This patent application is a U.S. nationalization under 35 USC §371 of international Application No. PCT/GB2009/050805, filed Jul. 8, 2009, which claim priority to Great Britain Patent Application No. 0812576.7, file Jul. 10, 2008. The disclosures set forth in the referenced applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
This invention relates to separating screens the main use for which is to separate components of mixtures, for example to separate or filter solids from mud or slurries generated during oil field drilling.
Generally, separating screens are fitted into shaker baskets, with each shaker basket having a plurality of screens. It is therefore necessary to provide a seal where adjacent screens abut and also where screens abut the shaker basket. It is known to co-mould a seal onto the edge of a screen body and also to attach a seal to a screen body by adhesives or by the use of fasteners such as screws. There are disadvantages associated with these known techniques and the invention aims to provide a different way of providing a seal on a screen body.
According to the invention there is provided a separating screen having a rectangular body one side of which carries a seal for sealing against an abutting side of an adjacent screen or basket, the seal comprising an elongate sealing strip of resilient material held in place against said one side of the body by a retaining strip attached to the body.
The retaining strip preferably clamps the seal to hold it in place.
Preferably, the retaining strip extends for substantially the whole length of the sealing strip so that the complete length of the latter is firmly held against said one side of the screen body, with part of the sealing strip sandwiched between the retaining strip and said one side of the screen body and another part of the sealing strip presenting an exposed surface for sealing against the abutting side of an adjacent screen or the abutting surface of a shaker basket.
The area of the retaining strip engaging the sealing strip may have formations such as pointed protrusions which resiliently engage the sealing strip to improve its retention.
The screen body may carry projections which extend through apertures in the retaining strip, in order to locate the retaining strip with respect to the screen body during manufacture. These projections may have their outer ends melted over areas of the retaining strip so as to serve as melted stakes, sometimes called heat stakes. The projections may alternatively engage the apertures with a snap action, the projections being resiliently deformed as they pass through the apertures and then springing back to hold the retaining strip firmly against the sealing strip. This form of mechanical connection avoids the needs for heated tooling.
The retaining strip may be separately formed from the screen body and attached thereto with the aid of the projections and apertures. Alternatively, the retaining strip may be pre-attached to the body or (as in the preferred embodiment), may be integrally formed with the body. In this case, the retaining strip is preferably attached to the body through an integrally moulded hinge which allows the retaining strip to be rotated (in a folding movement) with respect to the screen body so as to bring the retaining strip into its operative position where it holds the sealing strip against the screen body. The hinge is preferably formed along a lower edge of the body, the exposed surface of the sealing strip then extending along an upper edge of the body.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The retaining strip 5 also has a series of apertures or holes 8 which are positioned so that when the strip 5 is rotated about the hinge, i.e folded upwardly towards the body side as shown by arrow A, the pegs 4 register with the holes 8 and are able to penetrate the latter.
The purpose of the retaining strip 5 is to grip a resilient or elastomeric sealing strip 9 (
The length of the retaining strip 5 corresponds to the length of the sealing strip 9, and the use of a plurality of spaced heat stakes (formed by the pegs 4) ensures that the sealing strip 9 is firmly clamped along its complete length.
The strip 9 may be made from rubbers, natural rubber, closed cell structure foams, polychloroprene, polypropylene, thermoplastic elastomers (TPE) such as polyurethanes, copolyesters, styrene, copolymers, olefins, elastomeric alloys, polyamides, silicones, nitrile compounds or combinations thereof, or nitrile (NBR) compounds. The materials of the strips 5 and 9 must be resistant to oil-based muds and water-based muds because the main application is in filtering screens for filtering solids from slurries in oil field drilling.
The modification of
The sealing strip may be made from a commercially available extrusion the characteristics of which (notably elasticity) can be assessed and finalised in a manner which is simpler and more efficient than co-moulding where the range of available materials is more limited and where expensive tooling is necessary.
The use of an elongated retaining strip spreads and distributes the clamping pressure along the complete length of the sealing strip, in contrast to the use of screws which apply localised clamping pressure to discrete areas. Further, moulding the pegs with the body avoids a possible adverse reaction to the presence of water or oil-based muds, which can occur with metal screws or adhesive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0812576.7 | Jul 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2009/050805 | 7/8/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/25/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/004328 | 1/14/2010 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120006735 A1 | Jan 2012 | US |