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| United States Patent | 4660714 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4660714.html |
| Inventor(s) | Suzuki; Kenji (Izumishi, JP);
Ito; Yoshinori (Iwatsukishi, JP) |
| Abstract | A safety gas container including a valve member made of a shape memory
alloy, the valve member having a top head and a bottom head with a stem
portion having a relatively small diameter therebetween; wherein the valve
member is fitted in a gas passageway of the container; wherein the shape
memory alloy is previously made to remember a smaller shape at a specific
temperature; and whereby the valve member is diminished in size in
response to a rise in the ambient temperature above the specific
temperature so that gaps occurs between the valve member and the inside
wall of the gas passageway. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4660714 |
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Safety gas container |
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| Publication Date |
April 28, 1987 |
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| Filing Date |
March 10, 1986 |
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| Priority Data |
May 14, 1985[JP]60-102300 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A safety gas container permitting the content to escape at an abnormally
elevated temperature, the container comprising:
a valve member made of a shape memory alloy, the valve member having a top
head and a bottom head with a stem portion having a relatively small
diameter therebetween;
wherein the valve member is fitted in a gas passage
way of the container;
wherein the shape memory alloy is previously made to remember a smaller
shape at a specific temperature; and
whereby the valve member is diminished in size in response to a rise in the
ambient temperature above the specific temperature so that gaps occur
between the valve member and the inside wall of the gas passageway.
2. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the shape memory
alloy is capable of bidirectional shape recovery in response to changes in
temperatures.
3. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the shape memory
alloy is capable of unidirectional shape recovery.
4. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the valve member
is fitted in a gas passageway produced in a sealing plate placed on the
gas passageway of the container.
5. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the valve member
is fitted in a gas passageway produced in a shoulder portion of the
container.
6. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the vaIve member
is fitted in a gas passageway of a main valve fixed to the container.
7. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the valve member
is fixed to the container by swaging the top and bottom head portions
thereof.
8. A safety gas container as set forth in claim 1, wherein the valve member
is fitted in a gas passageway produced in the bottom of the container. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a safety gas container and more
particularly, a safety gas container for holding a gas of explosive
nature, such as carbon dioxide gas, oxygen and a liquefied fuel gas, the
container being provided with a valve for permitting the content to escape
at such a small rate as to avoid an abrupt ejection of the content which
would cause a reaction on the container thereby to propel it forward.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A typical example is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,219,126. The disclosed
container is provided with a recess in the sealing plate, the recess
having a thin bottom wall rupturable under the rise in internal pressure
due to overheating. The disclosure teaches that when the internal pressure
abnormally rises an invisible crack occurs in the bottom of the recess,
through which the content gradually leaks thereby to reduce the internal
pressure.
As a result of experiments, however, it has been found out that the crack
develops from the bottom to the inside wall of the recess, thereby finally
causing the whole recess to rupture into a hole. Consequently the content
ejects through the hole, thereby causing the reaction of ejection upon the
container. It is reported that there have been several accidents in which
people were injured by the flying container. This is mainly caused by the
structure in which the gas is straightly ejected along the axis of the
container. It is therefore difficult to prevent the container from flying
under the reaction.
Another disadvantage of the disclosed invention is that it is difficult to
equalize the bottom thicknesses of the recesses. Normally the bottom wall
is made as thin as 0.3 mm so that it readily fructures under the rise in
internal pressure. As a result it is unavoidable that some containers have
recess whose bottom walls are relatively thick while others have those
which have relatively thin bottom walls. Thus the safety critical
temperature has to be low.
A further disadvantage of the prior invention is that the thin bottom walls
of the recesses are liable to corrosion because of a gathering water, such
as rain. The corroded bottom is likely to fracture even at normal
pressures.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to solve the problems pointed out above,
and has for its object to provide a gas container which allows the content
to escape at such a small rate as to avoid propelling of the container
under the reaction.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a gas container
having a high and wide thermal safety range.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a gas container
capable of easy and economical construction.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent
from the detailed description given hereinafter; it should be understood,
however, that the detailed description and specific embodiment are given
by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications
within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those
skilled in the art from this detailed description.
According to the present invention, there is provided a safety gas
container comprising:
a valve member made of a shape memory alloy, the valve member having a top
head and a bottom head with a stem portion having a relatively small
diameter therebetween;
wherein the valve member is fitted in a gas passageway of the container;
wherein the shape memory alloy is previously made to remember a smaller
shape at a specific temperature; and
whereby the valve member is diminished in size in response to a rise in the
ambient temperature above the specific temperature so that gaps occurs
between the valve member and the inside wall of the gas passageway.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross-section on a larger scale showing a safety valve portion
of the gas container according to the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a cross-section on a larger scale showing the safety valve of
FIG. 1 when in operation in response to the rise in the internal pressure;
FIG. 3 is a partial cross-sectional view showing a gas container according
to the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a cross-section on a larger scale showing a modified version of
the embodiment;
FIG. 5 is a cross-section on a larger scale showing a further modified
version of the embodiment; and
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view on a larger scale showing the safety valve
of FIG. 5 when in operation in response to the rise in the internal
pressure.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 3 shows a typical cylinder type gas container usually having a length
of about 130 mm and a wall thickness of 1.8 mm on average. The body
portion is indicated by 12, which has a bottom portion 14 of a hemispheric
shape. The container has a round shoulder portion 15 and a neck portion
having threads 19 in which a gas passageway 16 is produced.
After a gas (e.g. a liquefied carbon dioxide gas) has been filled in the
container, a sealing plate 18 is welded to the outer peripheral edge of
the gas passageway 16 thereby to close it. The sealing plate 18 has a
thickness of about 0.3 mm and has an aperture 5 adapted to allow the
content to escape therethrough. The aperture 5 is closed by a valve member
1, which includes a body 2, a stem portion 3 and a head portion 4. The
valve member 1 itself is made of a shape-memory-alloy, hereinafter
referred to the SM alloy. The valve member 1 is fitted in the aperture 5.
The SM alloys mean all alloys which are capable of remembering their
original shapes by virture of martensite transformation. These alloys have
the ability of restoring their original shapes when they are heated above
a specific temperature T.sub.o. A Ni-Ti content alloy, Cu content alloy,
Ag-Cd content alloy, In-Tl content alloy,, Fe-Pt content alloy and others
fall in the category of the SM alloys, and can be used for making the
valve member 1. However, when the relatively favourable characteristics of
recovery and fatigue are taken into consideration, the Ni-Ti content
alloys are preferred. On the other hand, when the relatively cheap price
is taken into account, the Cu content alloys, such as Cu-Al, Cu-Al-Ni
content alloys, are preferred.
The SM alloys herein are not limited to those which are capable of
unidirectional shape recovery, but include those which are capable of
repeating the shape recovery in response to changes in temperatures.
The Cu content SM alloys includes those which are especially swageable, and
which are adapted for use as a valve by utilizing the unidirectional shape
memory characteristics.
In the present invention a specific temperature T.sub.o, such as 70.degree.
C. for CO.sub.2 gas, is set as a thermal safety limit below which the
content is safe from an abnormal expansion. Then the amount of Ti against
Ni is adjusted so that at this safety temperature a specific shape is
remembered, thereby obtaining a bidirectional shape restorable Ni-Ti
content alloy.
The alloy obtained is cut to such a length and size that the cut piece is
allowed to fit in the aperture 5 in the sealing plate 18, and then the
head portions 4 are swaged. In this way the valve member 1 is anchored in
the sealing plate 18. As seen from FIG. 1, the valve member 1 has a
T-shaped crosssection. The aperture 5 is air-tightly closed by the double
enclosure provided by the stem portion 3 and the head portions 4, which
are kept in close contact with the top surfaces 8 and the bottom surfaces
7 of the sealing plate 18.
Under this arrangement the valve member 1 functions as a plug so long as
the container is placed at normal temperatures, as shown in FIG. 1. When
the internal temperature rises for some reason or other; for example, when
the container is placed in the sunlight for a long time or when a fire
breaks out near the container, thereby causing the temperature to rise up
to the prescribed temperature T.sub.o (e.g. 70.degree. C.), the valve
member 1 is likely to deform in response to the rise in temperature under
its shape restoration tendency.
As a result the valve memebr 1 diminishes in size as shown in FIG. 2,
thereby enabling gaps to occur round the stem portion 3 and between the
top and bottom surfaces 7, 8 of the sealing plate 18, and the head
portions 4. The reference numeral 10 designates a ring-shaped gap
occurring around the stem portion 3, through which the content is allowed
to escape. The gap 10 is as narrow as below 1/10 mm, thereby enabling the
content to discharge at such a small rate as to prevent the container from
propelling under the reaction. In addition, the direction of discharge is
horizontal or perpendicular to the axis of the container as shown in FIG.
2.
FIG. 4 shows another example characterized in that the valve member 1 is
fixed to the bottom of the container.
FIG. 5 shows a further modified version of the embodiment, characterised in
that the valve member 1 is fixed to a shoulder 15A of a main valve body
18A screwed to the open end portion of the container. The reference
numeral 2A designates a valve member fitted in a pressure escape
passageway 5A produced in the main valve 18A. The valve member 2A is also
made of a shape-memory-alloy, and in this example it is a elongated bar
whose top and bottom head portions are swaged so that the valve member 2A
is air-tightly fitted in the pressure escape passageway 5A. When the
internal temperature rises up above the prescribed thermal limit, the
valve member 2A expands along its length, thereby causing its stem portion
3A to diminish in diameter. Thus the content is allowed to discharged at a
small rate through the gap between the stem portion 3A and the inside wall
of the pressure escape passageway.
As a further example the valve member can be fixed to the shoulder portion
15 of the container.
As described above, the SM alloys are not limited but can be selected in
the wide range of alloys having the shape restoration characteristics.
The gas containers include all kinds of containers for holding thermally
expansible gases.
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Description  |
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