1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to pump stations, and particularly to a portable steel-reinforced HDPE pump station having a wet well made from plastic, preferably high-density polyethylene (HDPE) that is structurally reinforced with steel.
2. Description of the Related Art
A pump station is a device assembled from a variety of mechanical and structural components that, when combined into a working system, will permit the opportunity to convey wastewater from one location to another by mechanical means. The typical pump station configuration would typically collect wastewater at a localized lower elevation and mechanically transport or “lift” the wastewater to a higher elevation. The conveyance of wastewater is accomplished by the connection of the pump station to a wastewater discharge piping system, commonly referred to as a “force main”. The forcemain permits the conveyance of wastewater from the pump station to a point of discharge. The point of discharge is typically to a gravity sewer, another pump station, or a wastewater treatment plant or other such facility that would receive wastewater or storm water.
Conventional pump station designs developed and utilized during the past 150 years were typically constructed from steel and/or concrete. These materials were readily available and easily adapted to pump station construction and operation. However, it is fully recognized that these materials, while abundant and reliable, possess drawbacks relative to overall life cycle duration. In particular, wastewater exhibits aggressive corrosion tendencies related to the generation of sulfuric acid that results from the formation of hydrogen sulfide gas.
Gaseous sulfuric acid will attack and corrode concrete and unprotected steel, and after continued exposure and corrosion, will result in a structurally deficient system that can collapse or permit leakage of wastewater to the local environment or permit the intrusion of groundwater into the local sewer system. In any of these instances, the sewer system owner will need to provide significant repairs or total replacement of the steel and concrete systems, which tends to be very costly.
Thus, a portable steel-reinforced HDPE pump station solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The portable steel-reinforced HDPE pump station includes a vertically upright cylindrical wet well fabricated from structurally reinforced plastic. Pumps are disposed in the wet well. A pipe connected to the pumps extends to the outside of the wet well to allow outflow of water to external systems. An access hatch covers the upper portion of the wet well and is arranged above grade. The remainder of the wet well is disposed in the ground below grade. Vertically disposed sliding rails are attached inside the wet well and extend upward from a working area of the well to the top of the well near the service hatch. The pumps are slidably attached to the rails and attached to a pull chain to facilitate sliding installation and removal of the pumps by way of the access hatch. A water-receiving inlet pipe extends into the wet well, the inlet pipe allowing entry of water inside the wet well. The HDPE pump station may function for wastewater transfer, water conveyance, and irrigation.
Preferably, the tank is equipped with a bottom plate, which serves as an antifloatation collar, thereby preventing inadvertent floatation of an empty tank that may occur during or after construction. The pump station may be pre-assembled, providing a lightweight, rugged pump station that is easily fabricated, easily transported, and easily installed at the project site.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
The structurally reinforced HDPE pump station provides a pre-assembled pump station that can pump wastewater or clean water for such purposes as wastewater transfer, water conveyance, and irrigation. The pump station is designed to be utilized by public and private sector entities, such as towns, counties, cities, townships, state agencies, federal agencies, private individuals, commercial entities, industrial facilities, and agricultural facilities.
The pump station receives water or wastewater from a variety of conventional sources, such as gravity sewer, water pipes, streams, or other water collection systems. The water or wastewater enters a wet well that is an upright vertical cylinder manufactured from steel-reinforced plastic. The wet well houses one or more pumping systems that will convey water or wastewater by a pipe that connects the pumps to an external piping or water receiving system. Additional internal components may include a slide rail assembly to facilitate the installation and removal of pumps, internal piping that will connect the pump or pumps to external piping, an inlet pipe to receive water, a trash basket to collect trash that can be transported in the water or wastewater, a water level monitoring system that will control pump activation and alarms, and an access hatch in the top of the pump station that will provide access to the internal pump station components. During pump station operation, water enters the pump station and begins to fill the wet well basin. The water level will rise until the level monitor detects the water at a prescribed level. The level monitor signals an external pump control panel that activates the internal pump or pumps, The pumps begin pumping water and discharging the water through the internal pipes, which are connected to an external water receiving system, such as another pipe system, ditch, tank, or other such device or system. When the water level decreases due to pumping action and the level monitor detects water at a prescribed lower water level, the level monitor signals the external pump control panel, which, in turn, deactivates the pump or pumps. The operation is repeated as needed, based upon the water inflow rate into the wet well.
As shown in
Vertically disposed sliding rails 218 are attached to the wall of the wet well 216 inside the wet well 216 by mounting brackets 226, and extend upward from a working area of the well to the top of the well near the access hatch 22. The pumps 18 are slidably attached to the rails 218 to facilitate sliding installation and removal of the pumps 18 by way of the access hatch 22. A pump hoist chain 208 is attached to each pump 18 and disposed through a pump hoist lift socket 26.
The structurally reinforced HDPE wet well 216 has annular corrugations along the exterior sidewall of the wet well. A water-receiving inlet pipe 11 extends into the wet well 216, the inlet pipe 11 allowing entry of water inside the wet well 216. A removable bar screen 30 made from HDPE is disposed below the inlet pipe 11 to capture solids entrained in water flowing through the pipe 11.
The bottom portion of the wet well 216 extends into an HDPE filler block 222 attached to and resting on top of an ultra-high molecular weight (UHMW) plastic anchor block 212, which, in turn, is disposed on top of a substantially square-shaped antiflotation collar 12. The antiflotation collar 12 is preferably made of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) thermoplastic material. The top portion or rim 16 of the wet well 216 extends into an aluminum boilerplate top lid 14. The top lid 14 is annular and fits over the open top portion 16 of the structurally reinforced HDPE cylindrical wet well 216. The overall dimensions and configuration of the pumping station 10 may vary according to pipe diameters available from the manufacturer.
A PVC vent 20 extends upward from the top lid 14 and includes an insect barrier. The vent 20, preferably a four-inch SCH 40 vent, provides fresh air ventilation to the interior of the wet well 216.
A pressure bell pump electronic control assembly 24 is disposed in the wet well 216 between the two effluent pumps 18. The control assembly 24 includes level monitor sensors, which detect the water at a first predetermined level and actuate the pumps 18 at the first predetermined level. When water in the system 10 is detected at a second, lower predetermined level, the pumps 18 are deactivated. Additionally, alarms may further be provided for monitoring water levels and operation of the pumps 18. The sensors are held in place near the top interior center inside of the wet well 216 with stainless steel mounting brackets and bolts 200, which secure the elongate housing of the pressure transducer pump controller 210. The bottom portion of the housing of the pressure transducer pump controller 210 is attached to the pump station 10 in a lower internal portion of the station 10 inside of the wet well 216. An electrical cable 228 is electrically connected to the pumps 18, the cable 228 being routed through a conduit cabling hanger 206 and an electric conduit 204 that extends to a control panel external of the pump station 10. A stainless steel mast includes retrievable floats 214 and extends vertically inside the unit 10, being bolted to the floor and the top of the pumping station 10 inside of wet well 216.
Contech Construction Products, Inc., of West Chester, Ohio manufactures a high-density polyethylene (HDPE) piping possessing a steel exterior spiral-ribbed banding that is further encapsulated with a high-density polyethylene plastic, sold under the name Duromaxx™. Such a material, or similar materials, may be used in the manufacture of the wet well 216 to provide increased earth and dynamic load support.
The control panel preferably includes both manual and automatic switches, indicator lights, audible warning horns, visible warning lights, and an optional auto-dialer mechanism that can notify a manned station in the event of a wastewater treatment mechanical problem.
As shown in
Moreover, a pump assembly 318 is positioned inside the wet well 316 near the well's bottom portion, the pump assembly 318 being affixed to an HDPE pump platform 335, which is attached to portions of a lower internal radial surface of the well 316 on the side of the well 316 opposite the inlet assembly side.
An access conduit and hatch assembly 322 covers an access opening 343, and provides maintenance access to a pressure transducer conduit 310, the pumps 318, and the like. The pressure transducer conduit 310 is clamped to the interior of the tank 316 proximate the access hatch assembly 322. The pressure transducer conduit 310 extends downward to a point proximate the bottom of wet well 316.
A rigid plastic forcemain 320 is connected to and extends upward from the pump assembly 318. There are two plastic forcemains 320, one for each pump of the pump assembly 318. A check valve 321 may be installed in-line with the forcemain 320 as a backflow preventer.
Effluent pipes 328 are connected to the forcemains 320 and exit the well 316 to deliver fluid flow therefrom.
The opposing ends of the wet well 316 are sealed by attachment of two HDPE bulkheads 337. Each HDPE bulkhead 337 is pivotally stabilized by an HDPE stabilization plate 340 disposed across the bottom of the bulkhead 337. Triangular gussets 339 extend from the HDPE stabilization plate 340 at predetermined intervals laterally along the plate 340.
As shown in
An outlet pipe 728 is attached to a pump 724 at the cistern bottom and extends to a top portion of the cistern where it exits the cistern wall. The outlet pipe 728 and air inlet pipe 711 are supported by plastic mounting brackets 7222. The bottom of the cistern 716 includes an HDPE base plate 7212, which rests atop HDPE stiffeners 737, which rest atop an antiflotation collar 12.
HDPE stiffeners 737 extend from and attach to internal opposite sides of the cistern 716 wall and are fuse welded thereto. The HDPE stiffeners 737 are attached by fuse welding to the antiflotation collar 12 and are connected to the base plate 7212 by countersunk fasteners 787 extending through the base plate 7212 into the stiffeners 737 The countersunk holes are filled solid with HDPE material. The base plate 7212 is attached by fuse welding to the cistern 716 wall.
An alternative bottom to the cistern 716 would be the use of a non-compressible filler material between the base plate 7212 and antiflotation collar 12 in lieu of the stiffeners 737. A porous stone/synthetic stone aggregate 722 extends upward from the antiflotation collar 12 and itself collars the perforated region of the cistern 716 A filter fabric 720 covers the aggregate collar 722 and prevents infiltration and clogging of the holes 718 by fine materials.
While the above-described embodiments of the portable steel-reinforced HDPE pump stations are effective for their intended purpose, there are still some problems to be resolved, particularly for vertically oriented embodiments of the pump station. Loads applied to vertical pump stations are different from loads applied to horizontally buried applications. Unlike the direct earth loads applied to horizontal vessels, direct soil loads are rarely applied to the top of a vertical vessel. A vertical vessel not only must resist horizontal pressures, but must also resist vertical forces due to soil compaction. As the surrounding soil or backfill settles around the vertical vessel, shear or downdrag forces are applied to the vessel's outer shell. The drag-down force exerted onto the structure as the backfill material consolidates can be significant, and in the case of polyethylene material reinforced by external steel reinforcement ribs as described above, could cause the steel ribs to deflect from their perpendicular state. This deflection reduces the overall section modulus of the vessel, and thus reduces its strength. A significant reduction in section modulus could cause a structural failure to the vessel. Steel-reinforced polyethylene has not been utilized in vertical applications due to the issues noted above. Previous considerations have been to envelope the steel-reinforced polyethylene with a cementitious material in the field, such as flowable fill or the like. While this approach would achieve the desired result of protecting the steel-reinforced polyethylene ribs, it is not practical or cost effective.
The pump station embodiment 810 shown in
Alternatively, as shown in
Another problem with vertically oriented pump stations is that large horsepower pumps are heavy and impart dynamic/torque loads that must be resisted by the pump station's base. In order to effectively resist these loads, a cast-in-place concrete base 1150 (shown in
The cylindrical HDPE wet well 816 has a high modulus of elasticity and therefore is highly susceptible to temperature changes and will expand and contract accordingly. When used in a horizontal application, the friction with the ground provides resistance to these movements. However, when in a vertical orientation the wet well 816 has no resistance and the material will contract. A vertical basin that is susceptible to movement is not an acceptable material for civil infrastructure, for obvious reasons. Thus, as shown in
The top annular steel ring 1205 attaches to and circumscribes a top rectangular access hatch frame 1207. The interior circumference of the cylindrical wet well 816 attaches to the top annular ring 1205 and extends downward, contacting the elongate steel columns 1202 along their length. This endoskeletal arrangement 1200 reinforces the structural integrity of the attached wet well 816. Moreover the endoskeletal arrangement may be fully encapsulated in HDPE sheet or pipe material to ensure the same attributes and sustainability as the SRPE material. In addition to providing mechanical restraint to the thermal contraction issue, the endoskeleton also contributes to the structural composite base section and enhances the base's ability to resist vertical hydraulic loads.
The endoskeleton also provides a structural mechanism for lifting the pump station into place in the field. By way of the framed bracket inside the top of the pump station's access hatch, a loose steel lifting beam is used to lift the pump station vertically into place. The lifting beam engages the top structural steel frame, and thus the entire endoskeleton, to support the self-weight of the pump station while it is being moved into place. The ability to lift the unit in this manner eliminates the need for any penetrations into the top HDPE plate for lifting points, and thus ensures that all steel within the system remains protected.
As shown in
As shown in
It will be understood that the embodiments of
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/277,973, filed Oct. 20, 2011, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/408,282, filed Oct. 29, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61408282 | Oct 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13277973 | Oct 2011 | US |
Child | 14539999 | US |