The present invention relates generally to rotary fluid flow control valves.
Rotary valves are simple, lightweight, easy to automate, and easy to maintain, come in a variety of materials and end connections, come in a wide range of sizes, are available in multiport configurations, are quick opening and can be adapted to a broad range of services. Plug, ball, and butterfly valves are the major types of rotary valves widely used in industrial plants for flow control in fluid-handling systems. Quarter-turn valves move from fully open to fully closed with a 90° rotation of the closure member and are unique in that the flow condition is indicated by the position of the control handle or actuator.
In a plug valve a rotary cylindrical or tapered plug with an opening through it is inserted into an open body to block or allow the flow of a fluid. When the plug is rotated, it permits flow through the opening and the fluid conduit; a quarter turn in either direction completely blocks the flow path.
A type of plug valve is the eccentric plug valve which is used extensively in the water and waste industry because it offers straight-through flow and high capacity combined with tight shutoff. The design uses a resilient, coated plug segment that rotates 90° from open to closed position into a raised eccentric metal body seat. As the plug closes, it moves toward the seat without scraping the seat or body walls. This eliminates plug binding and wear. The moved member is a plug which is positioned by being rotated about an axis which is normal to, and is offset from, the axis of the cooperating valve seat. They are used particularly when a member is moved to various positions between the open and closed positions in order to adjust the flow rate of a fluid flowing through the valve.
In the eccentric plug valve the rotary valve is of a plate like configuration so that when it is partly open the flow rate of fluid can be accurately controlled and the valve is completely closed twice in every revolution of the valve. An eccentric rotary plug valve is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,256,285.
The valve is usually sited on the axis of the main bore. This arrangement has several drawbacks when considering motor speed and potential flow restriction in the bore caused by the rotating valve itself, as parts of the valve can never move completely out of the flow path and the valve cutaway will be presented to the flow twice in each valve revolution at 180 degree intervals.
We have now devised a rotary valve which gives a clear flow through with no obstruction and which closes the valve only once in each revolution.
According to the invention there is provided a fluid flow controlling rotary valve comprising (i) a housing containing a fluid flow path with a central axis, (ii) a plug having a sealing face cooperating with said housing in the closed position to block the fluid flow path, (iii) a support shaft arranged to carry said plug means and being rotatable on an axis which is normal to and spaced from the axis of said valve seat and located outside of the flow path so that rotation of the said shaft moves said plug means relative to said housing.
The distance between the axis of the support shalt of the plug means and axis of the fluid flow path is herein called the offset.
When the closed or sealing face of the plug is presented in the bore, flow is totally occluded whilst a 180 degrees rotation of the rotary valve will present a completely open aperture allowing fill flow through the valve assembly without obstruction due to the operating mechanism of the valve. The plug preferably has a plane face and, in the open position, this plane is contiguous with the side of the fluid flow path for smooth flow down the fluid flow path.
The plug means is preferably substantially cylindrical or spherical and has a radius larger than the diameter of the flow path; however the cross-section of the plug may deviate from strict circularity.
If the offset and plug diameter are increased while the width of the sealing face of the plug is maintained as equivalent to the bore diameter, a shorter angular opening period is provided for any given rotational speed, which can prove useful if a specific mechanical timing/angular relationship is desired between the valve assembly and the drive mechanism rotating the plug to operate the valve.
A further increase in the plug diameter and its locating bore can provide a closure seat in the flow-bore for even better sealing characteristics due to the overlap of position with a small overlap at the edges of the plug and the housing to ensure good sealing in this position.
Thus for any given applied pressure or vacuum, the maximum differential pressure will result causing the largest amplitude pulsation.
By introducing variations in the relationship between the width of the sealing face of the plug, port diameter and valve offset, a variety of different conditions may be created to suit the specific application requirement.
The valve offset, diameter and position provide for good sealing when closed, zero flow occlusion when open, and the ability to use a motor-gearbox speed reduction that is half that which is otherwise required with an on-axis rotary valve.
By presenting the sealing face of the plug in the flow path once in each revolution motor speeds are doubled for any given flow pulse rate when compared to conventional on-axis designs which close the valve twice in each revolution; this causes less low-speed motor torque problems.
This is not only a matter for convenience allowing adequate pulse speed from the limited standard ratios that are commercially available, but also generally allows a smaller gearbox to be employed due a lower number of gears or a reduced diameter of gears employed in the gear train, making this configuration more applicable in small to miniature sized mechanical assemblies. For a given plug rotation speed, the motor speed will therefore be effectively doubled. This is of great benefit with small diameter electric motors which often require quite high operating speeds to develop adequate useful driving torque. The valve can be used with any fluid and includes gases and liquids.
The present invention is particularly useful when a small pulse of air is required e.g. 5 to 200 Hz as it provides for rapid opening and closing of the ports giving a short controlled pulse of air.
Patent Application WO 03/077823 describes a breathing apparatus in which the air breathed is interrupted and the present invention is suitable for use in such applications. In this application a valve acts on the flow of air being breathed, and there is a breathing means through which a user can breathe and the valve causes a periodic interruption to air flowing through the valve to the breathing means.
In this application a pulsing effect in the user's breathing processes in the range 10-100 Hz is introduced, which causes an equivalent vibration frequency in the musculature surrounding the lungs and in the human diaphragm. The purpose of this is to cause a vibrated stress condition which recruits more than normal static load related muscle fibres for the purposes of strengthening and exercising this musculature.
The invention is illustrated in the drawings in which:—
a and 1b show a plan and elevation view of simple rotary valve;
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When the plug is used to provide pulses of air, air flows down flow path (3) and the plug (2) rotates. The valve opens and closes once every complete revolution causing the air to pulse down the flow path (3).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0520195.9 | Oct 2005 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB06/50314 | 10/5/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/4/2008 |