The present invention relates to a method for producing an inflatable lifting cushion and a lifting cushion.
Lifting cushions (also called lift cushions, compressed air cushions, pressure cushions or pneumatic lifting sets) are devices that can be inflated with compressed air and used to lift loads. For example, lifting cushions can be used as lifting equipment in rescue and disaster relief. For example, people can be freed using lifting cushions in the event of earthquakes. In addition, lifting cushions can be used to lift loads such as vehicles or aircraft during maintenance or repair work.
In most cases, lifting cushions are flat in the initial state, i.e. in the state before filling with compressed air, on the one hand so that the lifting cushions can be inserted into small gaps and on the other hand to allow for simplified storage of the lifting cushions. Lifting cushions are usually made of vulcanizable material (e.g. rubber). Using compressed air, the lifting cushions are inflated. In this case, the material expands in a predetermined direction by design, e.g. upward, and thus performs the necessary lifting work. Lifting cushions are usually operated with a pressure of up to 12 bar. Normative regulations require a safety factor of 4, so that lifting cushions must withstand a pressure of 48 bar without damage. Since none of the vulcanizable materials used are able to bear the high incident stresses by themselves, fabrics are incorporated into the material for reinforcement. These fabrics are embedded in a matrix of vulcanizable material so that there is sufficient flexibility to follow the change in shape of the lifting cushion during operation.
As a rule, the aforementioned requirements make it necessary for considerably more material to be applied than would be necessary from a purely mechanical point of view. On the one hand, this makes the lifting cushions particularly heavy, and on the other hand it increases the cost of material and processing times.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,938,179 discloses a method for producing a lifting cushion, in which first a layer of vulcanizable material is sprayed onto a rotationally-symmetrical molding core connected to a rotatable mandrel, the core being made of bonded sand particles. Further, a fiber layer is applied thereon by pulling a rubber-impregnated fiber from a roll and continuously winding it onto the molding core. Subsequently, an outer protective layer is applied, and the molding core is destroyed and removed. The process is complicated and expensive.
A similar process is known from EP 0 626 338 B1. In this case, continuous fibers are geodesically wound around a rotationally-symmetrical body. Subsequently, an elastomer is vulcanized onto the fibers. Alternatively, elastomer-impregnated fibers may also be wound to form the elastomer matrix. After the fiber reinforcement has been wrapped around the core, the core is removed.
EP 2 332 879 B1 discloses a lifting cushion made of a rubber material vulcanized in a press and previously in the form of a sheet, the material having an internal bladder and a shell of reinforced rubber material located outside the bladder and closely surrounding it. To produce this lifting cushion, the bladder is first made in a first vulcanizing step. The shell is then made in a second vulcanizing step, with a release agent between the shell and the bladder so that the shell is not bonded to the bladder.
The object of the present invention is to provide a novel method for producing an inflatable lifting cushion, the method enabling the production of a lifting cushion with improved mechanical stress characteristics in a simple and cost-effective manner. The object of the present invention is also to provide a corresponding lifting cushion.
The above object is solved by the features of claim 1 and of claim 14. Advantageous embodiments are claimed in the dependent claims.
According to the invention, a core is first provided which has main surfaces in the form of a front and rear side and an outer peripheral region. Then, one two-dimensional layer each, i.e. a disc made of (non fiber-reinforced) vulcanizable material or elastomer, is disposed on the front and back of the core and held there in position. Here, the two-dimensional layers can touch one another in the outer peripheral region and/or can be covered there on the outside by an additional strip layer. Then, a single- or multilayer, prefabricated two-dimensional fiber-reinforcing layer is pulled over the entire arrangement of the core and layers of vulcanizable material positioned thereon such that the fiber-reinforcing layer passes around the peripheral region and at least partially, preferably completely, covers the two-dimensional layers of vulcanizable material. Thereafter, a further two-dimensional layer, i.e. a disc made of (non-reinforced) vulcanizable material or elastomer, is applied to the outside of the fiber-reinforcing layer or arrangement in the region of the front and back side of the core. The fiber-reinforcing layer is thus embedded in sandwiched fashion in an inner and outer layer of vulcanizable material or elastomer. As a result, an optimal embedding of fiber-reinforcing layer is achieved in the vulcanizable material. In a simple manner, a sufficiently stable fiber reinforcement made of continuous fibers is applied to the outside of the vulcanizable material, which ensures uniform coverage of the vulcanizable material with continuous fibers and also and especially encloses the peripheral region with continuous fibers, which is an enormous advantage regarding the mechanical stress point of view. Finally, the arrangement is heated or hot vulcanized in such a way that a matrix composite of the fibers of the fiber-reinforcing layer and the two-dimensional layers of vulcanizable material is established. An elaborate winding of continuous fiber in a certain winding geometry including the necessary apparatus design is no longer necessary. The method according to the invention therefore provides a considerable savings effect. In the case of changes in dimensions, the method according to the invention can be changed over particularly easily, i.e. it can be adapted to production requirements. In addition, due to the new production method, there are no mechanical stress “problem areas” that would have to be remedied by an increased use of fiber windings and/or fiber-reinforced material. The lifting cushion produced by the method according to the invention is characterized by a comparatively low weight and is therefore very easy to handle. The two-dimensional layers of vulcanizable material can be single-layered or in turn can themselves comprise a plurality of layers.
Expediently, a tube or a tubular structure is used as a single-layered or multi-layered, prefabricated two-dimensional fiber-reinforcing layer which can be pulled over the arrangement of the core and the two-dimensional layers of vulcanizable material located thereon like a stocking. In this case, the above-mentioned arrangement is disposed transverse relative to the longitudinal extent of the stocking so that after the stocking is pulled on or in the case of a continuous tube after cutting off the necessary length of the fiber-reinforcing layer, the open tubular ends of the fiber-reinforcing layer are respectively beaten inward onto the front or back side of the core. The application of the fiber-reinforcing layer is particularly fast and effective. On the other hand, this method ensures a continuous fiber reinforcement around the entire circumference, without any point of separation.
Advantageously, the tubular fiber-reinforcing layer can be stretchable in diameter, so that the fiber-reinforcing layer essentially automatically sits against the front and rear side of the arrangement of the core and the two-dimensional layers disposed thereon around said arrangement or at least a part thereof.
Conveniently, the prefabricated fiber-reinforcing layer is a woven or knitted fabric.
Preferably, the fibers of the prefabricated fiber-reinforcing layer are continuous from one end to the other end of the fiber-reinforcing layer.
Because the two-dimensional layer of vulcanizable material need not have any fiber reinforcement, rubber parts, for example in the form of cut-out or punched rubber mats, can be used in a simple manner for this purpose.
In particular, the two-dimensional layer of vulcanized material may preferably, at least substantially, also have a round shape, i.e. may be used in a round disk shape. Equally well, a rectangular disc shape can be used.
In order to justify a matrix composite also in the outer peripheral region, the two-dimensional layers are dimensioned such that they touch in the outer peripheral region or at least can be brought into contact there.
Alternatively or additionally, an additional strip running along the circumference of the peripheral region, which likewise consists of vulcanizable material or elastomer, can be placed or arranged in the outer peripheral region of the two-dimensional layers. The strip covers the peripheral region of the two-dimensional layers and is also covered on the outside thereof by the fiber-reinforcing layer.
The peripheral region of the core is designed tapered in cross-section. This facilitates the merging of the two-dimensional layers in the outer peripheral region. Preferably, the core has a lens-like shape. Alternatively, viewed in cross-section, the core may also have a round, ellipsoidal or even rectangular basic shape or a combination thereof, which makes it possible to produce lifting cushions of an appropriate shape as required and depending on the intended use.
Conveniently, the core consists of a material which is removed after vulcanization or heating. In particular, the core is a material which can be washed out or rinsed out with liquid, for example chalk. Advantageously, in this process step this material can be flushed out during the final inspection of the lifting cushion in which water is usually injected into the lifting cushion for pressure testing purposes. Also useful would be a core made of material which is soluble in a liquid, for example water, or a heat-shrinkable material such as Styrofoam, or a material which is bonded to a heat-sensitive adhesive or a combination of a plurality of the aforementioned options.
If a lifting cushion with so-called pole caps is desired, a pole cap can be attached to the front side and/or to the back side of the core according to the method according to the invention before applying the two-dimensional layers. In this case, the two-dimensional layers of vulcanizable material are provided with cut-outs corresponding to the size of the pole caps. With regard to the fiber-reinforcing layer, which has a circumferential end region in particular in the case of tubular form, this is of very particular advantage since this circumferential end region can advantageously cling to the pole cap.
Preferably, the fiber-reinforcing layer or its annular end region is to be designed such that the layer or the end region thereof reaches the pole cap or is taken up by the pole cap. As a result, an advantageous reinforcement effect is ensured even in the transition region from the lifting cushion material to the pole cap.
The present invention also relates, secondarily, to an inflatable lifting cushion according to claim 16. The lifting cushion according to the invention has the advantage that on the one hand it is very simple and inexpensive to produce, and on the other hand has very good mechanical stress properties. In addition, the lifting cushion according to the invention is characterized by a comparatively low weight and is consequently very easy to handle.
The good mechanical stress properties of the lifting cushion according to the invention also result from the fact that the fibers of the two-dimensional fiber-reinforcing layer extend around the peripheral region and into the front and back sides of the lifting cushion, respectively, in an uninterrupted continuous arrangement along the outer peripheral region of the lifting cushion.
The fiber-reinforcing layer can form overlapping areas on the front and/or back side, whereby the total weight of the lifting cushion is not adversely affected and also the mechanical stress properties suffer no disadvantage from this.
Alternatively, if the fiber-reinforcing layer has sufficient flexibility, the respective cut-off end portion may terminate in the central region of the front and back side of the lifting cushion, respectively. This is possible because the fiber ends according to the invention are located in this area and the fiber end pieces have the least detrimental effect there from a mechanical stress point of view.
An expedient embodiment of the lifting cushion according to the invention has a two-dimensional layer, such as a disc, made of vulcanizable material or elastomer on both the inside of the fiber-reinforcing layer and on the outside thereof. The lifting cushion may preferably have a round or rectangular shape. Both shapes can be produced in a simple manner with the method according to the invention.
Preferably, a pole cap is provided on the front and/or back side of the inflatable lift bag, the fiber-reinforcing layer having a preferably annular end portion which extends toward or is received by the pole caps.
Due to the fact that the pole cap has a receptacle or step which receives the respective end regions of the two-dimensional layer and/or the fiber-reinforcing layer, a particularly intimate mechanical connection is achieved between the pole cap and the inflatable lifting cushion.
Advantageous embodiments of the method and lifting cushion according to the invention are explained below with reference to the drawing figures. The figures show the following:
Reference numeral 1 in
The filling of the lifting cushion 1 is usually carried out with compressed air, which is generated via a compressed air source 2, for example a compressed air cylinder, and is supplied via a hose 4 to the lifting cushion 1. Between the lifting cushion 1 and the compressed air source 2 is a control valve 3, by means of which the operator can control the lifting of the lifting cushion. In the inflated, unloaded state, the lifting cushion has approximately the shape shown by the dotted outline.
The manufacture of the inventive, for example lenticular lifting cushion 1, will be described in more detail below. First, a core 5 is provided, which when viewed in cross-section, has approximately a lenticular basic shape, for example. The core 5 comprises a front side 5a, a back side 5b and a circumferential peripheral region 5c which approximately correspond in orientation to the front side 1a, the bottom side 1b and the peripheral region 1c of the lifting cushion 1 from
The core 5 consists of a solid material, such as chalk, which can be removed from the lifting cushion 1 after the production thereof. After provision of the core 5, as shown in
According to
Subsequently, the free ends of the fiber-reinforcing tube must be pushed inwards and form joints 10a, 10b approximately in the central region of the front and back sides 5a, 5b of the core 5 joints. The fiber-reinforcing tube may alternatively have a flexibility that causes the protruding areas to more or less automatically sit against the front or back side of the arrangement or at least against a part thereof. In any case, the arrangement according to
After the ends of the fiber-reinforcing tube are pushed in, the fibers end at these joints 10a, 10b as shown in
Thereafter, according to
The arrangement is now subjected to a hot vulcanization step in which the vulcanizable material of the layers 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d is liquefied and forms an intimate elastomer/fiber matrix with the fibers of the fiber-reinforcing layer 7. The layers 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d thus lose their interfaces and form a uniform layer of elastomer in which the fibers are embedded.
After cooling the assembly, the hose 4 is connected via the valve 11 and the core 5 is flushed out by means of water, for example. The core 5 dissolves gradually, as indicated in
According to an alternative embodiment of the present invention shown in
The present invention is particularly suitable for the production of lifting cushions with so-called pole caps. In applications involving bridging larger distances, such lifting cushions can be connected at the respective pole caps and thereby be stacked and pumped individually in the stack. Adjacent stacked lifting cushions are locked to each other via their pole caps. The pole caps have a locking mechanism for this purpose. The pole caps are used for positioning and mechanical fixation of the lifting cushions to each other, so that a reproducible lifting operation can also be carried out using stacked lifting cushions.
For this purpose, after provision of the core 5, pole caps 13a and 13b, for example made of steel, are positioned preferably on both sides, on the front 5a and rear side 5b of the core 5, and then the two two-dimensional layers 6a, 6b are placed or applied as shown in
Subsequently, according to the invention, the two-dimensional fiber-reinforcing layer 7, as in the case of the method described under
Subsequently, according to
As a final result, a lifting cushion as shown in
The pole cap 13a, 13b can, as shown enlarged in the arrangement of
The tubular fiber-reinforcing layer 7 may in particular be one that is stretchable in diameter. The fiber-reinforcing layer 7 may be one or more layers.
Furthermore, the prefabricated fiber-reinforcing layer 7 may be a woven fabric or a knitted fabric.
The lifting cushion can have a round or rectangular shape.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/064936 | 6/19/2017 | WO | 00 |