circuit 29 the overflow of fluid situated inside the bunker 1.
To this overflow duct 27, existing on a standard ship, is fitted a salvage duct 31, surmounted by a connector 11b situated on the deck 3 of the ship 5.
Reference is now made to
As is seen in these figures, the connectors designed for salvage operations are in this case incorporated into various members for communication with the tank.
As is known per se, such a ventilation duct may be surmounted by a ventilator 35.
In
In this case, the connector 11 may be fitted in a T-connection to the duct 39, so as to be directed upward, as can be seen in
In the variant shown in
In the variant shown in
As is known per se, such a cleaning plug forms a passageway through the deck 3 of the ship making it possible to insert into the tank 1 tools for cleaning this tank.
Naturally any other combination of the members represented in
The operating mode and the advantages of the invention result directly from the foregoing description.
As it will have been possible to understand, the connectors 11 are connected to ducts which fulfill particular functions when the ship 3 is in a normal operating mode, that is to say outside salvage situations: these ducts make it possible, for example, to provide the ventilation, the decompression, the dipping, the filling, the emptying, the inspection or else the cleaning of the tank.
Installing the connectors 11 on these ducts therefore makes it possible to limit the number of piercings through the deck 3 of the ship 5, and therefore to reduce the complexity and the cost of installation of these salvage connectors.
It should be noted in addition that limiting the number of these piercings makes it possible to limit the number of weak points in the deck 3, and to increase free space on this deck.
In the event of an emergency for the ship 5, that is to say in particular in the event of stranding or sinking, salvors pierce the blind flanges 17 of the connectors 11 for example by means of a bell saw (or else they can unbolt this flange), and they attach to these connectors pipes making it possible on the one hand to inject seawater under pressure into the tank 1, and, on the other hand, to recover the polluting fluid situated inside the tank 1, expelled due to the inflow of the seawater.
Note that ensuring that the connectors 11 are situated on the deck 3 considerably eases access to them particularly by means of an ROV (remotely operated underwater vehicle).
Naturally, the present invention is in no way limited to the embodiments described and shown but are provided simply as examples.
It is in this way, for example, that it would be possible to envisage a single salvage connector per tank, mounted on a duct assigned at least partly to at least one function which is operational outside salvage situations: such a single connector would make it possible to introduce a pumping hose into the tank of a ship that has run aground or a ship of which at least one of the tanks has a breach.
It is in this way also that it would be possible to envisage more than two salvage connectors per tank.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
07 03211 | May 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2008/000515 | 4/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/17/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/142288 | 11/27/2008 | WO | A |
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4014358 | Andersson | Mar 1977 | A |
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4408943 | McTamaney et al. | Oct 1983 | A |
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5052319 | Beyrouty | Oct 1991 | A |
5795103 | Gaerlan | Aug 1998 | A |
6076480 | Chang et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
7004095 | Bronneberg et al. | Feb 2006 | B2 |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
9490174.0 | Jun 1995 | DE |
2849640 | Jul 2004 | FR |
2869012 | Oct 2005 | FR |
2878225 | May 2006 | FR |
2281060 | Feb 1995 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100089457 A1 | Apr 2010 | US |