The invention relates generally to pressure vessels. More particularly, embodiments of the invention relate to a volumetrically efficient, seamless, multi-section vessel suitable for, without limitation, holding a pressurized gas such as an air supply for underwater diving as well as in hostile work or rescue environments.
The use of pressurized gas vessels, or air tanks, for breathable primary or supplemental air supplies has become widely accepted in recreational, industrial and public safety arenas. Air tanks are used underwater for recreational underwater diving, termed “SCUBA” (Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus) diving, which is also applicable to industrial or commercial settings for ship repair, off-shore drilling operations, underwater salvage, pipeline repair, as well as to military applications, search and rescue operations, and underground environments, such as mines. In above-water applications, an air tank used as a Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) is invaluable for personnel working in an environment that poses an Immediate Danger to Life or Health (IDLH). SCBAs are used by fire fighters entering into smoke filled or toxic environments, police working at contaminated crime scenes, underground mine rescue teams entering “bad air” or smoke, HAZMAT teams working in contaminated environments, and industrial maintenance personnel working in confined spaces or in toxic environments. SCBAs are also strategically placed in chemical plants, laboratories, refineries, nuclear facilities, paper mills and underground mines for employees to use as a “self-rescuer” during an emergency.
Cylinders vary in size depending upon the application. A self-rescue air cylinder may be relatively small; for example a cylinder with an 8 cubic foot equivalent capacity at 3000 PSI, may be 4 inches in diameter and 10 inches long, and can be used to supply sustainable air for about 5 minutes. This provides the user enough time to retreat from a small building or enclosure to a safe environment. An air supply lasting 15 minutes is the minimum requirement for an SCBA to be approved by the National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety (NIOSH) for entering IDLH environments. In order for a SCBA to meet the 15 minute standard the device must have a capacity of 20-24 cubic feet equivalent, when the air is pressurized to 3000 PSI. This requires a single air cylinder with dimensions approximately 5 inches in diameter and 18 inches in length, or the breathable air volume can be split between multiple, smaller cylinders. However, the bulk and size of either of these configurations may become a hindrance if the user is attempting to perform tasks in, or trying to escape from, a confined space. Fire fighters and mine rescue personnel use incrementally larger configurations of SCBAs, allowing for extended forays into IDLH environments, re-supplying breathable air to fellow rescuers or the ability to share breathable air with a victim stranded in the hostile environment. Most SCUBA air cylinders are a so-called standard “80,” or a cylinder capable of holding 80 cubic feet of air. Thus, if an additional volume of breathable air is required, most divers will use two tanks or “double-up” tanks. However, 100 cubic foot and larger tanks are also available. The 100 cubic foot tanks are extremely large and, when made from steel, weigh more than 40 lbs. Double tanks or the large, 100 cubic foot tanks are manageable underwater, but can significantly reduce the diver's mobility when negotiating around or within structures such as, by way of example only, rocks or coral, offshore platforms, or sunken ships. Additionally, smaller users may not be physically able to shoulder or handle the larger tanks or multi-tank configurations while above water.
Further, with respect to the use of multiple cylindrical tanks, stacking or aligning cylindrical structures in a single row is an inefficient use of space. Considering cylinders with the same diameter, each cylinder contacts the laterally adjacent cylinder or cylinders tangentially along a line of contact, creating a substantially triangular void between the cylinders on either side of the line of contact. This issue has been addressed in a number of applications for improving the volumetric efficiency of multiple cylinders used for storing propane or natural gas. Most of these multi-cylinder pressure vessels are formed using rolled steel sections which are mated and welded together, such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,946,056 to Stannard, U.S. Pat. No. 3,528,582 to Rigollot and U.S. Pat. No. 3,414,153 to Leroux. Another method used to form multi-cylinder pressure vessels includes interlocking sections, such as a clip and lobe arrangement, shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,220,779 to Warner et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,944,215 to Orlowski describes a volumetrically efficient multi-cylinder vessel that may be formed from a plastic as a one-piece or unitary structure. A second one-piece plastic structure designed for use in automotive applications as a vacuum pressure vessel is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,409 to Silver. Each of these plastic vessels are designed for relatively low pressure or vacuum use, the former being designed for at least 5 atmospheres or approximately 75 psi and the latter being described to provide “adequate implosion resistance” when subjected to a vacuum sufficient to actuate automotive features like headlight door covers.
A diving tank is typically attached to a pack-frame using a clamping ring, or the tank is placed into a “clamshell” structure that fully encases the tank and is worn on the diver's back. Originally the pack-frame accommodated the air tank only and the user would need a separate weight-belt and inflatable vest or BC (buoyancy compensator) to achieve neutral or slightly negative buoyancy while in the water. Modern tank packs are now universally referred to as a BC and are configured more like a vest which includes the air tank clamping ring, integrated regulators and gauges, an inflatable bladder, weights and pockets for numerous diving accessories. With both the older pack-frame and a modern BC, the air tank extends well above the diver's back and, since it is behind the diver and out of sight, the diver can easily misjudge the clearance necessary to enter an opening in a reef, cave or wreck, causing damage to the air tank or possibly trapping the diver. This problem is exacerbated when using large or multiple tanks.
Divers manage underwater risk in several ways. One way is by “slinging” their air tank over a single shoulder when diving in a confined space such as wreck or cave, allowing the tank to dangle below the diver, where the tank can be watched and manually manipulated around obstacles. A second way to manage risk and which has been adopted as a modern standard safety feature is the provision of an emergency regulator. Originally, tanks included a single hose from the primary valve to the diver's mouthpiece or regulator. Currently, an additional hose for a backup regulator or “octopus” is attached to the tank. The octopus is available to the diver if the primary regulator fails or malfunctions and may be offered to another diver who is short of air or otherwise in trouble.
It would be desirable to offer a portable air tank system that is volumetrically more efficient than conventional multi-tank systems, is of reduced overall weight for easy handling, is less obtrusive, as well as more compact and hydrodynamic.
Embodiments of the present invention comprise a pressure vessel including at least two longitudinally extending sections, each including a side wall, a first substantially hemispherical end wall and a second substantially hemispherical end wall. A rib is formed at an interface between the sections and includes at least one aperture extending therethrough. The at least two laterally adjacent sections and the rib comprise a seamless, unitary structure of a metal material.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to a volumetrically efficient air tank which may be manufactured using lightweight material, has a lower and more ergonomic profile than a conventional, cylindrical air tank of similar volume, and exhibits better hydrodynamics. Embodiments of the invention comprise a seamless unitary structure of metal material, configured to operably contain an internal gas pressure of at least about 3000 psi at ambient atmospheric external pressure.
One embodiment of the present invention comprises a volumetrically efficient hybrid pressure vessel having at least two sections. The outer sections or lobes are largely cylindrical with a flattened side portion at a common interface, or rib, with a laterally adjacent section. An intermediate section or sections, if present, have arcuately curved outside surfaces and common flat portions at both interfaces with laterally adjacent sections. When looking at a transverse cross-section of the intermediate sections of the pressure vessel, these cross-sections may be characterized as substantially square, rectangular, or trapezoidal. More than two cylinders, or even more than one row of cylinders, may be employed. A different number of sections may be disposed in an additional row of cylinders, such a row being offset from the first row. With such an arrangement, wasted space between pressure vessel sections may be minimized as the sections of the additional row are partially received in recesses between sections of the first row.
Communication ports or apertures may be provided through each rib, enabling each section of the pressure vessel to be filled or discharged from a single primary valve mounted to one section. Further, the presence of the holes serves to equalize pressure between sections, enabling a relatively high internal gas pressure to be safely accommodated. In addition, placement of the holes in lateral alignment, as shown, provides, in combination with other apertures extending through a wall of the pressure vessel in the form of an external valve port in a central section and external clean-out ports in outer sections (assuming a three-section pressure vessel) the ability to employ a single piece core in a mold employed to cast the pressure vessel. This is effected by the use of three external core locating features extending through the previously mentioned external ports, in combination with portions of the core extending through the internal, inter-section ports, to accurately position the single piece core.
The shape and structure of the ports or apertures is also a significant feature of embodiments of the present invention. Reinforced, elliptical ports or apertures reduce stress on the structure of the pressure vessel to acceptable levels. The aspect ratio (height to width) of the ellipse is dependent upon the thickness of the side walls, domed ends and internal ribs employed in the pressure vessel. An ellipse is particularly suitable for the port or aperture shape, as internal stress from gas pressure acting on the side walls along the middle, longitudinally extending portion of a cylinder, termed tangential or “hoop” stress, is approximately two times greater than the longitudinal or axial stress acting on the ends of the cylinder. However, the invention is not so limited, and other aperture or port shapes are contemplated as within the scope of the present invention.
The pressure vessel of the present invention may be formed, by way of example and not limitation, as a monolithic or unitary structure using semi-permanent mold, permanent mold with sacrificial sand core, or investment casting methods. The pressure vessel may be cast of a low melting point alloy of aluminum using, for example, a semi-permanent mold or a permanent mold with a sacrificial sand core. Other, high melting point alloys of a steel, such as a stainless steel, may be used with investment casting techniques. Other casting methods and metal materials are also contemplated as suitable for implementing embodiments of the invention.
A finished aluminum alloy pressure vessel will be significantly lighter than a similar steel structure. It is contemplated that the weight of the structure may be further minimized by varying the thickness of the pressure vessel walls. As noted above, the stress acting on the side walls along the middle, longitudinally extending portion of a cylinder is referred to as the tangential stress or “hoop” stress and is approximately two times greater than the longitudinal or axial stress acting on the ends of the cylinder. Considering this fact, it is contemplated to reduce the thickness of the end walls in relation to the wall thickness of the side walls of cylinders of the pressure vessel. Additionally, the thickness of the side walls may be reduced if the section is then reinforced with a filament-wound belt. The belt can be constructed using a light weight material such as fiberglass, graphite, Kevlar, or a combination of materials. In order to avoid gaps formed under the filament-wound belt, the outside surface formed at the junctions between sections must be substantially planar. This may be accomplished by providing lightweight shims configured to fill the gaps between the adjacent sections on either side of each interface, or by configuring intermediate sections of the pressure vessel such that the outer surface is planer. Filament-wound pressure vessels offer an optimal capacity to weight ratio and are ideal for above-water SCBA applications.
The volumetrically efficient configuration of embodiments of the present invention enables a user to store more breathable air in a smaller, less obtrusive pressure vessel than is possible with conventional pressure vessel designs. Since the contained volume of air is distributed across a series of semi-cylindrical sections, the present invention offers a thinner, or lower, profile than a conventional air cylinder. The low profile pressure vessel reduces the user's entrapment risk when entering a confined space or an area with reduced clearance. Additionally, the semi-cylindrical sections can be formed where a center point of each section lies on a shallow arc. This allows the tanks to be substantially contoured around a user's back, further reducing the distance the pressure vessel extends away from the user.
The pressure vessels of the present invention offer improved hydrodynamics in comparison to a conventional air cylinder, due to its lower profile, shorter length and closer conformity to a diver's body. A conventional air cylinder protruding above the user's back has an effect similar to the rudder of a sailboat in that; as water moves past the cylinder, the cylinder tends to “steer” the diver. While the propensity of the air cylinder to steer a diver is negligible under most circumstances, it can be significant if the diver is swimming across or against a strong current, or if the diver is using an underwater sled or other propulsion device.
The pressure vessel of the present invention has been broadly discussed as a vessel for breathable air. However, it is contemplated that the pressure vessel can be used to store other gases or liquids for other applications including, medical gases, welding gas, automotive or aerospace fuel cells, etc.
FIGS. 2 and 3A-C depict an embodiment of the pressure vessel 100 of the present invention formed with a seamless metal body 120 including two outer lobes or sections 122 and an intermediate section 124. Metal body 120 may be formed from an aluminum alloy or a steel, including without limitation a stainless steel. Each section is substantially cylindrical with a flat portion at the common interface between the sections. Each common interface extends substantially entirely longitudinally along a boundary between laterally adjacent sections, forming a structural rib 126 between the sections. Communication ports 128 are provided in the ribs 126, allowing gas to move between sections and evenly distribute the pressure within pressure vessel 100. As noted above and as depicted in
Each of
In comparison to conventional pressure vessels configured as air tanks for SCUBA applications, embodiments of the present invention provide obvious advantages. For example, conventional aluminum air tanks operable at 3000-3300 psi service pressure and providing a 77.4 cubic foot air capacity, have an O.D. of 7.25 inches and a length between approximately 26.8 inches and 26.1 inches, with weights between about 31.4 lbs. and 35.4 lbs. These tanks also provide positive buoyancy. In contrast, an embodiment of the pressure vessel of the present invention, cast of an aluminum alloy and operable at 3300-4350 psi service pressure and providing a 78.6 to 103.6 cubic foot air capacity, employs three semi-cylindrical sections each having an O.D. of 6 inches for a total width of less than 18 inches, a length of 17 inches and a total weight of 33.5 lbs. This pressure vessel also offers neutral buoyancy. Thus, the present invention offers the capability of a lower profile and a significantly reduced length in comparison to conventional designs, at a similar weight, with superior capacity and more favorable buoyancy characteristics.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms which will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and have been described in detail herein. However, it should be understood that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention includes all additions, deletions and modifications, as well equivalents, and alternative implementations falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the following appended claims and their legal equivalents.
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