The present invention relates to a pump; and more particularly to a pump for controlling the provisioning of syrup from a syrup bag to a fluid dispenser.
Pumps are known in the art that are air-driven double piston/diaphragm pumps such as the model G & N series BIB pumps that are distributed by the assignee of the present invention. Problems and shortcomings of these known pumps include that they require more parts and more space than is otherwise needed to provide the required output or pumping. For the required output (which is relatively small), these pumps are over rated and therefore not an ideal solution in terms of cost and space.
There is a need in the industry to provide a solution to the aforementioned problem in terms of cost and space.
The present invention provide a single piston diaphragm pump that provides a solution to the aforementioned problem in the art in terms of cost and space.
By way of example, and according to some embodiments, the present invention may include, or take the form of, apparatus such as a pump featuring a liquid housing configured with a liquid chamber in combination a gas housing configured with a gas chamber.
The liquid chamber may be configured with a single piston/diaphragm assembly arranged therein to respond to a suction stroke and draw liquid into the liquid chamber, and configured to respond to a pressure stroke and provide the liquid from the liquid chamber.
The gas housing may include a slide valve assembly that fluidicly communicates with a first gas chamber and a second gas chamber. The slide valve assembly may be configured to respond to a suction-to-pressure stroke force at a conclusion of the suction stroke, change from a suction stroke state to a pressure stroke state, provide gas from the first gas chamber to the second gas chamber through the slide valve assembly, and provide the pressure stroke so the liquid passes from the liquid chamber. The slide valve assembly may also be configured to respond to a pressure-to-suction stroke force at a corresponding conclusion of the pressure stroke, change from the pressure stroke state to the suction stroke state, provide gas from the second gas chamber to atmosphere through the slide valve assembly, and provide the suction stroke so the liquid is drawn into the liquid chamber.
The present invention may include one or more of the following features:
The slide valve assembly may include a block or housing assembly and an actuator assembly; the block or housing assembly may include a slide valve housing configured with a cavity, recess or channel; and the actuator assembly may include a slide block configured to slide in the cavity, recess or channel of the slide valve housing, an actuator combination having a slide spring arranged between a lower retainer and an upper retainer, and a yoke configured with an opening to contain the actuator combination under compression and also configured to couple to the slide valve housing allowing the slide valve assembly to change between the pressure stroke state and the suction stroke state respectively in response to the suction-to-pressure force and the pressure-to-suction force.
The actuator assembly may be configured to slide, rotate or translate in relation to the block or housing assembly in response to the suction-to-pressure force and the pressure-to-suction force.
The first gas chamber may be configured to receive the gas via a gas-in fitting in response to the suction-to-pressure force at the conclusion of the suction stroke.
The valve slide assembly may be configured to provide the gas via a gas exhaust fitting to atmosphere in response to the pressure-suction force at the conclusion of the pressure stroke.
During the pressure stroke, the valve slide assembly may be positioned so that gas is routed from the first gas chamber thru the slide valve assembly to the second gas chamber.
During the suction stroke, the valve slide assembly may be positioned so that gas is routed from the second gas chamber thru the slide valve assembly to a gas exhaust fitting, then to atmosphere.
The single piston/diaphragm assembly may be configured to respond to the gas filling the second gas chamber, provide the pressure stroke causing a displacement of the liquid from the liquid chamber through an outlet fitting, and cause the slide valve assembly to change from the pressure stroke state to the suction stroke state at the conclusion of the pressure stroke.
The single piston/diaphragm assembly may be configured to respond to the gas being exhausted from the second chamber, provide the suction stroke, draw the liquid through a liquid inlet fitting and into the liquid chamber, and cause the slide valve assembly to change from the suction stroke state to the pressure stroke state at the conclusion of the suction stroke.
The single piston/diaphragm assembly may include a spring configured to respond to the pressure stroke, compress storing energy for the suction stroke, and provide the suction stroke at the corresponding conclusion of the pressure stroke.
The single piston/diaphragm assembly may be configured between the second gas chamber and the liquid chamber to respond to the suction stroke and move so as to expand the volume of the liquid chamber drawing fluid into the liquid chamber.
The slide valve assembly may include at least one component made of ceramic. By way of example, the slide block may be made of ceramic.
The single piston/diaphragm assembly may include a piston and a diaphragm, the piston being coupled to the slide valve assembly via a piston shaft/actuator slide assembly, and the diaphragm being coupled between the gas housing and the liquid housing.
Possible applications may include, e.g., bag-in-box fluid transfer, bottled water dispensers, coffee machine auto-refill, beverage dispensers, general fluid transfer, water pressure systems, or chemical spraying systems.
The drawing includes
In the drawing, the Figures have reference numerals and lead lines associated with the various elements shown therein. For the sake of reducing clutter in the drawing, and also improving readability when the specification is read in conjunction with the drawing, every Figure does not include every reference numeral and lead line associated with every element shown therein. Moreover, as a person skilled in the art would appreciate, some elements that do not form part of the underlying point of novelty of the present invention are not provided with a reference numeral and lead line.
By way of example, inside the gas housing 20, the following components may be arranged: a slide valve assembly 22 configured therein, a gas housing cover 24, and a piston shaft/actuator slide assembly 26. The slide valve assembly 22 may be configured with a block or housing assembly 22a and an actuator assembly 22b. The block or housing assembly 22a may include a slide valve housing 22a1, a block plate 22a2 and a gasket block 22a3, as labeled in
As labeled in
By way of example, inside the liquid housing 30, the following components may be arranged: a piston/diaphragm assembly 32, a piston shaft 34, a spring 36 and check valves 38a, 38b. The piston/diaphragm assembly 32 may include a piston 32a and a diaphragm 32b, as labeled in
By way of example,
The Actuator Assembly 22b
In the actuator assembly 22b, the slide spring 22b3 is configured under compression between the lower and upper retainers 22b2 and 22b4, and in relation to the sliding block 22a1 and the yoke 22b5, e.g., when in either the position in the pressure stroke (
A Ceramic Slide Type Gas Valve 22b
By way of example, the slide valve assembly 22 may include one or more components made of ceramic. For example, the slide block or gas valve 22b1 may include, or take the form of, a ceramic slide type gas valve. As a person skilled in the art would appreciate, a ceramic may take the form of a product or an article of manufacture made from a nonmetallic material by firing at a high temperature, such as porcelain. In particular, porcelain may be made from, or consistent of, kaolin, quartz and/or feldspar that is fired at high temperatures. The scope of the invention is not intended to be limited to any particular type or kind of ceramic or ceramic material that is now known or later developed in the art.
Applications
By way of example, possible applications may include: BIB pumping, transfer pumping, or beverage dosing.
The present invention may also be used in, or form part of, or used in conjunction with, other fluid handling applications. The scope of the invention is also not intended to be limited to being implemented in any particular type or kind of pump either now known or later developed in the future, and may include other diaphragm pumps, etc.
The Scope of the Invention
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, may modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed herein as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention.
This application is a continuation application of, and claims benefit to, patent application Ser. No. 14/733,481, filed 8 Jun. 2015, which claims benefit to provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/008,782 (911-005-074-1 (FFLJX0010US)), filed 6 Jun. 2014; which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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manitowocbeverage.com “HeavyDuty Advantage BIB Gas Pump” http://www.manitowocbeverage.com/asset/?id=zzqng. 911-532 Rev. A 03/02 which also includes Shurflow' Juice Gas pump 166-200-XX (green label) Installation adn Operation Manual, 911-437 Rev. F 1/98 pp. 1-6; and Shurflow Condiment Gas pump 166-200-XX, Installation and Operation Manual, 911-432 Rev E. 9/03 ECO 7509, pp. 1-4. Mar. 2002. |
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JP2005121013 English Language Abstract (2 pages); Dec. 5, 2005. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220128048 A1 | Apr 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62008782 | Jun 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14733481 | Jun 2015 | US |
Child | 17488669 | US |