1. Field of the Invention
Fluid seals
2. Description of Related Art
Presently available seals leak when especially challenged to seal against high and variable pressure differences, and to securely confine important or valuable fluids. Not only do presently available seals leak under such circumstances, but their leakage is variable and unpredictable.
The invention aims to improve the leak resistance of seals used for such challenging circumstances. The invention also aims to provide seals that are reliable, highly leak resistant, predictable, and inexpensive enough to be used in many applications.
The inventive seal accomplishes its improvements by using a resilient carrier holding compressible sealing rings. The sealing rings are preferably arranged on opposed limbs of the carrier, and the carrier is formed to have a resistance bias against pressing the limbs, with their sealing rings, toward each other. Then when the seal is installed in a sealing position, the resilient carrier limbs are squeezed together, which the carrier resists by pressing the sealing rings against sealing surfaces.
In such a sealing position, a space between the opposed carrier limbs is preferably exposed to a higher pressure than outer surfaces of the limbs bearing the sealing elements. Orienting the seal to expose the space between the resilient limbs to a higher pressure effectively exploits a pressure difference between a sealed fluid and an ambient atmosphere, which is used to increase the outward bias of the carrier limbs. This helps the seal remain leak resistant during variations in the sealed and unsealed pressure differences.
Four related and preferred versions of the inventive seal are shown schematically in
Within these figure groups, FIGS. 1,5,9, and 13 show exploded views of preferred circular embodiments of resilient carriers and compressible sealing rings.
FIGS. 2,6,10, and 14, show diametrical cross-sections of the seals of FIGS. 1,5,9, and 13 respectively.
FIGS. 3,7,11, and 15 show enlarged fragments of the views of FIGS. 2,6,10, and 14, respectively.
FIGS. 4,8,12, and 16 show enlarged, fragmentary views of typical installations of the seals of FIGS. 1,5,9, and 13, respectively.
The preferably circular seal assembly 10 is shown in an exploded form in
Assembly 10 comprises a resilient carrier 15 and a pair of sealing rings 12. Carrier 15 is preferably formed with a pair of opposed limbs 16, the outward facing surfaces of which have grooves 17. Rings 12 are fitted into grooves 17 to form seal assembly 10, which can then be deployed as schematically shown in
Carrier 15 is preferably formed of resilient material, which can include a variety of metals and resins that are spring-like in their capability of developing a resilient bias against deformation. For cross-sectionally U-shaped carrier 15, as illustrated in
Carrier 15 is preferably machined of a spring steel alloy such as 17-1, 18-8, 3C2, and the Inconel® family of metals. Other spring steel alloys can also be used, as well as resilient resin carriers. The aim is to give seal assembly 10 significantly more resilience than can be expected from relying on the more limited resilience of sealing elements engaging sealing surfaces. It also allows the combined resilience of carrier 15 and sealing elements 12 to be applied in a limited or confined space. For example, carrier 15 and sealing rings 12 are preferably formed to have a compact shape or low-profile in an axial direction to meet the dimensional needs of face or axial seals, such as schematically shown in
Sealing rings 12, can also be made of a wide variety of materials that are preferably compressible, resilient, and resistant to fluids encountered in a sealing application. They also preferably compress evenly so that they can engage sealing surfaces smoothly and reliably. Examples of suitable materials for sealing rings 12 include Kel-F, Torlon®, PEEK, Vespel®, and the Teflon® families. Grooves that are formed in carriers 15, 35, 55, and 75 are preferably made deep enough to receive more than half the thickness of respective sealing rings. This helps the sealing rings deform in compression, rather than bulging laterally as they are pressed against sealing surfaces.
When seal 10 is deployed in a gland 14 of a closed container 20, as schematically shown in
The seal that is accomplished in the installation illustrated in
The axial or face seal assembly 30 of
Seal assembly 50, as shown in
Seal assembly 70, as shown in
The illustrated preferred embodiments can be varied in many ways that are not shown. Different configurations of carriers can produce flexible limbs having grooves formed in different limb regions. A circular form with a cross-sectional U-shape is preferred for resilient seal carriers, but other forms or x, y, or other cross-sectional shapes are also possible.