This application is a Section 371 National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/NL2019/050762, filed Nov. 20, 2019 and published as WO 2020/106147 A1 on May 28, 2020, in English.
The present invention relates to a pile driving system, comprising a lifting element attached or attachable to a hoisting cable of a crane, a pile driver which is mounted to the lifting element and movable with respect to the lifting element in a pile driving direction and a brake for braking a movement of the pile driver with respect to the lifting element.
Such a pile driving system is known from WO 2018/139931 and is suitable to reduce a shock load on the crane after the pile driver is freefalling. This typically occurs during installing a pile in the event that the tip of the pile reaches a ground layer providing low resistance. The pile may start running into the ground due to its own weight and the weight of the pile driver resting on the pile. The pile driver must be arrested by the crane resulting in a huge shock load. The known pile driving system brakes the movement of the pile driver with respect to the lifting element by means of a complex hydraulic damping and compression circuit.
An aspect of invention is a pile driving system having a brake comprising cooperating sliding members at the lifting element and the pile driver, which sliding members are pressed against each other in a direction extending transversely to their mutual sliding direction.
Pressing the sliding members to each other provides the opportunity to create a relatively high static friction between the sliding members such that the pile driver remains at a fixed position with respect to the lifting element up to a certain force level of the pile driver onto the lifting element in their mutual sliding direction. When the hoisting cable arrests the pile driver in the event that it is in a freefalling condition, the hoisting cable exerts a force onto the pile driver via the lifting element and the sliding members, hence causing a deceleration of the pile driver. When this force overcomes the static friction between the sliding members, the pile driver will move with respect to the lifting member whereas dynamic friction occurs when the cooperating sliding members rub together. Consequently, the movement of the pile driver with respect to the lifting element is gradually decelerated by conversion of kinetic energy into thermal energy, hence avoiding a shock load in a relatively simple way. Conversion into thermal energy may further lead to thermal expansion of the sliding members, hence increasing friction progressively.
The mutual sliding direction of the sliding members refers to the direction of the path along which the sliding members slide along each other. In practice the mutual sliding direction of the sliding members and the pile driving direction may be the same. It is noted that the pile driving direction refers to the direction in which a pile is driven by the pile driver under operating conditions and the opposite direction.
In a particular embodiment the sliding members are configured such and the force between the sliding members is selected such that the brake keeps the pile driver at a fixed position with respect to the lifting element by static friction between the sliding members up to a predetermined force level of the pile driver on the lifting element in their mutual sliding direction.
The predetermined force level may be at least 1.1, and preferably at least 1.4, times the weight of the pile driver. This means that the static friction will be overcome after the lifting element and the pile driver are already decelerating due to increased tension in the hoisting cable.
At least one of the sliding members may be pressed against the other by a hydraulic cylinder.
Alternatively, at least one of the sliding members may be pressed against the other by a spring.
In still another embodiment at least one of the sliding members is made of a resilient material, for example rubber.
In a particular embodiment one of the pile driver and the lifting element is provided with a rod extending in the pile driving direction and guided by the other one of the pile driver and the lifting element, wherein the rod forms the sliding member at the one of the pile driver and the lifting element which sliding member cooperates with the sliding member at the other one of the pile driver and the lifting element.
The sliding member at the other one of the pile driver and the lifting element may comprise a pair of friction blocks which engage the rod at opposite sides thereof.
The rod may be tapered such that the distance between the friction blocks increases during a movement of the pile driver away from the lifting element. This creates a progressive braking behavior. In case the friction blocks are pressed against the rod the spring force will increase during the movement. In case of a hydraulic force the hydraulic pressure will be increased during the movement; in this case the hydraulic, system may be provided with an accumulator.
In an alternative embodiment the lifting element comprises a cylindrical outer surface which is at least partly accommodated within a cylindrical inner surface of the pile driver, wherein one of the inner surface and the outer surface is provided with at least a protruding rib extending in the pile driving direction and the other one of the inner surface and the outer surface is provided with a pair of friction blocks which exert a clamping force on the rib.
Aspects of the invention will hereafter be elucidated with reference to very schematic drawings showing embodiments of the invention by way of example.
The pile driving system 1 further comprises a hydraulic pile driver 6 and a transition cylinder 7 which are fixed to each other. A rod 8 is mounted to the pile driver 6 and the transition cylinder 7. A bottom end of the rod is provided with a plate 8a which is movable within the transition cylinder 7. During normal pile driving the plate 8a can rest on a collar 7a inside the transition cylinder 7 between two successive blows of the pile driver 6. When the pile driver 6 and a monopile together move downwardly during a blow the transition cylinder 7 also moves downwardly. Under normal pile driving conditions the rod 8 has a fixed position with respect to the lifting element 2, which means that during a blow of the pile driver 6 the transition cylinder 7 can move downwardly with respect to the lifting element 2 including the rod 8, whereas the lifting element 2 including the rod 8 may follow the movement somewhat later. It is noted that under normal pile driving conditions there is minimal or no tension load in the hoisting cable 3, hence avoiding repetitive load pulses onto the crane 4.
Under certain conditions the rod 8 is also movable with respect to the lifting element 2 in a vertical pile driving direction X within a cylinder 9 which is located inside the lifting element 2, which will be explained hereinafter. In the embodiment as shown in
The pile driving system 1 is provided with a brake in the form of a friction block 10 which is pressed against the rod 8 by means of a hydraulic pressure chamber 11. This means that the rod 8 forms a first sliding member whereas the friction block 11 forms a second sliding member of two cooperating sliding members, the first sliding member being located at the pile driver 6 and the second sliding member being located at the lifting element 2. The sliding members can move relative to each other in their mutual sliding direction, which is the same direction as the pile driving direction X in this case.
Alternatively, the friction block 10 may be pressed against the rod 8 by means of a spring or the like. It is also conceivable that the friction block 10 is made of a resilient material, for example a rubber block, and mounted in compressed condition against the rod 8. Furthermore, the pile driving system 1 may have more than one friction block 10, for example at an opposite side of the rod 8 with respect to the location where the friction block 10 is shown in
When the pile driving system as shown in
The hydraulic pressure chamber 11 always presses the friction block 10 against the rod 8, i.e. in case the pile driver 6 and the rod 8 have fixed positions with respect to the lifting element 2 as well as in case the pile driver 6 and the rod 8 move with respect to the lifting element 2. In the latter case dynamic friction occurs between the friction block 10 and the rod 8, whereas in the former case static friction occurs between the friction block 10 and the rod 8. The pile driving system 1 may be adapted such that a downward force of the rod 8 onto the friction block 10 must be more than 1.4 times the weight of the pile driver 6 in order to overcome static friction and to start moving the pile driver 6 with respect to the lifting element 2. Dynamic friction will increase quickly during moving due to heat generation causing thermal expansion of the sliding members. In order to create a progressive braking behaviour during movement the rod 8 may be slightly tapered such that the pressing force of the friction block 10 will increase during movement of the pile driver 6 and the rod 8 with respect to the lifting element 2, caused by compressing the volume of the hydraulic pressure chamber 11. Alternatively, additional hydraulic pressure may be generated during movement of the pile driver 6 and the rod 3 with respect to the lifting element 2.
The sliders 22 have the same function as the plate 8a inside the transition cylinder 7 in the embodiment as shown in
The pile driving system 1 is provided with a brake between the lifting element 2 and the respective sliders 22, which brake is in the form of friction blocks 23, see
When the pile driving system as shown in
From the foregoing it becomes clear that different types of brakes are conceivable, but each type serves to allow a movement of the pile driver 6 with respect to the lifting element 2 after arresting the lifting element 2, on the one hand, and to decelerate the resulting movement in a controlled manner, on the other hand. In fact, peak acceleration creating a shock load on the crane 4 after the pile driver 6 is freefalling is reduced by extending the duration of the impact.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments shown in the drawings and described hereinbefore, which may be varied in different manners within the scope of the claims and their technical equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2022051 | Nov 2018 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NL2019/050762 | 11/20/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/106147 | 5/28/2020 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20220018081 A1 | Jan 2022 | US |