This invention relates to a process for manufacturing secondary containment panels of the type used in connection with above-ground fuel and chemical storage tanks, as well as retention ponds and similar facilities. The panels are first manufactured offsite using a computer controlled robotic sprayer combined with non destructive measurement of dry film thickness and measurement of dry coating thickness with magnetic gauges within an environmentally controlled facility and then assembled and installed onsite to provide secondary containment in the event of spills or leaks.
Above-ground petroleum storage tanks, chemical storage tanks and similar facilities typically utilize a secondary containment system for capturing hazardous liquid that leaks or spills from the tank. Secondary containment is also used for retention ponds, lakes and similar facilities to prevent polluting substances such as drill water, acids, gasses and unsafe chemicals from entering the water table. Conventional secondary containment systems employ an impermeable or impervious liner that extends across a basin or retention area. The liner, which is designed to prevent petroleum, chemicals or other hazardous materials from seeping into the ground, typically comprises a plurality of juxtaposed geotextile fabric panels. These panels are cut as required, arranged across the containment area and then sprayed with a polyurea coating that renders the panels impermeable to the passage of liquids discharged from the tank or otherwise held in the retention facility.
Assembling and installing secondary containment panels onsite presents a number of problems. Most significantly, when the polyurea is sprayed onto the geotextile fabric in the field, a significant amount of the impermeable coating is apt to be dissipated, lost and wasted due to wind and/or rain. Outdoor weather conditions tend to complicate the application process considerably. In order to provide the completed panels with a stippled, slip-resistant surface, the polyurea coating must be sprayed onto the geotextile fabric from a distance of about several feet or more. This separation causes at least some of the sprayed coating to dissipate and miss the fabric entirely, particularly under windy conditions. Indeed, in a typical secondary containment system, as much as 25% of the coating material can be wasted when it is applied outdoors and onsite.
The evenness or uniformity of coating coverage on the surface of the fabric also varies tremendously.
An additional disadvantage accompanying conventional coating application procedures is that large amounts of polyurea coating and affiliated applicator equipment must be transported to and from the secondary containment site. The coating itself is typically transported to the site in 55 gallon drums. After the drums are emptied and the coating applied to the geotextile fabric, the drums must be removed for disposal. In addition, bulky applicator equipment including pumps, hoses, etc. must be transported to and from the secondary containment site. All of this adds to the complexity and expense of installing the secondary containment system.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved and more efficient technique for manufacturing and installing secondary containment panels.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for assembling and installing the liner of a secondary containment system, which significantly reduces the amount of polyurea coating material that is lost and wasted during the installation.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing secondary containment panels in an environmentally controlled indoor environment so that effective impervious panels are pre-made without being subjected to wind, rain and other adverse weather conditions that tend to dissipate and waste coating material when the secondary containment liner is manufactured outdoors and onsite.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing, assembling and installing secondary containment panels that is far more efficient and cost effective than previous secondary containment installation techniques.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing and installing secondary containment panels that significantly reduces the inconvenience and expense normally involved in transporting impermeable coating material to the secondary containment site and disposing of the empty containers for the coating after the coating has been applied.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a technique for assembling and installing secondary containment panels that reduces the need for much of the equipment, including pumps and hoses, normally required when the liner of a secondary containment system is manufactured in the field and onsite and which also significantly reduces the maintenance required for such equipment and costs associated therewith.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing secondary containment panels that is simpler, more efficient and less costly than previously known techniques.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing the liner of a secondary containment system which reduces the inefficiency and expense of transporting adhesive coating and associated application equipment (e.g. hoses and pumps) to the storage tank site where the secondary containment system is being installed and which thereby significantly facilitates installation of the secondary containment system and, in particular, the liner of the system.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing secondary containment panels that are easy to roll-up and transport to a secondary containment site for onsite installation.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for manufacturing environmentally friendly secondary containment panels that can be repeatedly, conveniently and efficiently recycled and reused as needed.
This invention results from a realization that the impervious liner of a secondary containment system may be installed much more efficiently and cost effectively, and with far less waste of impermeable coating (e.g. polyurea) by prefabricating the liner in discrete secondary containment panels. These panels are pre-made in an environmentally controlled, enclosed facility wherein the impermeable coating is applied to an underlying substrate (e.g. geotextile fabric) without being subjected to potentially adverse outdoor conditions such as wind and rain. This significantly reduces the amount of coating that is wasted as the coating is sprayed or otherwise applied onto the fabric substrate. By the same token, the technique of this invention greatly lessens the complexity, expense and hassle normally involved with transporting drums of polyurea coating and associated applicator equipment (pumps, hoses, etc.) to and from the site of the secondary containment system.
This invention further results in improved quality control of the sprayed textile. This is achieved using a computer controlled robotic sprayer with improved spray rates (gallons per minute or “gpm”) traversing a fabric width on a controlled companion sprayer carriage. The programmable computer controller ensures that the preselected spray pattern is uniformly applied. The spray rate of specified gallons per minute and distance travelled per minute can ensure that the fabric is coated with the selected thickness, permeation and surface stipling. It will be appreciated that the obtaining a uniform thickness of coating on the fabric is difficult when conducted by an individual. This difficulty is not removed by moving the spraying activity into an enclosed space. This problem is solved using a robotic sprayer.
The robotic sprayer may be equipped with a modified spray nozzle that increase output capacity and control overspray. The nozzle may be modified by removing an interior nozzle wall. This may prevent overspray. It can also increase the spray output to approximately 3 gpm.
The invention also results in improved quality control by facilitating use of industry accepted non-destructive testing procedures requiring ferro-magnetic plates to be positioned beneath the fabric and post coating thickness testing performed in accordance with ASTM-D7091-05 Standard Practice for Nondestructive Measurement of Dry Film Thickness of Nonmagnetic Coatings Applied to Ferrous Metals and Nonmagnetic, Nonconductive Coatings Applied to Non-Ferrous Metals using either a Type I or Type II test gauge. Thickness testing may also be conducted per the frequency requirements of SSPC-PA2 (Paint Application Specification No. 2): Measurement of Dry Coating Thickness with Magnetic Gauges. The contents of ASTM-D7091-5 and SSPC-PA2 are hereby incorporated herein by reference in the entirety.
This invention features a method of manufacturing a secondary containment panel for use in a secondary containment system of an above-ground liquid storage tank or other liquid retention facility. A flexible, generally flat substrate piece is formed. A liquid impermeable coating is applied to an upper surface of the substrate piece while leaving an edge segment of the upper surface of the piece uncoated. The coating is applied to the piece inside an environmentally controlled enclosure.
In a preferred embodiment, the coating is sprayed onto the substrate piece. The substrate piece may include a geotextile fabric and the coating may be polyurea. Typically, the coating is sprayed on the substrate piece from a distance sufficient to form a slip-resistant stippled surface on the upper surface of the piece.
This invention also features a method for manufacturing, assembling and installing a plurality of secondary containment panels for use in a secondary containment system. Each panel is manufactured in the previously described manner by coating respective substrate pieces in an environmentally controlled enclosure and providing each piece with an uncoated edge segment. After the coated substrate pieces defining the panels are manufactured, those pieces delivered to the site of a storage tank or retention facility (e.g. lake or pond). The coated substrate pieces are then extended across the ground adjacent to the tank and at least a pair of pieces are juxtaposed relative to one another such that a bottom surface of a first one of the pieces overlaps the uncoated edge segment of a second substrate piece to form a seam between the pieces. An adhesive substance is applied to the seam to secure the pieces together. In particular, polyurea coating, two-sided adhesive tape or other adhesives are introduced between the lower surface of the first substrate piece and the uncoated edge segment of the second piece to fasten together the first and second pieces.
Adhesive may also be applied across the seams and to the upper surface of the overlapping substrate pieces.
Other objects, features and advantages will occur from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
There is shown in
A secondary containment system 10 commonly is installed about tank T in order to catch and retain liquid fuel or chemicals that have spilled from tank T due, for example, to a leak in the shell of the tank or in the pipes or other equipment associated with the tank. Spills can also be caused by overfilling the tank. System 10 comprises a secondary containment liner 12 that extends across the ground surrounding tank T. The secondary containment system may also feature various other components including sensors, alarms, switches and valves (not shown), which react to a liquid spill by shutting off further pumping of liquid into the tank T and which notify the owner/operator of the spill so that needed repairs and other corrective action may be performed.
System 10 specifically includes an earthen berm 14 that encircles or otherwise surrounds tank T. As further shown in
A trench 21,
The foregoing secondary containment construction is largely conventional. Typically, the liner is constructed and installed by configuring sheets of the geotextile fabric about the storage tank so that the sheets extend across the ground and cover the area defining the spill retention basin, as well as the berm and trench. The impermeable coating is then sprayed onto the fabric and allowed to cure. As previously described, this procedure has presented several problems. Governmental regulations have commonly required that the upper surface of the liner be stippled to provide a non-skid/slip surface. To accomplish this, the polyurea coating material must be sprayed onto the upper surface of the geotextile fabric in a pattern achieved only by holding the nozzle of the sprayer a distance of about several feet from the fabric. As a result, when the coating is sprayed in the field and onsite, it tends to dissipate in the outdoor environment. A considerable amount of coating material (e.g. up to 25%) can be lost and wasted, especially when windy, rainy or other adverse weather conditions are encountered. In addition, significant quantities of coating material, which is typically stored in 55 gallon drums, must be transported to the site of the storage tank. After the coating is applied, the empty drums must be removed and discarded. Applicator equipment including pumps and hoses must also be transported to and from the site. All of this adds significantly to the inconvenience and cost of installing the secondary containment system.
The present invention overcomes the foregoing problems. As shown in
A critical aspect of this invention is that the secondary containment panels are manufactured individually in an environmentally controlled indoor environment prior to delivery to the site of the storage tank. As shown in
After piece 42 has been produced, polyurea coating 44 is sprayed onto the upper surface of piece 42 by a conventional sprayer 46. As shown in
When worker W reaches a selected short distance from the trailing edge of substrate piece 42, application of coating 44 is completed. The coating is then allowed to cure so that a completed secondary containment panel 24, shown in
In alternative embodiments, the coating material may be sprayed onto or otherwise applied to the substrate pieces by various other means including robotic applicators and alternative machines. The manner in which the coating is applied is not a limitation of this invention.
With regard to the embodiment utilizing a robotic applicator, in one embodiment a self-propelled steerable and computer-controlled robot is employed. In one embodiment, a traversing robot from SprayWorks Equipment Group, Inc. may be used. The robot may comprise a spray nozzle and component mixing unit that traverses above the fabric and crosses on a self-propelled computer-controlled sprayer carriage. The nozzle may be directed vertically down to the fabric surface. In another embodiment, the nozzle may be directed horizontally to broadcast the coating material. The nozzle may also be directed at an angle to the surface, e.g., 45°. The nozzle can be elevated 3 to 4 feet from the fabric surface. Other distances are possible.
The extent of movement of the spray nozzle unit is controlled by the computer. After a section of fabric is traversed a predetermined number of times, the carriage can be propelled forward to a new section of fabric and the process repeated. It will be appreciated that the computer control of the robot movements allows for a uniform coating to be applied that is unachievable by hand spraying.
The robot may comprise a spray nozzle. It may also contain an impingement block for mixing the two components of the polyurea (PUA) coating. The flow through the impingement block is controlled by a computer-controlled termination rod. The robot controls the speed and disbursement rate of polyurea coating. The robot also controls the direction or position of the nozzle relative to the fabric. In one embodiment, a Graco Probler P2 (air purge) or Graco Gusmer GX-7spray gun may be a used. The spray portioning unit may be supplied from 21st JMT.
The modified nozzle can spray at an accelerated rate of 3 gpm. It will be appreciated that this is a disbursement rate greater than can be achieved by an individual. The robotically controlled nozzle applies polyurea on the fabric at a thickness from 40 to 120 mils (1.0 to 3.0 mm) with a preferred rate of 40 to 100 mils (1.0 to 2.5 mm) and a most preferred at 40 to 80 mils (1.0 to 2.0 mm). It will be appreciated that the thickness will be uniformly applied by the computer-controlled robot.
In one embodiment, the fabric can be spun-bonded geotextile. The fabric may alternatively be a non-woven geotexitle. The fabric may have a weight range of 4 to 12 oz. In the preferred embodiment, the fabric is spun-bonded with a weight range of 4 to 8 oz. The most preferred embodiment the fabric is 4 oz weight spun bonded.
The spun-bonded fabric may be obtained under the tradename Typar supplied by Remay. The non-woven fabric may be obtained under the tradename Petromat supplied by Amoco Geotextiles.
The method may also comprise advanced quality control of the coating thickness, permeation and surface texture. Ferro-magnetic plates may be placed on a firm level surface where fabric coating is to be conducted. The uncoated fabric is positioned on the floor. A single fabric layer may be coated. The fabric is position over a plurality of the ferro-magnetic plates. It may also be positioned so that the robotic sprayer carriage straddles the width of the fabric. The total length and width of the fabric piece is accessible to the spray nozzle of the robot. It will be appreciated that the robot sprayer carriage can hold the coating mixture supply hoses, for example the A and B components of a polyurea coating.
After the coating is applied to the fabric, magnetic gauges may be placed in contact with the upper surface of the coated fabric, i.e., Type II constant contact gauges, to determine the thickness of the coating. The number or shape of the plates is not limited.
If it is determined that the boarder (or other selected distance) has been reached, the traverse movement of the sprayer stops 106. The carriage is propelled 107 forward in the Y direction (moving a predetermined distance along the length of the fabric). When the predetermined distance is reached, the carriage stops 108. The sprayer now traverses back across the carriage (the X2 direction) 109. Again the computer tracks the distance that the sprayer traverses across the carriage 111. If the boarder is reached the movement of the spray is stopped 112. If the boarder has not been reached, the sprayer continues spraying 110.
If the sprayer is stopped due to reaching the boarder of the fabric (or other predetermined distance) the carriage is again propelled in the Y direction (moving a predetermined distance along the length of the fabric 113. When the carriage travels the specified distance, it stops 114. The computer determines whether the carriage has travelled the length of the fabric (travel is the Y direction) 115. If no, the sprayer again traverses the across the carriage in the X direction. If the computer program determines the predetermined Y direction (designated c on
After a desired number of panels 24 required for a particular job are manufactured in the foregoing manner, they are transported to the storage tank site or other liquid retention site by various means of transportation. For example, as shown in
After the panels 24 are arranged and stretched out across the ground surrounding the tank, adjoining panels are fastened together to from the liner of the secondary containment system in the manner shown in
In contrast, to prior liner installation techniques, application of polyurea coating onsite is generally limited to regions of the seams along the seams or joints formed between the adjoining panels. The liner thus requires the application of far less coating in the field than is conventionally required when the entire liner is spray coated with polyurea as is performed in the prior art. Because much less coating is applied onsite, there is far less waste of such material. In addition, less coating material, fewer storage tanks and less related applicator equipment need to be transported to and from the installation site.
In alternative embodiments, panels 24 may be assembled and installed in an analogous manner in applications such as retention ponds and lakes and “frac” containment facilities. The panels are constructed and installed in the manner previously described and achieve corresponding advantages to those described in the storage tank embodiment.
The panels are environmentally friendly and can be reused and recycled as needed. When use of the assembled panels is no longer required at a particular containment site, the liner can be cut along the seams or otherwise to form reusable panels. These used panels can then be conveniently rolled-up and transported to a new containment site where they can be re-seamed and/or reassembled with newly manufactured panels (made as previously described) and reinstalled as a new secondary containment liner. This technique saves materials and cost and improves efficiency considerably.
Accordingly, the system of the present invention allows for secondary containment liners to be assembled and installed much more efficiently than has been done previously. Because the coating is applied in an environmentally controlled indoor site with robotically controlled equipment for uniform application, far less material is wasted. Consumption of coating components is reduced by approximately 90% (plus/minus 3%). Production costs are thereby significantly reduced. By the same token, much less coating material and related application equipment is required at the site of the storage tank. Transportation costs and inconvenience are thereby significantly reduced. In addition, the cost and annoyance associated with delivering 55 gallon drums of coating to the job site and then disposing of those drums after installation of the secondary containment system is completed are reduced significantly.
In one embodiment of the disclosure, an apparatus sprays the coating upon the secondary containment panel. See
The sprayer and carriage are powered by at least one motor 832. The motors can be electrically powered, fluid powered, powered by liquefied gas or by other fuels and mechanisms (i.e., piston driven).
The motor, sprayer or carriage can be operator controlled. The apparatus can also be controlled by a programmable computer, microprocessor or CPU 831. Cables or wires 834 connect the computer to the motor and to sprayer and to the carriage. Cables, wires or hoses 833 connect from the motor to the sprayer or carriage. It will be appreciated that the required length of the cables, wires and hoses varies with the positioning of the sprayer and the carriage. These components must be flexible and withstand bending. The varying quantity of these components 833, 834, can be retained in a carriage tray 820. The wires and cables can be moved or held above the carriage by a holder 850. The holder can be a wheel.
The carriage may have a motor such a servo-motor or powered geared mechanism 830 for turning the carriage surface moving component 802.
The sprayer includes a nozzle 807 which extends from the body of the sprayer 806. The nozzle may be adjusted to spray at an angle to the plane of the substrate (not shown). In a preferred embodiment, the nozzle is perpendicular to the plane of the substrate. Again, it will be appreciated that the sprayer can traverse or extend across the carriage spraying the substrate. The sprayer may be powered by a servo-motor and by a geared drive.
The carriage is moveable. It moves by operation of the carriage surface moving component. The carriage surface moving component can be one or more wheels, treads, tracks, tracks with rails or other mechanism known in the art. The carriage moves forward and backwards as shown by vector arrow 902.
The height of the sprayer nozzle above the substrate can be varied. For example, the vertical mounting components 803 can be adjusted in length. In another embodiment, the elevation of the sprayer relative to the carriage may also be varied. This of course, as all other movements, can be computer controlled.
The nozzle can be adjusted to control the quantity of coating sprayed on to the substrate. The coating thickness can therefore be controlled. The thickness of the coating may also be controlled by the rate of movement of the sprayer across the carriage or by the rate of movement of the carriage.
The extent of the substrate coated by the sprayer can be controlled. This can be controlled by the controlled movement of the sprayer. It can also be controlled by selectively (controllably) the start and stopping of the spray passing through the nozzle 807. Similarly, the movement of the carriage may also control the extent of coating coverage. The carriage and sprayer may move simultaneously. The substrate may also be separately moved in relation to the carriage and the sprayer. For example, the substrate may be moved in the directions of vector arrow 902.
From the foregoing it may be seen that the apparatus of this invention provides for a process for manufacturing secondary containment panels of the type used in connection with above-ground fuel and chemical storage tanks. While this detailed description has set forth particularly preferred embodiments of the apparatus of this invention, numerous modifications and variations of the structure of this invention, all within the scope of the invention, will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is understood that this description is illustrative only of the principles of the invention and is not limitative thereof.
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some of the drawings and not others, this is for convenience only, as each feature may be combined with any and all of the other features in accordance with this invention.
This specification is to be construed as illustrative only and is for the purpose of teaching those skilled in the art the manner of carrying out the invention. It is to be understood that the forms of the invention herein shown and described are to be taken as the presently preferred embodiments. As already stated, various changes may be made in the shape, size and arrangement of components or adjustments made in the steps of the method without departing from the scope of this invention. For example, equivalent elements may be substituted for those illustrated and described herein and certain features of the invention maybe utilized independently of the use of other features, all as would be apparent to one skilled in the art after having the benefit of this description of the invention.
While specific embodiments have been illustrated and described, numerous modifications are possible without departing from the spirit of the invention, and the scope of protection is only limited by the scope of the accompanying claims.
Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.
This application is a Continuation of Ser. No. 16/570,237 filed Sep. 13, 2019, which is a Continuation of Ser. No. 15/006,616 filed Jan. 26, 2016, which is a Continuation in Part of application Ser. No. 13/435,093 filed Mar. 30, 2012 (and now Pat. No. 9,278,372, issued Mar. 8, 2016) which is a Continuation in Part of application Ser. No. 12/315,584 filed Dec. 4, 2008 (and now U.S. Pat. No. 8,500,941 issued Aug. 6, 2013), the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16570237 | Sep 2019 | US |
Child | 17528124 | US | |
Parent | 15006616 | Jan 2016 | US |
Child | 16570237 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13435093 | Mar 2012 | US |
Child | 15006616 | US | |
Parent | 12315584 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13435093 | US |