1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to measurement and testing of seawater and the like, and particularly to a seawater surface sampling device that samples water only in the topmost layer of a body of water.
2. Description of the Related Art
There exists a great deal of variety in the contents of seawater (and water contained in other natural bodies of water) based on depth from the water's surface. The topmost 0.5 cm of seawater is of particular interest, as it is highly concentrated with phytoplankton and zooplankton. Additionally, a wide variety of surface-atmospheric interactions, taxonomic diversity, the partial pressure of carbon dioxide, and contaminants (such as radionucleides) are of interest in numerous fields of study. Although a wide variety of techniques for sampling water exist, ranging from simple bottles which are dipped into the water to robotic skimmers, such devices typically collect the water from mixed depths including far more than just the topmost 0.5 cm surface layer. It would be desirable to be able to easily sample water taken just at the topmost surface layer. Thus, a seawater surface sampling device solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The seawater surface sampling device is a buoyant device for sampling the topmost layer of water in a body of water in order to study water properties specific to depths of only about 0.5 cm, such as surface-atmospheric interactions, phytoplankton concentrations, partial pressure of carbon dioxide, radionuclides and the like. The seawater sampling device includes a buoyant housing having an open upper end, a lower wall and at least one sidewall. The lower wall has opposed upper and lower surfaces, with the lower surface having a concave contour. An apex of the concave contour is vertically positioned higher than a pair of side edges of the lower surface. An aperture is formed through the lower wall at the apex.
A pair of stabilizing members are preferably secured to the buoyant housing. The stabilizing members are preferably also buoyant such that, when placed in the body of water, a lower surface of each stabilizing member rests on the water's surface. In order to sample the water in the desired depth near the surface, a vertical distance between the lower surface of each stabilizing member and the apex of the lower wall is between approximately 1 mm and approximately 2 mm.
A pump is mounted on the upper surface of the lower wall, within the buoyant housing, and is in fluid communication with the aperture for extracting the water sample through the aperture. A sample holder is also mounted on the upper surface of the lower wall, within the buoyant housing, and is adapted for removably receiving a sample collection bottle. In use, when the buoyant housing floats on the surface of the body of water, the pump extracts the water sample through the aperture formed through the lower wall of the buoyant housing and outputs the water sample to the sample collection bottle through an output tube connected to the pump.
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.
Referring now to
The lower wall 14 has opposed lower and upper surfaces, 24, 26, respectively, with the lower surface 24 having a concave contour. As best seen in
A pair of stabilizing members 38 are preferably secured to the buoyant housing 12. The stabilizing members 38 are preferably also buoyant such that, when placed in the body of water, a lower surface 40 of each stabilizing member 38 rests on the water's surface, as shown in
As shown in
A sample holder 34 is also mounted on the upper surface 26 of lower wall 14, within the buoyant housing 12, and is adapted for removably receiving a sample collection bottle B. It should be understood that sample collection bottle B is shown for exemplary purposes only, and that the overall contouring and relative dimensions of sample holder 34 may be varied dependent upon the size and type of bottle B used.
In use, when the buoyant housing 12 floats on the surface of the body of water W, the pump 28 extracts the water sample through the aperture 22 formed through the lower wall 14 of buoyant housing 12 (indicated by water flow F in
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.
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20160018377 | Corbett | Jan 2016 | A1 |
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Kelley Elliott et al., “NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer Maximizing Operations: Exploring the ‘sticks’ in systematic exploration”, printed from http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/okeanos/explorations/ex1006/welcome.html; 4 pages, printed on May 17, 2016. |