The present invention relates to pumps and more particularly to air-operated diaphragm pumps. Conventional air-operated diaphragm pumps typically include a diaphragm positioned within a diaphragm chamber surrounded by a diaphragm housing. The diaphragm housing is comprised of an air cap and a fluid cap that cooperate to form the diaphragm housing. The diaphragm chamber is comprised of two separate chambers: an air chamber and a fluid chamber. On one side of the diaphragm, between the air cap and the diaphragm, the air chamber is formed. Air is alternatingly supplied and evacuated from the air chamber to drive the diaphragm back and forth. On the other side of the diaphragm, between the diaphragm and the fluid cap, the fluid chamber is formed, through which a fluid to be pumped flows as the diaphragm moves back and forth. In conventional pumps, the air cap and fluid cap are typically formed with inner surfaces of a constant radius or other simple shape. The diaphragm is often coupled to one end of a piston, which may be coupled on its other end to a second diaphragm in a double-diaphragm arrangement.
In conventional air-operated diaphragm pumps, the shape of the inner surfaces of the air cap and the fluid cap are designed such that the diaphragm may unintentionally contact either of the inner surfaces at the extent of its stroke or leave unwanted space between one of the inner surfaces and the diaphragm at the extent of its stroke. Contact between the diaphragm and one of the surfaces of the diaphragm housing can cause wear and fatigue of the diaphragm. Unwanted space between the inner surface of the air cap or fluid cap and the diaphragm can reduce efficiency of the pump. A diaphragm housing that is designed with a shape to reduce contact between the diaphragm and the inner surfaces of the air cap and fluid cap and reduce the space between the inner surfaces of the air cap and fluid cap and the diaphragm at the extent of its stroke would be welcomed by users of air-operated diaphragm pumps.
According to the present invention, a method of producing a pump comprises selecting a diaphragm, determining the extent to which the diaphragm will deform when pressurized in a diaphragm chamber of a pump, and designing the diaphragm chamber to house the diaphragm based on determining the extent to which the diaphragm will deform.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the following detailed description exemplifying the best mode of carrying out the invention as presently perceived.
The detailed description particularly prefers to accompanying figures in which:
Referring to
Referring again to
As shown in both
For example, an exterior surface 526 of the diaphragm 504 may actually contact the inner surface 522 of the fluid cap 512 when the piston 502 and the diaphragm 504 are in the extended position at the extent of the their stoke, as shown in FIG. 1. Additionally, when the piston 502 and the diaphragm 504 are at the extent of their stoke as shown in
Similarly, the inner surface 520 of the air cap 510, while not formed with a relatively consistent radius like the inner surface 522 of the fluid cap 512, is nevertheless formed with a relatively simple shape that it is hoped will accommodate the range of motion of the diaphragm 504. However, using conventional methods of designing the typical air cap 510, the relationship between an interior surface 528 of the diaphragm 504 and inner surface 520 of the air cap 510 is not known. When the piston 502 and the diaphragm 504 are in their withdrawn position as shown in
Referring now to
As can be seen in
To minimize the remaining volume of the fluid chamber 124 when the diaphragm 106 is in its extended position, the pump 100 and its diaphragm housings 112 have been designed and manufactured with the deformed shape of the diaphragm 106 in mind. To do this, a computer model of the diaphragm 106 is first built. The type of material to be used for the diaphragm 106 and other known parameters for the manufacture of the pump 100 are used in constructing the computer model of the diaphragm 106. Once the computer model of the diaphragm 106 is constructed, a pressure is applied to the diaphragm model to simulate the environment the diaphragm 106 will experience in the actual pump. Using a nonlinear finite element analysis (FEA) methodology, the diaphragm 106 is then analyzed to estimate the shape of the diaphragm 106 in its deformed state. For example, the shape of the diaphragm 106 in
Alternatively, instead of using finite element analysis to estimate the deformed shape of the diaphragm 106, the diaphragm 106 could actually be placed in a test chamber and measurements could be taken to estimate the deformed shape of the diaphragm 106 when it is actually in the finished pump 100. In either case, some estimation of the deformed shape of the diaphragm 106 is used to design the diaphragm housing 112. Additionally, it will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that the nonlinear finite analysis discussed above could alternatively have been performed without the use of a computer.
Similarly, as shown in
As mentioned above, the diaphragm 104 could be analyzed using non-computerized means. For example, a test diaphragm could be constructed and placed in a test chamber with a pressure differential applied to it to actually measure the deformed shape of the diaphragm. Also, nonlinear finite element analysis could be performed on the diaphragm 104 to predict its deformed shape, with or without the use of a computer. In all cases, the diaphragm 104 or 106 is analyzed to predict its deformed shape in actual use to better design the diaphragm housing 112 and particularly the inner surfaces 120 and 128 of the fluid cap 116 and the air cap 114, respectively.
Although the invention has been described in detail with reference to certain described constructions, variations and modifications exist within the scope and spirit of the invention as described and defined in the following claims.
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