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| United States Patent | 4545317 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4545317.html |
| Inventor(s) | Richter; Uwe (Luneburg, DE);
Kellershofen; Hans (Hamburg, DE) |
| Abstract | A device for treating the surfaces of structures and ships, even under
water, with a spray medium which cleans, preserves, or coats, and is
sprayed onto the surface which is to be treated by way of a pressurized
gas flow via an at least partially flexible conduit which leads to the
work location and is provided with an outlet nozzle. The outlet nozzle,
which is constructed as a Laval nozzle, is provided with a funnel-shaped
nozzle adapter which has a longitudinally extending, parabolic inner
chamber. A controllable shunt, capable of bypassing the spray medium
source may be provided for the pressurized gas between the pressurized gas
source and the line leading to the outlet nozzle so that the device can be
used under water. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4545317 |
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Device for treating the surfaces of structures and ships |
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| Publication Date |
October 8, 1985 |
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| Filing Date |
November 30, 1982 |
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| Parent Case |
The present invention relates to a device for treating the surfaces of
structures and ships, even under water, with a spray medium which cleans,
preserves, or coats, and is sprayed onto the surface which is to be
treated by means of a pressurized gas flow via an at least partially
flexible conduit which leads to a work location and is provided with an
outlet nozzle. |
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| Priority Data |
Apr 01, 1981[DE]3113028 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. A device for treating the surfaces of structures and ships, even under
water, with a spray medium which cleans, preserves, or coats, and is
sprayed onto the surface which is to be treated by means of a
pressurized-gas flow, said device comprising in combination therewith:
a source of pressurized gas;
an at least partially flexible conduit, which is operatively connected to
said source of pressurized gas and leads to a work location for conveying
spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas thereto;
an outlet nozzle, in the form of a Laval nozzle, provided at an end of said
conduit remote from said source of pressurized gas; and
an additional funnel-shaped nozzle adapter attached to said outlet nozzle
for effecting delivery of said spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas to
said surface which is to be treated; said nozzle adapter additionally
having a longitudinally extending, parabolic inner chamber therein, said
funnel-shaped nozzle adapter with the longitudinally extending, parabolic
inner chamber having considerably higher effectiveness of the spray
medium.
2. A device in combination according to claim 1, in which, for use of said
device under water, the additional length of said additional funnel-shaped
nozzle adapter corresponds essentially to the required working distance
between said outlet nozzle and said surface which is to be treated, said
additional length amounting to approximately 250 mm for said nozzle
adapter having a 50 mm outlet diameter.
3. A device in combination according to claim 2, which includes a source of
spray medium operatively associated therewith which is adapted to
communicate with said at least partially flexible conduit, and an
additional controllable shunt for pressurized gas, said shunt bypassing
said source of spray medium, and being provided between said source of
pressurized gas and said at least partially flexible conduit, said
additional shunt being controlled in such a way that even during times
without spray medium supply, said conduit the leads to an underwater work
location and said nozzle can be kept dry and free of water due to a
relatively small overpressure of pressurized gas conveyed thereto via said
shunt to prevent water from entering therein.
4. A device for treating the surfaces of structures and ships, even under
water, with a spray medium which cleans, preserves, or coats, and is
sprayed onto the surface which is to be treated by means of a
pressurized-gas flow, said device comprising:
a source of pressurized gas;
an at least partially flexible conduit, which is operatively connected to
said source of pressurized gas and leads to a work location for conveying
spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas thereto;
an outlet nozzle, in the form of a Laval nozzle, provided at an end of said
conduit remote from said source of pressurized gas;
a funnel-shaped nozzle adapter attached to said outlet nozzle for effecting
delivery of said spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas to said surface
which is to be treated; said nozzle adapter having a longitudinally
extending, parabolic inner chamber, and furthermore, for use of said
device under water, the length of said nozzle adapter corresponds
essentially to the required working distance between said outlet nozzle
and said surface which is to be treated, a source of spray medium which is
adapted to communicate with said at least partially flexible conduit, and
an additional controllable shunt for said pressurized gas, said shunt
bypassing said source of spray medium, and being provided between said
source of pressurized gas and said at least partially flexible conduit,
said controllable shunt being provided with a control line which leads to
said underwater work location, and with a pressure gauge which detects
water pressure and keeps pressurized gas delivered by said shunt at a
pressure which is greater than the water pressure.
5. A device according to claim 4, which includes, at said underwater work
location for delivery of said spray medium, a remote control means which
is operatively in communication with said at least partially flexible
conduit.
6. In a device for treating the surfaces of structures and ships, even
under water, with a spray medium which cleans, preserves, or coats, and is
sprayed onto the surface which is to be treated by means of a
pressurized-gas flow; said device including a source of pressured gas; an
at least partially flexible conduit, which is operatively connected to
said source of pressurized gas and leads to a work location for conveying
spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas thereto; an outlet nozzle, in the
form of a Laval nozzle, provided at an end of said conduit remote from
said source of pressurized gas; the improvement in combination therewith
comprising:
an additional funnel-shaped nozzle adapter attached to said outlet nozzle
for effecting delivery of said spray-medium-conducting pressurized gas to
said surface which is to be treated; said additional nozzle adapter having
a longitudinally extending, parabolic inner chamber therein, and
furthermore, for use of said device under water, the length of said
additional nozzle adapter corresponds essentially to the required working
distance between said outlet nozzle and said surface which is to be
treated. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of Invention
Compressed-air spraying as a free-jet air blast is a reliable method for
surface treatment with spray material. The method requires a compressor as
a source of compressed air, a compressed-air drier, a compressed-air
filter, a spray medium container for metered supply of the spray medium,
and a hose line having a nozzle, which is generally a Laval nozzle. The
performance or efficiency of the method is determined by the parametric
field of the air-delivery volume of the compressor as a function of the
necessary final pressure, spray medium flow rate, hose length, pressure
ahead of the nozzle, and nozzle size.
When it is a question of cleaning and roughening surfaces with only a
single application of the spray medium, typical operating values under
normal conditions are: 8 mm nozzle diameter; 250 mm spacing from the
surface of the spray material; and 80 mm spray-spot diameter,
corresponding to approximately 5000 mm.sup.2 spray surface. The rate of
flow of spray medium depends upon the required surface quality. Naturally,
less spray medium is required for cleaning than for attaining a clean
metallic surface having a certain peak-to-valley height.
Experience has shown that the effectiveness, i.e., the capacity for doing
work, of the spray medium flow decreases very rapidly along the path
between the nozzle outlet and the surface to be treated since the
supersonic-flow rate is decreased very rapidly to the subsonic range. The
theoretically most favorable working distance from zero cannot be realized
in practice, since the spray spot cannot be permitted to fall below a
critical small surface. This, however, corresponds to a working distance
over the length of which the undesired spray speed reduction already
occurs.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The foregoing drawback is even more pronounced when working in or below
water. Still further drawbacks are as follows:
1. After acceleration in the Laval nozzle, the spray medium enters a medium
which in many cases has a higher density. Consequently, the accelerated
spray medium very quickly decreases in speed, so that the spray medium has
hardly any effect when it encounters the surface to be treated if a water
gap exists between the nozzle outlet and the surface to be treated.
2. It is only possible to perform work by a slanted application of the
Laval nozzle directly on the surface; in this way the spray spot diameter
equals the nozzle diameter. For an 8 mm nozzle, the spray surface under
water is only approximately 50 mm.sup.2, and a selected surface quality
having a certain peak-to-valley height cannot be attained under these
conditions.
3. A counterpressure which increases proportionally to depth of application
occurs in the Laval nozzle.
The foregoing drawbacks result not only when treating a surface with the
cleaning spray medium, but also when treating surfaces with protective or
coating spray medium.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved device
which, proceeding on the basis of the foregoing indicated state of the
art, makes it possible to employ such spray methods with higher
efficiency.
This object is fulfilled according to the present invention in that the
outlet nozzle which is constructed as a Laval nozzle, is provided with a
funnel-shaped nozzle adapter which has a longitudinally extending,
parabolic inner space or chamber.
Tests of the device according to the present invention show a considerably
higher effectiveness, apparently caused by increased spray velocity.
When the inventive device is used under water, the length of the nozzle
adapter may correspond essentially to the required working distance
between the nozzle and the surface which is to be treated.
According to a further development of the present invention for underwater
use, it is inventively proposed to provide an additional controllable or
regulatable shunt for the pressurized gas; this shunt would bypass the
spray medium source and would be provided between the pressurized gas
source and the line which leads to the outlet or discharge nozzle and
hence to the surface which is to be treated.
The shunt provided according to the present invention can be controlled or
regulated in such a way that even during times without spray medium
supply, the line which leads to the underwater work location, and the
nozzle, can be kept dry and free of water. A relatively small overpressure
is sufficient for the pressurized gas conveyed via the shunt; this
overpressure assures that the pressurized gas at all times bubbles out at
the free end of the outlet or discharge nozzle, thereby preventing the
water from entering.
According to further specific features of the present invention, the
controllable shunt may be provided with a control line which leads to the
underwater work location, and with a pressure gauge which detects the
water pressure and keeps the pressurized gas delivered via the shunt at a
pressure which is greater than the water pressure. A remote control means,
which may include a switch, a signal line, and a control unit, may be
provided in the pressurized gas flow at the underwater working location
for the spray medium delivery.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention, for use under water, is
illustrated by way of example in the following with the aid of the
attached drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of those structural elements of the
inventive device for surface treatment which are located above and below
the water surface; and
FIG. 2 is a view showing an axial section through the spray medium outlet
or discharge nozzle, which is provided with a nozzle adapter or attachment
according to the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The spray system illustrated in FIG. 1 includes a large proportion of
conventional structural elements. These conventional structural elements
include a compressor 1 which supplies the compressed-air supply line 4 via
a water separator 2 and an air filter 3. A pressure gauge 5 and a shutoff
valve 6 are located between the compressor 1 and the water separator 2.
Further conventional elements include: the container 20 which contains
spray medium and is provided with a closable filling opening 21; a line 22
which is provided with a control valve, pressurizes the spray medium
container, and is connected to the supply line 4; and additionally an
excess-pressure valve 23. When the filling opening 21 is open, the spray
medium to be employed for cleaning, preserving, or coating can be refilled
from a storage tank 24 via a supply line 25 or a funnel.
When underwater cleaning is to be performed with the device of the present
invention, the spray medium supply or storage tank 24 contains quartz
sand, corundum, copper slag, natural or synthetic mineral granules, cork,
or the like. For the intended underwater employment, with only a one-time
use of the spray means, it is also possible, in contrast to outdoor or
open-air spraying, to use such spray media which for the latter cannot be
used any more because of danger to the breathing passages of the operator
handling the apparatus, or can be used only when taking special protective
measures.
Furthermore, the connection of the compressed-air supply line 4 with the
spray hose 8, which leads to the work location, is conventional; this
spray hose 8 terminates at an outlet nozzle 9, which is preferably a Laval
nozzle.
A nozzle adapter or attachment 12 is connected to the Laval nozzle 9 as
shown in FIG. 2 for the underwater application or use according to the
present invention, where the spray hose 8 leads below the water surface 40
to an underwater work location 41 at which a diver 42 is located. A sleeve
10, which serves for fastening of the nozzle adapter 12 overlaps the free
end of the nozzle and is held by screws 11 in such a way that it can be
detached and replaced. The funnel-shaped nozzle adapter 12 surrounds an
elongated parabolic inner space or chamber 13. The length of the adapter
12 corresponds essentially to the required working distance between the
Laval nozzle 9 and the surface 50 which is to be treated. By way of
example, this length amounts to approximately 250 mm for a nozzle adapter
12 having a 50 mm outlet diameter.
A shunt control 30 is provided pursuant to the present invention to assure
that the parts of the device located under water, namely the spray hose 8,
the spray nozzle 9, and the spray nozzle adapter 12, remain continually
dry and cannot fill with water. The input side of this shunt control 30 is
connected via a line 31 to the output side of the air filter 3, and the
output side is connected via a control valve 32 with a part of the supply
line 4 which is located after the spray medium container 20 when viewed in
the direction of flow. The line system via line 31, shunt control 30 and
control valve 32 thus bypass that portion of the supply line 4 in which
the spray medium is introduced into the supply line 4 via a delivery or
charging valve 26.
Accordingly, the possibility exists when the spray medium container is not
shut off continually to flush those structural elements of the apparatus
which are located under water with a pressurized gas flow, so that no
water can penetrate therein. The pressurized gas, which is preferably air,
delivered via the shunt into the spray hose 8 must have a pressure which
is slightly greater than the water pressure at the work location 41. A
control line 36 leads from the shunt 30 to the underwater work location 41
in order to effect automatic pressure adjustment. The pressure detected in
the shunt 30 at a pressure gauge 38 directly affects a control valve 35 of
the shunt 30, and adjusts the shunt 30 in such a way that a small amount
of pressurized air is continually delivered at the spray nozzle adapter
12. As shown in FIG. 1, additional pressure gauges 33 and 34 can be
provided in the shunt control 30, which is arranged above water, in order
to be able to read the normal working pressure and the reduced pressure in
the shunt.
In order that the spray device can be turned off and on by the diver 42 in
a very simple manner at the underwater work location 41, a switch 51 is
located next to the spray nozzle 9 with which a control unit 53 located
above water can be actuated via a signal line 52. The control unit 53
serves to turn on the spray medium supply. In other words, the control
unit 53 acts directly on the delivery or charging valve 26 of the
container 20 for metering or dosing the spray medium, or, if the valve 26
has a fixed setting, the control unit 53 acts directly on the main shutoff
valve 7 of the compressed-air supply line 4. It is also possible to have
the control unit 53 act on the shunt 30. However, the shunt 30 is
generally left open, so that when the spray medium delivery is turned on
and off, no water can penetrate the spray nozzle adapter 12.
Considerably shortened work time and improved surface quality have resulted
not only during above-water operation, but also during underwater
operation. The following performance data was obtained during underwater
operation, for example, in connection with the inventive
compressed-air-shunt 30 and the nozzle adapter 12 at a water depth of 10
meters: with a spray surface of approximately 2200 mm.sup.2, and at a gas
pressure of approximately 9 bar, there was attained a spray performance of
3 m.sup.2 /h with a degree of purity of Sa 21/2 according to DIN (German
Industrial Norm) 55928 part 4, and a peak-to-valley height of 30 .mu.m.
Thus, as a whole, it can be stated that the device according to the present
invention leads to a reliable and economical above-water and underwater
working method for treating surfaces in accordance with established
standards with a high degree of purity and necessary peak-to-valley height
while at the same time considerably increasing the surface area covered
per unit of time, and decreasing the smount of spray medium used.
Furthermore, the present invention is in no way restricted to the specific
disclosure of the specification and drawing, but also encompasses any
modifications within the scope of the appended claims.
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Description  |
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