The present invention relates to tubular liners. More specifically, the present invention is concerned with woven tubular liners.
Compared to flat fabric weaving, which is used to manufacture flat liners, in circular weaving of wefts and warps, the wefts and the warps are continuous, i. e. running uninterrupted along a circumferential direction, and along a longitudinal direction respectively, and the weft yarns are submitted to reduced displacement during weaving. Interestingly, continuously woven tubular products have fewer points of weakness than tubular products assembled from flat liners when stressed at high pressure for example.
Still, during circular weaving, typically displacement of the different yarns by the shuttle occurs, in all directions. As a result, the resulting woven structures may be too loose and not be strong enough depending on applications, for example under high pressure, and/or in applications where the tubular products need to respond quickly and without incident such as bunching or accumulation of internal sheath. High flow hoses used to move large bodies of water or for rehabilitation of waterways and filtration, and flexible industrial pipes used in agriculture, for example are all tubular products submitted to high forces.
Tubular liners are used in a number of applications, such as fire hoses for example. The properties required for a fire hose for example often require a doubled structure. Obtaining a double structure by circular weaving is still a challenge.
Double jacket hoses comprise two separate sheaths inserted one into the other. Upon use one sheath may stretch more than the other sheath, the less stretched sheath creating wrinkles in the assembly; such so-called “bunching” may be internal or external, as the accumulation of wrinkles may occur to a different degree on the inner or on the outer sheath, respectively.
There is still a need in the art for tubular woven liners.
More specifically, in accordance with the present invention, there is provided a woven tubular liner, comprising an outer surface and an inner surface, wherein the outer surface comprises outer wefts and warps, and the inner surface comprises inner wefts and the warps, the inner and outer surfaces being connected by the warps, the outer wefts being protected from an environment inside of the tubular linear and the inner wefts being protected from an environment outside of the tubular liner.
There is further provided a tubular liner weaved of continuous warps and continuous wefts, comprising at least i) first wefts interlaced with the warps and ii) second wefts interlaced with the warps, the first wefts interlaced with the warps and the second wefts interlaced with the warps being connected by the warps, and the first and the second wefts being separated.
There is further provided a method of weaving a tubular liner, comprising repeating a weaving unit of continuous outer wefts and continuous inner wefts running uninterrupted along a circumferential direction, woven with continuous warps running along a longitudinal direction, offsetting positions of the warps relative to the wefts in the weaving unit, selectively interlacing outer wefts with the warps, and selectively interlacing inner wefts with the warps.
Other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will become more apparent upon reading of the following non-restrictive description of specific embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In the appended drawings:
The present invention is illustrated in further details by the following non-limiting examples.
With the outer weft Tout in an upper position while warp C1 is in a middle position and the inner weft Tin is in a lower position over rotation 1, then on 6 rotations for example, the outer weft Tout travels between the upper position and the middle position while the inner weft Tin runs from the low position to the middle position, the warp C1 running through the 3 positions. Thus, the warp C1 ends up interlocked by the inner weft Tin and the outer weft Tout, and the inner weft Tin and the outer weft Tout found themselves connected together through the warp C1 (See
As a result, the outer surface of the fabric, facing the outer environment, of the resulting tubular liner is formed by the outer wefts Tout and the warps (C) (
As a result, the outer surface of the fabric, facing the outer environment of the resulting tubular liner, is formed by the outer wefts Tout and the warps (C) (
Thus, the inner and outer surfaces of the tubular liner are physically separated and not interlocked directly with one another, still connected together in an integral wall structure. The present disclosure thus provides a single layer woven tubular liner, allowing features of double jacket tubular liners while overcoming issues of differential stretching of double jacket tubular liners upon use causing wrinkles or bunching.
A method of weaving a tubular woven liner according to an embodiment of an aspect of the present disclosure comprises repeating a weaving unit of continuous outer and inner wefts running uninterrupted along the circumferential direction, with continuous warps running uninterrupted along the longitudinal direction. The method comprises offsetting the positions of the warps relative to the wefts in the weaving unit, selectively interlacing the outer wefts with warps, and selectively interlacing the inner wefts with warps. As a result, in the thickness of the fabric of the resulting tubular liner, the outer wefts and the inner wefts are separated, each in a separate level of the structure, namely a level comprising outer wefts and warps, and a level comprising inner wefts and warps.
The method comprises separating the outer and inner wefts of the weave by the warps. As a result the first surface of the tubular liner is formed by the inner wefts interlocked with the warps, while the second surface of the tubular liner is formed by the outer wefts interlocked with the warps. Thus, although the tubular liner is a single jacket tubular liner, the inner and outer surfaces of the tubular liner are separated and they do not share the inner and outer wefts. Yet, the inner and outer surfaces of the tubular liner are connected in a single structure, by a middle layer of warps interlocking the outer and inner wefts. Such method of weaving a tubular liner comprising separating inner and outer wefts thus provides a single jacket tubular liner that may combine, and increase, specific properties of double jacket and single jacket liners into an integral structure.
A first level formed by the outer wefts and warps, a second level formed by warps indirectly connecting the inner and outer wefts, and a third level formed by the inner wefts and warps, as described hereinabove. In such a three-level integrated structure, the first and third levels are connected through the second level, in which warps indirectly connect the inner and outer wefts (see
Such levels in the structure of the walls may be extended to more than two levels. Such levels in the structure of the woven tubular liners may be extended to multiple levels. The present disclosure applies for first wefts, second wefts, third wefts, etc. . . . , the first, second and third wefts, etc. . . . , interlocking with warps as opposed to interlocking directly together.
The present tubular liner is made of continuous wires for the warps and wefts, thereby exempt of short lengths of warps and wefts, the lengths of the wires being limited by the spools capacity, thereby splices ensure the continuity of the wires upon changing spools, thereby yielding a seamless, sutureless, jointless woven tubular liner, as opposed to flat weaved tubular liners.
It was found that the present single jacket tubular liners have bursting resistance, flexibility, resistance to temperature variations, radial and longitudinal expansion as well as resistance to puncture, comparable to those of double jacket tubular liners.
The materials, sizes and density of the inner wefts, the outer wefts and the warps may be selected according to target parameters of the tubular liner, so as to reach target combinations of elongation and expansion, abrasion, flexibility and resistance to temperature variations, tailored to each specific application of the tubular liners. For example, in the case of fire hoses or mining hoses, target parameters may include maximized bursting resistance, controlled elongation, resistance to winding, resistance to abrasion, resistance to outer and inner environments.
The internal and external wefts may be high tenacity polyethylene terephthalate (PET) yarns and the warps ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMPWE) yarns for example.
Textile synthetic wires such as polyester, nylon, technical fibers such as aramid, ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE, UHMW) also known as high-modulus polyethylene (HMPE), mineral fibers such as basalt and glass fibers may be used. Wires of continuous fibers, discontinuous fibers or spun fibers may be used. Coated wires as well as hybrid yarn or combination of technical fibers and yarns may also be used.
The present 3-dimensional weaving method creates thickness by stacking multiple layers.
The scope of the claims should not be limited by the embodiments set forth in the examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2021/051095 | 8/6/2021 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63071242 | Aug 2020 | US |