Claims
- 1. A rotary blood pump for the displacement of blood, comprising:
- a housing having a peripheral wall and a pair of lateral walls, said peripheral wall being rigid having a single-lobe trochoidal surface defining a pumping chamber with said lateral walls;
- an intake port and a discharge port opening into said chamber and formed in said housing; and
- a rotary piston eccentrically mounted in said chamber and eccentrically driven therein to displace blood from said intake port to said discharge port, said rotary piston having a pair of opposite edges spacedly juxtaposed directly with said surface and describing a theoretical epitrochoid (E) upon orbiting said chamber as said rotary piston is eccentrically driven therein, said edges being formed with circular arc curvature whose radius is smaller than an equidistant (a) from the center of said curvature to said surface whereby said curvature and said surface define a gap seal having a minute constant width sufficiently small to prevent substantial blood flow therepast and sufficient to prevent damage to blood cells by shear stress as said edges sweep along said surface, said curvature having a center substantially coinciding with the intersection of said epitrochoid (E) and a piston symmetry axis extending through both of the piston edges, said lateral walls defining with corresponding flanks of said piston a minute constant spacing of a width forming a gap seal sufficiently small to prevent substantial blood flow therepast and sufficient to prevent damage to blood cells by shear stress as said flanks sweep along said lateral walls.
- 2. The rotary pump as defined in claim 1 wherein said intake port and said discharge port are formed as elongated openings in said peripheral wall and are located directly opposite said edges of said piston in a dead-point position thereof wherein said piston subdivides said chamber in two pumping compartments, one having a maximum volume and the other having a minimum volume.
- 3. The rotary pump as defined in claim 1 wherein one of said ports is formed as an elongated opening in said peripheral wall and the other of said ports is constituted by at least one opening formed in one of said lateral walls and said openings are positioned so that the opening in said peripheral wall is directly opposite one of said edges of said piston in a dead-point position thereof wherein the opening in said lateral wall lies between opposite flanks of said piston.
- 4. The rotary pump as defined in claim 1 wherein, to avoid physiolgically detrimental effects by suction at the intake port, the intake port has a greater cross section than the discharge port.
- 5. The rotary pump as defined in claim 1 wherein said ports are formed as openings in at least one of said lateal walls, said openings being covered by said piston in a dead-point position thereof wherein said piston divides said chamber into two pumping compartments, one of which is at maximum volume while the other is at minimum volume.
- 6. The rotary pump as defined in claim 1 wherein said curvature is formed by a circular cross section sealing bar received in the respective edge of said piston.
- 7. The rotary pump as defined in claim 6 wherein said bar is composed at least on part of an elastic material.
Priority Claims (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
1857/82 |
May 1982 |
ATX |
|
171/83 |
Jan 1983 |
ATX |
|
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This is a continuation of co-pending application Ser. No. 493,694 filed on May 11, 1983, now abandoned.
This application is related to my concurrently filed copending application Ser. No. 493,693.
US Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
807421 |
Dickison |
Dec 1905 |
|
4218199 |
Eiermann |
Aug 1980 |
|
4296500 |
Monties et al. |
Oct 1981 |
|
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2242247 |
Mar 1974 |
DEX |
583035 |
Dec 1946 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
"Pulsatile Flow Blood Pump Based on the Wankel Engine", by N. Verbiski et al., Journal of Thoracic & Cardiovascular Surgery, vol. 57, No. 5, May 1969, pp. 753-756. |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
493694 |
May 1983 |
|