This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Patent Application DE 10 2011 014 104.9 filed Mar. 16, 2011, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention pertains to a personal safety system with a security entrance and a holding room.
A personal safety system with a security entrance and with a holding room is known from DE 35 21 884 C1. The prior-art personal safety system also comprises a ventilation and air exhaust system including a filter unit.
Prior-art personal safety systems are designed such that persons who enter the security entrance must stay therein until possible contaminations have been reduced to a permissible level. An air delivery unit, which flushes the security entrance and sends the gas over a toxic gas filter, is provided for decontamination. The degree of contamination can be determined by measuring the toxic gas concentration in the security entrance. The interior space may be entered only when the contaminations have been reduced to a permissible level. The security entrance must be as small as possible for fast decontamination, which means that only a small number of persons can stay in the security entrance. This security principle is not suitable for the case of a disaster with highly toxic gases, because persons who want to enter the security entrance wear an escape hood, which offers protection for a very limited time only. This means that persons cannot wait for entry at the outer door of the system because of time limitations. The duration of use of an escape hood is often limited to a period of 30 minutes. A fairly large number of persons can be expected to want to enter the holding room at the same time in case of a disaster.
A basic object of the present invention is to improve a personal safety system such that persons can reach the holding room in a short time.
According to the invention, a personal safety system is provided with a security entrance and a holding room connected to the security entrance. An air curtain device is provided at an entrance door of the security entrance. A circulating air system for the interior space enclosed by security entrance and for the holding room comprises at least one air delivery unit and a toxic gas filter. An air flushing device comprising air storage units is provided for the holding room. A gas supply duct is provided for respirator products.
The air curtain device may comprise an air feed duct, an air return duct and a blower.
The circulating air system may comprise another air feed duct, another air return duct, another blower and the toxic gas filter. The circulating air system for the holding room may also comprise a further air feed duct, a further air return duct as well as a further blower with another toxic gas filter. The circulating air system may be in common for the security entrance space and the holding room and may include the another air feed duct and the another air return duct in the security entrance space and the another blower with the toxic gas filter between the another air return duct and the another air feed duct. A reversing valve may be provided on the discharge side of the another blower. The reversing valve establishes a gas path to the another feed duct in a first switching position and establishes a gas path to the further air feed duct in the holding room in a second switching position. The air storage units of the air flushing device may be connected to the further air feed duct in the holding room. The air flushing device and/or circulating air system may be designed for a flushing flow rate of at least 600 m3/hr.
The personal safety system according to the present invention has, in front of the entrance door of the security entrance, an air curtain device, which reduces the amount of toxic substances introduced during entry into the security entrance. The contaminations introduced by a person are reduced in the security area to a calculated level during the passage over the high-performance filter device. Persons enter the holding room without delay and must keep the respirator on there only as long as introduced contaminations are indicated. Breathing masks, which can be supplied from autarchic breathing air storage units for a long period of time, may be put on when needed.
When all persons have entered the room, the holding room is flushed with breathing air at a high air exchange rate. The toxic substance concentrations are reduced after a few minutes to a permissible level, and the breathing masks can be removed. The room air is monitored by means of a gas-measuring device, and optical and acoustic warnings are triggered when impermissible values are exceeded. Not only is the room air purified now by means of a circulating air system and a toxic gas filter, but fresh breathing air is introduced at the same time into the interior space of the holding room by means of an air flushing means to support flushing by the circulating air system.
The breathing masks, which are being worn by the persons in the holding room, are also supplied with breathing air during the air flushing.
The air curtain unit arranged in front of the entrance door of the security entrance is provided with a closed air shield. This markedly reduces the thermal effect during the opening of the entrance door, which effect is brought about by different temperatures. Slight wind effects are reduced and decelerated by the invisible air curtain. The amount of toxic substances introduced into the security entrance is greatly reduced thereby. Toxic substances are introduced when opening the entrance door by thermal effects and by contaminations being carried in by persons.
The quantity of contaminants carried in by the persons per unit of time can be determined by limit value considerations. It is assumed that each person introduces a quantity of air corresponding to his body volume into the security entrance. If thermal effects are eliminated by the air curtain device, it can be assumed that only contaminations in the security entrance must be removed.
Example: 100 persons (P) shall enter in 10 minutes. Assumptions: 80 L of body volume per person, 5,000 ppm outside contamination, corresponding to 0.5 vol. %.
Quantity of contaminated air carried in:
100 P×80 L/10 minutes=800 L per minute.
Quantity of toxic gas carried in:
100 P×80 L/10 minutes=800 L per minute*0.5%=4 L/minute.
The filter unit will be designed such that the toxic gas concentration in the security entrance is limited to a predetermined value.
Example: In case of introduction of toxic gas at a rate of 4 L/minute, the toxic gas concentration in the security entrance shall be limited to 0.04%, corresponding to 400 ppm. The filter efficiency equals 90%.
The necessary air throughput of the filter equals 4 L/minute/0.04%*0.9=667 m3/hr.
When a concentration of 400 ppm is reached in the security entrance, the filter unit removes 4 L/minute of toxic gas from the air. This corresponds to the hypothetical quantity of toxic gas introduced. The filter capacity is selected to be higher for the actual design of the unit.
Based on the same calculation example, a reduced quantity of toxic substances is introduced into the holding room, because each person carries in only a quantity of toxic substance corresponding to 400 ppm rather than 5,000 ppm.
The volume of the quantity of toxic gas carried in equals:
Toxic gas carried in:
100 P×80 L/10 minutes=800 L per minute*0.04%=0.32 L/minute.
Concentration in the room air after all persons have entered:
0.32 L/minute*10 minutes=3.2 L.
Concentration in the room air in the holding room after all persons have entered:
Room size: 111 m3
Concentration in the room air: 3.2/111,000=28 ppm
The permissible concentration in the room air equals 5 ppm.
Consequently, all persons must still be supplied with breathing gas with masks via a central breathing unit over a certain transition time.
The following purification functions can be used for purification to the permissible value of 5 ppm:
The following quantity of air is needed to purify 28 ppm toxic gas (a) to 5 ppm (b):
In (ppm (a)/ppm (b))*room volume=ln 28/5*111=191.2 m3 and for a filter efficiency of 80%, 239 m3; with ln=natural logarithm.
Time for purification in the holding room.
a) Purification by means of air flushing from air storage units: 17 cylinders@14,000 L useful volume are needed. If the quantity of flushing air is 600 m3/hr., the purification time is approximately 24 minutes.
b) Purification by means of the gas filter unit: About the same time is needed with the rated volume flow of 667 m3/hr.
c) Purification by means of the absorber lime cartridges: About the same time is needed with the nominal volume flow rate of 600 m3/hr.
The time can be reduced considerably in case of cooperation of all action mechanisms, namely, air flushing, filtration and the use of absorber. Air flushing and gas filtration can be used together simultaneously in every case, and the time for purifying the holding room would equal approximately 12 minutes.
The breathing unit is designed on the basis of this time as the minimum time. The actual breathing air capacity is designed to be such that the higher toxic gas concentrations can be purified in the safety room in case retention systems are inoperable and the corresponding air is available to the persons for supplying the masks during the longer purification time.
One exemplary embodiment of the device according to the present invention is shown in the figure and will be explained in more detail below. The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and specific objects attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
Referring to the drawings in particular,
A second air feed duct 13 with discharge openings 14, a second air return duct 15 with inlet openings 16, which are connected to one another via a second gas duct 17, are located in security entrance 4. A second blower 18 arranged in the second gas duct 17 delivers the interior space air over a first toxic gas filter 19 from the second air return duct 15 to the second air feed duct 13. The interior space air drawn in via the second air return duct 15 is purified in the first toxic gas filter 19 and returns as decontaminated air back into the interior space via the second air feed duct 13.
Holding room 5 has a third air feed duct 20 with discharge openings 21, a third air return duct 22 with inlet openings 23 and a third gas duct 24 with a third blower 26 and a second toxic gas filter 25 for delivering the interior space air from the third air return duct 22 to the third air feed duct 20. A breathing air line 27 for breathing masks, shown schematically, extends in the middle of holding room 5. The breathing air line is connected to a breathing air storage unit 29 via an air control panel 28. A supply line 30 extends from air control panel 28 via a sound absorber 31. The third air feed duct 20 is thus supplied with gas via both the third blower 26 and the breathing air storage unit 29, so that residual contaminations are flushed out of the holding room 5 via both the breathing air storage unit and via the air from the breathing air storage unit 29. Excess gas is released from holding room 5 via a spring-loaded pressure relief valve 32. Pressure relief valve 32 is set such that an interior space pressure that prevents toxic gases from entering from the environment will always prevail in holding room 5.
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application of the principles of the invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 014 104 | Mar 2011 | DE | national |
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5890367 | You et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
20080196329 | Kennedy et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20080311842 | Alston et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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35 21 884 | Oct 1986 | DE |
39 25 941 | Feb 1991 | DE |
39 27 673 | Feb 1991 | DE |
2004 085147 | Mar 2004 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120233923 A1 | Sep 2012 | US |