The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to describe a vehicle recovery assembly for underwater vehicles which operate under negatively buoyant conditions.
(2) Description of the Prior Art
A variety of recovery systems for underwater vehicles have been in operation since submersibles were first conceived and operated. More recently, the Navy has operated vehicles employing recovery systems designed to bring negatively ballasted vehicles to the surface upon conclusion of vehicle operations.
As indicated by the references that follow, present recovery systems rely on inflating bags (attached to the vehicle) with lower density gas or liquid, relative to seawater. The inflated bags provide sufficient positive buoyancy to lift the vehicle to the surface. The low density gas or liquid, can be stored internal to the vehicle at high density, where upon a command the fluid expands to a low density state into the recovery floats external to the vehicle.
The principle of buoyant bag recovery is straightforward, although complications arise for vehicles operating at speeds greater than 5 knots. Complications arise due to the hydrodynamic loading, which will occur when the buoyancy floats expand into the hydrodynamic flow past the vehicle. Under these circumstances, the forces are sufficient to damage the recovery bags, thus necessitating the use of exotic materials of construction for the bag. The materials are typically expensive, all but negating the possibility of having an affordable recovery system.
Furthermore, in order to retrieve the undersea vehicle after recovery from the surface water and subsequently prepare the vehicle for another operation, the entire recovery assembly must be replaced from within the vehicle, requiring excessive disassembly of the vehicle, another undesirable cost driver.
In Radford (U.S. Pat. No. 3,706,294), a recovery assembly conforming to the outer contour of a torpedo is disclosed. Compressed gas inflates an annular member that operates as a buoyancy device. A similar configuration with similar limitations exists in Sandler (U.S. Pat. No. 4,271,552) where a torpedo recovery assembly having an inflatable annular sleeve 28 is used to slow the torpedo and raise the torpedo to the water's surface.
In Driggs (U.S. Pat. No. 1,998,805), a torpedo recovery assembly is disclosed. In the cited reference, an inflatable bag 52 is pressurized when the carrying torpedo decelerates and the torpedo begins to sink in an undersea environment. The increased pressure at increased depths acts upon a diaphragm to allow air to inflate the bag 52 thereby opening external doors 55 and 56 to a buoyant bag 16. At least one limitation on device of the Driggs reference is that the doors may further decelerate the torpedo but as a result of an initial deceleration. The doors do not act to decelerate the torpedo initially.
An improvement to the recovery systems described above would be an assembly that could decelerate a torpedo or undersea vehicles from velocities in excess of five knots to deploy a buoyant recovery device. The assembly should be a lower cost alternative to present buoyant recovery systems, whereby the concept is based on a simple design employing single components designed to perform multiple and different functions, thus reducing complexity, increasing reliability and reducing overall cost of operation. The assembly should allow a relatively straight forward recovery of the torpedo or underwater vehicle via surface ship or some other means other than submerged recovery.
It is a general purpose and object of the present invention to provide a recovery assembly for underwater vehicles, which operate under negatively buoyant conditions while transiting at velocities in excess of five knots.
To attain the object described, a vehicle deceleration and positive buoyancy assembly is disclosed, hereinafter referred to as the “assembly”. The assembly may be positioned on a torpedo or on alternate undersea vehicles. The assembly comprises a pair of doors acting as hydraulic/pneumatic dampened hydrodynamic drag brakes with accompanying flotation bags used for buoyant recovery of the torpedo.
The doors (or systematically named hydrodynamic drag brakes—HDB) are designed such that the doors are controllably forced open to an initial door angle and subsequently extended to the fully deployed position by hydrodynamic forces on the doors. These hydrodynamic forces acting in the opposite direction of the movement of the torpedo, decelerate the torpedo.
For any given initial vehicle velocity, the magnitude of the forces on the door are controlled passively by a compression damper linked to a door hinge assembly. A slot of the door hinge assembly allows a piston rod of the compression damper to travel while the door opens to an initial angle off the longitudinal axis. The action of piston controls the force from the door as a function of the instantaneous door opening angle and subsequent hydrodynamic force counteracting the movement force of the torpedo.
The initial door angle to the fully extended position will dictate the load profile acting on the door, thus the deceleration rate of the torpedo. The initial door angle allows the hydrodynamic flow to “catch” a leading edge of the door. The catch action strongly influences an initial force condition and resulting opening rate of the door.
The vehicle deceleration is predominantly a function of vehicle velocity, vehicle projected area, vehicle surface area, vehicle mass and the fluid medium which the vehicle is traveling thru. As such the doors, as hydrodynamic drag brakes, focus on their projected area to influence vehicle deceleration.
The method of inflating the flotation bags is by compressed gas. As depth increases, ambient pressure increases linearly. As pressure increases, the resulting volume of the inflated flotation bag decreases linearly, thus more gas is required at deeper depths to achieve the same volume. In many cases, the additional gas may not be available due to space limitations, thus rendering the recovery assembly useless at these deeper depths. Therefore, the hydrodynamic braking action of the doors reduces the time required to reach terminal velocity, thus reducing the depth the vehicle (or torpedo) sinks, thus enabling recovery with less gas required.
When deceleration of the torpedo is needed, a controller, either remotely-operated or by use of a depth sensor, actuates a first solenoid valve. Once actuated, the first solenoid valve allows high pressure gas (typically nitrogen gas, N2) from a sphere to provide a release action of latches. Once the latches are released, a bleed line to the surrounding ocean environment depressurizes the latches allowing the latches to retract—typically after recovery of the assembly.
The releasing action of the latches allows the doors to open to the preset initial angle. Almost instantaneously, the packed pressure of the flotation bags acts against breakaway webs to assist the latches in setting the initial angle. The doors are further opened by ensuing hydrodynamic forces of the movement of the vehicle.
A second solenoid valve actuates to allow high pressure gas to flow from the sphere to the flow control valve. The second solenoid valve actuates when the torpedo decelerates to a pre-determined speed.
The flow control valve controls mass flow of the high pressure gas through the valve and into the flotation bags by an internal variable orifice piston balancing depth pressure from the surrounding ocean environment against a calibrated spring. As gas flows through the flow control valve, the gas passes into the flotation bags inflating them to full capacity in a period of time, depending on depth.
When the flotation bags are fully inflated, gas flow is allowed to pass through two high flow relief valves, limiting the pressure of each of the flotation bags thus preventing over-inflation of the flotation bags as the assembly rises to the ocean surface for recovery.
Once the assembly and the torpedo are recovered, a bleed valve on each of the flotation bags, allows deflation of the flotation bags. Once each of the flotation bags is deflated, the bags can be set in the storage cavity, the doors can be re-latched, the gas sphere can be recharged, and the assembly can be re-used.
The assembly of the present invention presents a new method to recover a negatively buoyant underwater vehicle using hydrodynamic drag brakes to decelerate the undersea vehicle. Because of the compression damper and strength of the door hinges, the doors do not separate from the vehicle upon deployment. Other recovery systems jettison their doors, which can result in damage to the outer vehicle surface as well as add to the cost of replacement doors after every run.
The doors can be deployed at high vehicle speeds, allowing for rapid deployment of the flotation bags at low vehicle velocities. The low vehicle velocities translate into lesser hydrodynamic loads on the flotation bags than other systems thereby greatly decreasing the cost of the flotation bags.
A more complete understanding of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereto will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numerals and symbols designate identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views and wherein:
The vehicle deceleration and positive buoyancy assembly 10 of the present invention, hereinafter referred to the “assembly” is depicted in
When recessed to a surface 12, the doors 20 act as concealing sleeves of the recovery flotation bags 30 and a storage cavity 34. The doors 20 (or systematically named hydrodynamic drag brakes—HDB) are designed such that the doors are each actuated into the fully open position from the surface 12 of the assembly 10 as a result of the hydrodynamic forces acting on the doors. More specifically, as the doors 20 are controllably forced open to an initial door angle of approximately 17 degrees off a longitudinal axis 14 (shown in
For any given initial vehicle velocity, the magnitude of the forces on the door 20 are controlled passively by a compression damper 22 linked to a door hinge assembly 24 (See
The variations in the force characteristics, as determined by the deceleration profiles in
F=kVpn (1)
where k is the damping coefficient, Vp is the velocity of the piston 27 of the damper 22 during its stroke and n is a dimensionless constant, which can vary depending on damper design initiatives.
For this application, dampers with coefficients ranging from k=800 to k=2000 together with linear dampers (n=1.0) and non-linear dampers (n=2.0) are depicted in
The initial door angle, shown in
The dynamics of the torpedo 100 and expansively the vehicle deceleration are predominantly a function of vehicle velocity, vehicle projected area, vehicle surface area, vehicle mass and the fluid medium which the vehicle is traveling through. As such the doors 20, as hydrodynamic drag brakes, focus on their projected area to influence vehicle deceleration. The drag resulting from the doors 20 is:
Fd=CA sin(θ)V2 (2)
where Fd is the resulting hydrodynamic drag force on the door, A is the projected area of the door, θ is the door angle and V is the velocity of the vehicle. The hydrodynamic drag force of the doors 20 is adaptive to the existing vehicle drag characteristics.
The method of inflating the flotation bags 30 is by compressed gas. As depth increases, ambient pressure increases linearly. As pressure increases, the resulting volume of the inflated flotation bag 30 decreases linearly, thus more gas is required at deeper depths to achieve the same volume (i.e., buoyancy) as defined by the relationship,
Vvol=1/P*RT (3)
where VvOl is the volume of the flotation bag 30, P is the ambient pressure acting on the flotation bag, R is the gas constant and T is the gas temperature in the flotation bag. In many cases, the additional gas may not be available due to space limitations, thus rendering the recovery assembly useless at these deeper depths. Therefore, the hydrodynamic braking action of the doors 20 reduces the time required to reach terminal velocity or a velocity suitable for flotation bag deployment, thus reducing the depth the vehicle (or torpedo 100) sinks, thus enabling recovery with less gas required (shown graphically in
As is shown in
The hydrodynamic loading on the flotation bag 30, having a given projected area into the free stream is proportional to the square of the vehicle velocity, thus the relevance of minimizing vehicle speed prior to deploying the floats into the free stream. As can be seen in
Referring now to
The releasing action of the latches 48 allows the doors 20 to open to the preset initial angle of approximately 17.7 degrees with the assistance of the compression dampers 27 (as described above). Almost instantaneously, the packed pressure of the flotation bags 30 acts against the breakaway webs 32 to assist the latches 48 in setting the initial angle. The doors are further opened by ensuing hydrodynamic forces as previously described (shown as the direction arrow “A” in
A solenoid valve 60 allows high pressure gas (typically nitrogen, N2) to flow from the sphere 44 to a flow control valve 62. The solenoid valve 60 actuates when the torpedo 100 decelerates after use to a certain speed.
The flow control valve 62 controls mass flow through the valve and into the flotation bags 30 by an internal variable orifice piston balancing depth pressure from the surrounding ocean environment, “SEA”, against a calibrated spring (See
Once the assembly 10 and the torpedo 100 are recovered, a bleed valve 70 on each of the flotation bags 30, allows deflation of the flotation bags. Generally, once each of the flotation bags 30 is deflated, the bags can be set in the storage cavity 34, the doors 20 can be re-latched and the assembly 10 can be re-used.
The assembly 10 of the present invention presents a new method to recover a negatively buoyant underwater vehicle using hydrodynamic drag brakes to decelerate the torpedo 100 or undersea vehicle. No powered actuators are required for deployment other than the initial actuation of the latches 48 and the solenoid valve 60.
The deployment time of the doors 20 is also controllable by a single compression damper 22 linked to one of the doors. Because of the compression damper 22 and strength of the door hinges 24, the doors 20 do not detach from the torpedo 100 or vehicle upon deployment. Other recovery systems jettison their doors, which can result in damage to the outer vehicle surface as well as add to the cost of replacement doors after every run.
The doors 20 can be deployed at high vehicle speeds, allowing for rapid deployment of the flotation bags 30 at resultant vehicle velocities of less than 10 feet/second. These low vehicle velocities translates into hydrodynamic loads on the flotation bags 30 of less than 50 lbs; other systems would necessitate loads in excess of 2000 lbs, greatly increasing the cost of the flotation bags.
Alternatives to this assembly are either more expensive to operate due to the higher loads that the flotation bags or recovery floats must accommodate due to the lack of hydrodynamic drag doors or the alternatives do not have the ability to recover the vehicle rapidly from high initial vehicle speeds, thus requiring the vehicle to have inherently low operating speeds.
While the invention has been described in connection with what is considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it should be understood that this invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1998805 | Driggs | Apr 1935 | A |
3047259 | Tatnall et al. | Jul 1962 | A |
3706294 | Radford | Dec 1972 | A |
4271552 | Sandler | Jun 1981 | A |
4832288 | Kendall et al. | May 1989 | A |