The invention concerns a porous wall for forming a gaseous supporting layer.
The process of support by a gaseous layer forming a cushion is intended to hold a quantity of liquid above a plate or in a receptacle while avoiding direct physical contact that could tarnish or corrode the supporting surfaces or even contaminate the liquid through a chemical reaction. The gaseous layer is formed by blowing the gas into a chamber located behind the porous wall so that it passes through the pores of the wall while maintaining sufficient dynamic pressure.
On the one hand we are trying to increase the quantity of liquid supported while avoiding excessive instability or irregularity in the support. In the present typical case where the wall is in the form of a plate or dish on which the liquid is placed, the problems encountered can be explained in the following manner. Increasing the volume of the liquid implies both an increase in its depth and in its surface area and therefore that of the wall. In the latter case, flexing of the wall produced by the loss of gas pressure through it increases rapidly, so that a limit is set by the strength of the wall whose thickness cannot be increased by much since it would then be difficult to form a gaseous layer of sufficient pressure; if the volume of the liquid is to be increased, the gaseous layer must have a greater dynamic pressure in order to continue to support the liquid, which requires an increase in the pressure of the gas behind the wall and a loss of pressure through the wall and therefore a further increase in the bending force to which the wall is subjected.
On the other hand, we also wish to control the shape of the lower surface of the supported liquid by locally varying the pressure and thus the thickness of the gaseous layer. This is possible by locally increasing the flow of gas through the wall, in particular by making it more permeable. In practice, variations in the pressure and flow of the gas must be considered, in particular the fact that the gas passing through the wall at the centre of the liquid mass has more difficulty in dispersing and creates a higher pressure locally than that at the perimeter of the liquid mass. This phenomenon is accentuated with an increase in the gas flow rate and can lead to the formation of a pocket of gas below the centre of the liquid mass, deforming it more and more and even bursting or dispersing it.
The purpose of the invention is therefore to improve control of the support in order, on the one hand, to increase the volume of liquid supported without fear of breaking the porous diffusion wall and, on the other hand, to control the shape of the lower surface of the liquid mass.
Several embodiments will be proposed which will constitute the same number of possible solutions, but all have the common feature that the wall forms a strengthening structure. A strengthening structure consists of thickened areas that, on the one hand increase its mechanical strength and, on the other hand, permit the flow of gas to be controlled. The implementations of the invention are clearly distinguishable from the usual solutions where the porous wall has a constant thickness, whether it is flat, concave, cylindrical or some other shape. They must also be distinguished from certain earlier designs in which the upper surface, on which the layer of gas is formed, is concave in order to retain the liquid mass better while the lower surface of the wall is flat since the peripheral thickening is not produced by design and is not deliberately placed where the wall is most heavily loaded. In the invention, the strengthening can be distributed over the whole surface of the wall.
The reinforcing structure will be situated on the side of the wall opposite to the gaseous layer. It will consist of ribs having various shapes and directions.
Some of these ribs may be circular which will relieve the centre forming gas chambers with different pressures: if the pressure is lower in the central chamber, the loads will be less and the flow passing through will also be lower.
Such procedures will call for adjustment of the various pressures in improved implementations. It is therefore recommended that capillaries pass through the wall so that the pressure can be measured at different points in the gaseous layer. It would then be possible to control the pressures in the chamber, or each chamber, below the wall. The capillaries could also lend themselves to an active role if they were connected to a device for varying the pressure instead of a pressure measuring device: if, for example, too high a pressure was detected in the gaseous layer at the centre of the wall and the liquid mass, it would be possible to draw off the excess gas at this point by means of the capillary.
A different type of device to counter variations in the pressure of the layer would involve the provision of radial grooves from the edge of the wall on which the gaseous layer is formed so as to facilitate the transfer of gas from the centre of the gaseous layer towards the edge.
The invention will now be described with reference to diagrams, which include:
All the descriptions refer mainly to the diffusing walls whose upper surface forms a plane. They can also be easily applied to walls with upper surfaces of different shapes: cylindrical, spherical and any concave or convex shape, symmetrical or unsymmetrical.
Referring to
One could create a thickening at the centre of the plate 22 in
Rather than by means of a strengthened central area, we choose to stiffen the plate by forming ribs on it, so that once again its upper surface, on which the gaseous layer is formed remains smooth. A first implementation of the invention is drawn in
Another advantage is produced by the ribs in the implementation shown in FIG. 6. Continuous ribs, in particular circular ones 45, can form concentric chambers of gas 43 and 44 below the plate 42. A base 46 completes the separation of the chambers by making contact with the lower edge of the rib 45 and extending to the flange 47 of the plate 42. Two gas supply devices 48 and 49 inject gas into the chambers 43 and 44 respectively, at any desired pressure. If these pressures were equal to a common pressure p1, we would essentially revert to the situation in
Generally speaking, it is possible to combine the arrangements proposed in the foregoing or future implementations or certain of their features only.
The implementation in
This idea of controlling the pressure distribution in the gaseous layer 18 by the use of measurement capillaries can be generally adopted.
One could imagine the simultaneous use of several capillary systems, each connected to a different suction device, or even to blowing devices in order to perfect the equalisation of the pressure within the gaseous layer 18; such capillary systems would be arranged in concentric circles of different diameter across the plate. Again, one could place a whole series of capillaries similar to that in
We return to the ribs in order to give them a shape that seems particularly suitable to strengthen a plate 82.
An arrangement of a different type from the preceding ones could achieve the same purpose of equalising the thickness of the gaseous layer 18:
Finally, we must mention that the invention can be extended to other forms than flat, circular plates: thus
The materials used to produce these porous walls must be carefully chosen in order to avoid any chemical reaction with the material to be supported in the event of point contact. It is best to select them from sintered glass and porous materials (tungsten, graphite, etc.), ceramics (aluminium oxide, zirconium carbide, boron nitride, zirconia, thoria, etc.).
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 00 04614 | Apr 2000 | FR | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCTFR01/01093 | 4/10/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/18/2002 |
| Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO0177036 | 10/18/2001 | WO | A |
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| Number | Date | Country | |
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| 20030038386 A1 | Feb 2003 | US |