This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 22461611.0 filed Sep. 28, 2022, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure is concerned with providing heating for valves and valve components e.g. to prevent freezing.
Valves of many types are known to regulate the flow of fluid through a system. Such valves can be manual or motorized. Mechanical, hydraulic and electrical valves are known and used in many fields. Often, such valves and associated pipes are required to operate in extreme environments and are required to be able to continue to operate reliably in environments where e.g., contamination, vibration, pressure and or temperatures can impact operation. One field of application where the valve components are subjected to particularly low temperatures is in the aerospace field. Valves are used to drain fluid from water systems in the aircraft or to drain water that has accumulated in parts of the aircraft such as the fuel tank. Hydraulic valves are also used to control moveable parts of the aircraft such as flight control panels. Components such as water pipes and valves designed for aerospace applications often face many unique challenges. One of the main challenges is high altitude operation with ambient temperatures around −45° C. (−50° F.). At such temperatures, water in or around the valve parts can freeze and prevent reliable operation of the valve. For this reason, many valves require some form of heating to prevent water in or on the valve from freezing.
Typically, silicone heaters are used since these can be formed as flexible sheets or sleeves and fitted around the parts of the valve that require heating.
Although silicone heaters provide an effective and simple solution, silicone has fairly low mechanical properties and so can be damaged during installation or during normal use of the valve and may need to be replaced frequently. Further, the known silicone heaters are provided as a layer around the valve/pipes. This results in an overall increase of the size of the valve/pipes and therefore requires more space for installation. In aircraft, and other applications where space is limited, this can be disadvantageous.
There is, therefore, a need for a simple way of providing heating to valves that avoids these problems.
According to this disclosure, there is provided a heating arrangement for a valve, comprising a thermally conductive heating wire embedded within a body of the valve. Also provided is a valve body formed by additive manufacture and having a thermally conductive heating wire embedded therein to which electric power is applied to cause the thermally conductive heating wire to generate heat in the valve body. A method of manufacture is also provided.
Examples of the valve heating arrangement of the disclosure will be described below with reference to the drawings. It should be noted that variations are possible within the scope of the claims.
The arrangement will be described with particular reference to valves used in aerospace, but the inventive concept can be equally applied to valves used in other applications where heating is required and the scope of the invention is not limited to any particular application or type of valve.
With reference to
A typical valve comprises a valve body 1 having a number of ports 2 and defining a fluid flow passage 3 therethrough between the ports. The valve regulates the flow of fluid in different ways depending on the type of valve, but essentially a valve component e.g. a ball, moves relative to the valve body to open and close the fluid flow passage as required. The present invention is not limited to any particular type of valve.
In the conventional arrangement, where the valve is at risk of freezing at low temperatures, silicone heater elements 4 are wrapped around the outside of the valve parts.
As can be seen, this adds to the overall dimensions of the valve and, further, the heater elements may be vulnerable to damage.
In recent times, additive manufacturing (or 3D printing) processes have been developed and improved to an extent that more and more components can be made in this way. Using additive manufacturing enables more flexibility in the sizes and more complexity in the shapes of components that can be manufactured. Desired shapes and sizes can be manufactured quickly and on an ‘as needed’ basis thus also reducing storage requirements. Additive manufacturing is now becoming a more common way of manufacturing valve bodies and valve parts. The solution provided by the present invention takes advantage of this development.
The heating arrangement of this invention involves using a heating wire that is located within the valve body during formation of the valve body by additive manufacturing, as will be described in more detail below.
Rather than using sheets or sleeves of silicone provided on the outside of the valve body, the present invention uses a thermally conductive wire that is located within a channel formed in the valve body during additive manufacture.
The heating wire can be sized, shaped and arranged in any manner according to the size and shape of the valve body and the locations where heating is required. An example of a heating wire 100 structure is shown in
The manner in which the heating arrangement is formed will now be described in more detail, by way of example only, with reference to
The valve body and the heating wire are printed in a single additive manufacturing, AM, process to provide a single part. The valve body 200 is formed, using AM, in the desired shape and size and with the desired port and fluid flow passage configuration and, during the printing or building up of the valve body, a channel or recess is formed within the valve body defining the location where the heating wire is to be positioned. In the example shown, this involves defining a channel or recess 250 around each of the valve body ports.
The heating wire 100 is then located in the printed channel/recess 250 as seen in e.g.
Once the wire has been positioned in the valve body as desired, and is temporarily held in place by the supports (in preferred examples), a filler material 300 is provided around the heating wire 100 in the channel/recess, as shown in
Once the heating wire 100 is secured in place in the channel 250 by the filler material 300, the supports can be machined away as seen in
As mentioned above, the shape and dimensions of the wire can be varied according to heating requirements. The wire ma be a simple circular cross-section wire. Alternatively, the wire may have a non-circular cross-section e.g. an X-shaped cross-section, as shown in
By providing heating to a valve by incorporating a heating wire into an additively manufactured valve body, the heating element is fully provided within the envelope of the valve body thus not adding to the overall size of the valve and also not leaving the heating elements exposed and subject to external environment damage such as mechanical loads and chemical damage. Also, because the heating wire is formed with the valve body during additive manufacture, the desired shape of heating wire can be formed easily and quickly according to the specific requirements of the valve being manufactured. There is, therefore, flexibility, during manufacture, to adapt to different temperature and other product requirements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
22461611.0 | Sep 2022 | EP | regional |