This application is a 371 of PCT/IB2005/001611 filed on Jun. 9, 2005, published on Dec. 22, 2005 under publication number WO 2005/120736 A1 which claims priority benefits from French Patent Application Number 04/06332 filed Jun. 11, 2004.
The invention relates to a method and a device for a filling, cleaning, unblocking-type intervention in a closed or virtually closed enclosure. It is particularly suitable for complex-shaped and/or hard-to-reach cavities. It offers many applications including in construction, chemical or food production installations, medicine and dentistry.
To clean a closed enclosure, it is known practice to make two openings in the enclosure in order to cause a fluid, gaseous or liquid, where necessary having chemical cleaning properties, to circulate therein at high pressure. This method rapidly reaches its limits:
To fill an air-filled closed or semi-closed cavity with a liquid or pasty substance, it is known practice to connect a water inlet duct in an opening of the cavity and to provide a discharge of the air, either through a second opening or through the same opening. Such a method is however lengthy if the volume is great. In addition, it does not make it possible to perfectly fill a cavity whose shape is complex, has thin and narrow ramifications, in which air pockets remain trapped.
Such a filling solution is described in document EP0538200 in the dental field, for which the closed enclosure is the inside of a tooth that has to be filled with a filler paste. This solution consists in a mechanism for aspirating the volume of the tooth allowing it to be filled at the same time with a paste. Such a method has the disadvantages of a lengthy filling if the volume is great, of not allowing a filling of all the interstices of the cavity and residual air pockets remaining trapped.
A second solution in the dental field is described in document U.S. Pat. No. 4,021,921. This solution consists in inserting a liquid inside a tooth with the aid of a pump pushing the liquid. This solution also provides for the addition of gas bubbles and the use of pressure oscillations combined with periodic pulses, applied via a control of the pump allowing it to carry out repeated start and stop cycles. This solution has the advantage of improving the cleaning and filling effect that would be obtained by a simple circulation of pressurized liquid. However, the proposed device has the disadvantage of being complex, of having a voluminous mechanism and of being difficult to apply and to control due to the particular operation of the pump. Additionally, the solution does not make it possible to fully eliminate all the air pockets from the cavity and its filling and cleaning are insufficient.
A third solution in the dental field is described in document EP0299919. This solution is based, on the one hand, on a pump which makes it possible to create a vacuum in the tooth and on a device with a piston which has the function of inserting into the tooth a pressurized cleaning liquid. This device operates on the basis of the cavitation phenomena, of which the high energy involved makes it possible to resolve the disadvantages of the preceding solutions. However, such a solution requires two controlled pumping systems, relatively long ducts, many connections, depends on the inertia of the components in motion, the inertia of the columns of liquids in motion and is subjected to the various damping factors associated with the various components such as the ducts in the context of the pressure variations. This solution relies therefore on a complex mechanism posing problems of reliability. In addition, the energy consumed is considerable and this solution causes a considerable consumption of liquid. Finally, it generates cavitation phenomena that are always accompanied by often undesirable violent effects and are not suitable for the envisaged uses. A variant of this solution, which has the same disadvantages, is described in document EP0521119.
A solution having similar disadvantages is described in document EP0766535.
Another solution using cavitation is described in document EP1146914. It consists in the creation of a low pressure by a device that is periodically placed in contact with the enclosure to be cleaned, in alternation with a setting at atmospheric pressure. This solution is based on a rotor rotated by a motor and containing several internal ducts to connect the various pressure sources to the cavity of the closed enclosure. This device has many disadvantages like those mentioned previously, to which the fact of using the rotor is added: specifically, this device requires particular connections between the ducts, causes losses of energy and wear by friction, problems of sealing and hygiene because the liquid passes through the rotor.
When a duct is blocked, it is known practice to try to unblock it by filling it, for example, with water according to the preceding technique hoping that the pressure will be sufficient to clear the blockage. In practice, this method is limited in the case of stubborn blockages.
A general object of the invention consists in proposing a method and a device that allow a difficult intervention of the cleaning, filling, unblocking type in a hard-to-reach closed cavity.
More precisely, the object of the invention is to propose a method and a device suitable for filling, cleaning, unblocking-type operations that make it possible to obtain a good result and in a short time.
An object of the invention also consists in proposing a method and a device suited to different fields such as construction, chemical or food installations, the cavity being able to be a liquid-conveying duct or a tank, or such as the medical and dental field, the cavity being able to be an artery or a tooth.
An object of the invention consists in proposing a simple method and device, of little bulk and low cost.
The concept of the invention consists in subjecting the enclosure, within which the intervention is necessary, to cycles of sudden pressure releases, causing a particular motion of fluid, gaseous, liquid and even pasty, within the enclosure, which has the effect of cleaning, filling, unblocking the enclosure.
More precisely, the device according to the invention for difficult intervention in a closed enclosure comprises an enclosure connected to the closed enclosure via a duct, a piston that can move thanks to a motor, a geometry allowing a contact with the outside air when the piston occupies a certain position within the enclosure in order to generate a sudden release of pressure, and an outlet valve remaining closed when the piston increases the volume of the enclosure so as to cause the pressure reduction within the enclosures.
The motor may consist of a pneumatic device, comprising a closed enclosure comprising a gas inlet and outlet, a piston connected to the piston of the enclosure.
The device may also comprise a spring opposing the motor and allowing the movement of the piston in a first direction, the motor causing the movement of the piston in a contrary direction.
The enclosure of the device may comprise a hole, a groove or a sectional enlargement to place its volume in contact with the outside and cause a sudden release of pressure when the piston reaches a certain position.
The device may comprise a duct of which one end is designed to penetrate within the enclosure, and of which the other end is connected to a fluid reservoir.
It may comprise a cone made of silicone or elastomer traversed by the end of the tube or tubes designed to penetrate within the closed enclosure, the cone being adapted to its positioning in an opening of this closed enclosure. One of the ducts may protrude by a greater length from the cone in order to penetrate more deeply within the closed enclosure.
The invention also relates to a method for difficult intervention in a closed enclosure in contact with the enclosure of the device via a duct, comprising a repetition of the following steps:
The device and method of the invention may be used to clean and fill a tooth or a bone.
These objects, features and advantages and others of the present invention will be explained in detail in the following description of particular embodiments given on a nonlimiting basis in relation to the appended figures amongst which:
a to 5c are variant embodiments of the means of sudden release of pressure;
a to 7c illustrate the operation of the device of
For reasons of simplification, the cavity is represented schematically as rectangular. It could however have any complex form and particularly have hard-to-reach nooks.
The cleaning method of the invention, applied with the aid of the foregoing device, comprises the following essential steps:
The pressure reduction means 2 may be of a mechanical type such as a pump, of the hydraulic type, such as a turbine, of the electromechanical type, such as a vibration pump whose operating cycle is sufficiently high to be considered continuous. It operates in a continuous or virtually continuous manner so that it causes a virtually permanent flow of air within the enclosure.
The release device 3 has the function of causing a sudden pressure increase, and may consist in a simple device suddenly placing the enclosure at low pressure in contact with the outside at constant pressure, such as the air at atmospheric pressure for example. It may consist in a simple mechanical device consisting of a ball blocking off an opening of the enclosure and connected to a spring, this ball being able to be moved so as to release the opening of the enclosure when the pressure difference between the inside and the outside of the enclosure reaches a sufficient value to oppose the force of the spring. This device may also be based on the constant elasticity of a material that makes it possible to open a valve when the pressure reduction exceeds a certain threshold. This phenomenon causes a sudden change in the virtually permanent flow. As a variant, this device may be controlled, the valve being mechanically controlled for example.
The combination and repetition of the two foregoing effects make it possible to create a circulation of air marked by violent movements inside the enclosure which makes it possible to obtain a better cleaning than with a simple flow.
This device may also be used with any fluid 4. Note that in the case of a liquid such as water, by nature incompressible, such a device remains effective by the fact that there always remain at least a few air bubbles within the enclosure, a phenomenon due to the imperfect geometry of the walls of the enclosure, to the possible presence of polluting products, solid or liquid, at the openings for example, which allows the device to produce the pressure cycle described hereinabove. According to the concept of the invention, the extreme conditions of cavitation are not sought and are not necessary, unlike the prior art. However, the invention remains compatible with these extreme conditions and nothing would prevent the device from operating in such conditions if certain applications required it.
This device makes it possible to carry out the following steps:
Note that this device makes it possible to obtain the following effects:
Finally, this device makes it possible to combine the action of two complementary fluids, the air which allows a mechanism of pressure reduction then sudden release, and the water, with, where necessary, an addition of liquid cleaning product, which may have a more effective cleaning effect than the air alone, and participates effectively in the transmission of the shock waves. Naturally, any other combination of fluids, liquid, gaseous and even pasty, is possible, as is the use of a liquid comprising solid particles in suspension.
This device and method therefore make it possible to obtain improved cleaning. It is possible to exploit the principles of the invention in a secondary application to clean an object that is positioned in the enclosure.
In addition, they make it possible to fill the enclosure 1 well with water. Finally, this system is also perfectly suited to the unblocking of the enclosure, due to the fact that filling is improved and makes it possible to reach zones that are difficult to reach with a simple flow, and due to the fact that the sudden pressure reductions make it possible to transfer impacts that have a positive effect on the unblocking action.
This device operates as follows:
It is therefore evident that this device makes it possible to use the method of the device of
In this embodiment, the pressure reduction method consists in an outlet valve 7, a piston 8 and a motor 9.
a to 5c represent variant embodiments of the device of
Specifically,
As a comment, this device combines the two functions of pressure reduction 2 and of sudden release 3 by means of the piston 8, which makes it a controlled system, unlike the preceding devices in which the two means operated independently.
The device of
The device of
Since it is not possible to place a piston directly in contact with the interior volume 18 of a bone 19 to be cleaned and filled, a particular device 20 is used. This device comprises a cylindrical enclosure 1, connected to the cavity 18 of the bone through a duct 21 penetrating into the bone through an opening 22, the seal being provided by the use of a cone pushed into the opening and allowing the ducts to pass through. This cone may be made of elastomer or silicone, is retained by simple wedging, the pressure reduction inside the bone also participating in keeping it in place.
This device comprises a piston 8, set in motion by a pneumatic motor 9 and a spring 10. The piston 8 occupies a sufficient cross section of the enclosure 1 to make it possible to cause pressure variations within it with its movement. The device also comprises a valve 7 and an opening 11 in its wall, the assembly having been described in relation to
This device has an embodiment in which the motor 9 is a pneumatic system, based on an enclosure 23 affixed to the enclosure 1 in a sealed manner, including a piston 24 connected to the piston 8, an air inlet 25 and an air outlet 26. Naturally, it is possible to symmetrically exchange the directions of setting in motion of the motor 9 and of the spring 10.
The pistons 8 and 24 and the enclosures 1 and 23 are dimensioned to obtain the pressure variations and forces necessary to each application.
This motor may be replaced by any other equivalent system or combination of means, such as springs, electric motors, etc.
a to 7c illustrate the operation of the device.
In
At the end of travel of the piston 8, represented in
When the piston 8 reaches the position represented in
The cycles succeed one another in this way, causing pressure reductions and sudden pressure releases within the enclosures 1 and 18.
These cycles may first be carried out with a supply of water, the reservoir 6 being filled with water, in order to clean the cavity 18, then the water may be replaced by resin and the cycles resumed until the cavity 18 is satisfactorily filled with resin. Note that this device makes it possible to obtain both a surprising cleaning and filling, in a very short time.
This device makes it possible, on the one hand, to clean the cavity 18 of the bone with the aid of a cleaning fluid 6. It also makes it possible to fill this cavity with a paste, by putting it in the place of the cleaning fluid.
This device makes it possible to achieve the pressure curve shown in
Those skilled in the art will adapt the device to suit it to the different fields of application mentioned hereinabove.
As an additional comment, this device can function in other particular conditions in which there is a change of state of a fluid, in which there are cavitation phenomena. It remains compatible with the addition of complementary components such as pressure sensors, devices such as a transducer in contact with the fluid or submerged in the cavity in order to add complementary vibratory and/or thermal phenomena, of the ultrasound type for example.
The device and method of the invention finally have the following advantages:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
04 06332 | Jun 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/001611 | 6/9/2005 | WO | 00 | 12/11/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/120736 | 12/22/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3816922 | Thiel et al. | Jun 1974 | A |
3990152 | Hirdes | Nov 1976 | A |
4021921 | Detaille | May 1977 | A |
4092778 | Hirdes | Jun 1978 | A |
4768955 | Hirdes | Sep 1988 | A |
4993947 | Grosrey | Feb 1991 | A |
5282366 | Reilly et al. | Feb 1994 | A |
5295828 | Grosrey | Mar 1994 | A |
6030215 | Ellion et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6824751 | Rossell | Nov 2004 | B2 |
20030103855 | Kim et al. | Jun 2003 | A1 |
20050221253 | Spinello | Oct 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
198 48 479 | May 2000 | DE |
0 299 919 | Jan 1989 | EP |
0 538 200 | Apr 1993 | EP |
0 521 119 | May 1996 | EP |
2003119867 | Apr 2003 | JP |
WO 9212685 | Aug 1992 | WO |
WO 9535069 | Dec 1995 | WO |
WO 0045859 | Aug 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070235066 A1 | Oct 2007 | US |