GB2452047A - Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps - Google Patents

Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2452047A
GB2452047A GB0716294A GB0716294A GB2452047A GB 2452047 A GB2452047 A GB 2452047A GB 0716294 A GB0716294 A GB 0716294A GB 0716294 A GB0716294 A GB 0716294A GB 2452047 A GB2452047 A GB 2452047A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
diaphragm
pump
fluid
disc
resilient material
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB0716294A
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GB0716294D0 (en
Inventor
Joseph Anthony Griffiths
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Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to GB0716294A priority Critical patent/GB2452047A/en
Publication of GB0716294D0 publication Critical patent/GB0716294D0/en
Priority to US12/190,274 priority patent/US20090053081A1/en
Publication of GB2452047A publication Critical patent/GB2452047A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04BPOSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS
    • F04B43/00Machines, pumps, or pumping installations having flexible working members
    • F04B43/0009Special features
    • F04B43/0054Special features particularities of the flexible members
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04BPOSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS
    • F04B43/00Machines, pumps, or pumping installations having flexible working members
    • F04B43/02Machines, pumps, or pumping installations having flexible working members having plate-like flexible members, e.g. diaphragms
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05CINDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO MATERIALS, MATERIAL PROPERTIES OR MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS FOR MACHINES, ENGINES OR PUMPS OTHER THAN NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES
    • F05C2225/00Synthetic polymers, e.g. plastics; Rubber
    • F05C2225/04PTFE [PolyTetraFluorEthylene]

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Reciprocating Pumps (AREA)

Abstract

A diaphragm 100, which may be circular or oval, for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material, which is preferably elastomeric or rubber, having a substantially dished shape. The curvature of the disc is formed from a plurality of steps 101 a,b which may be a series of flat annular rings 101 of increasing diameter joined at their adjacent edges by shoulder portions 102 extending in an axial direction. The diaphragm 100 may have a coating of a substantially inelastic chemically resistant coating 103, such as PTFE, on at least one side, preferably on the side which is concave when the diaphragm is at rest.

Description

-1-2452047 Pump Diaphragm
Description
The present invention relates to a diaphragm for use in a fluid pump, and more particularly, to a diaphragm configured to be coated with a protective layer such that the protective layer would avoid fracturing in use.
Diaphragm-type fluid pumps and, in particular liquid pumps, have a flexible pumping diaphragm which is driven to effect the pumping action of the pump. In such pumps, the diaphragm comprises a flexible circular or oval disc which has its outer penpheral edge clamped and sealed within the body of the pump. The diaphragm may have a central aperture which is secured to a moveable actuator such as a piston, which reciprocates back and forth causing the diaphragm to flex between a concave and a convex configuration. In an alternative pump configuration, however, the diaphragm does not have a central aperture and forms a partition with a driving fluid chamber in which the hydraulic pressure of the driving fluid is repeatedly alternated between high and low pressures, thereby causing the diaphragm to flex between a concave and a convex configuration. In both pump types, the repeated flexing of the pump diaphragm causes fluid displacement in a pumping chamber which results in the pumping action.
When such pumps are used to pump inert or un-reactive fluids, such as water, the diaphragm can be constructed from plain rubber material, since there is no problem with the fluid reacting with or corroding the diaphragm material. However, if the pump is intended for use with fluids having a more chemically reactive nature, an elastomeric diaphragm, such a natural rubber, alone is unsuitable as it is rapidly corroded, leading quickly to pump failure.
In order to solve this problem, it is desirable to provide the elastomeric diaphragm with a protective coating to prevent the pump fluid from reacting with or corroding the elastomer. However, the materials which would be most desirable to use for such a protective layer due to their excellent chemical resistance properties, such at PTFE, have plastic material properties, meaning they are unable to stretch and recover their original shape. However, when conventional pump diaphragms are in use, the repeated flexing between convex and concave positions causes the rubber of the diaphragm to repeatedly stretch and deform. Therefore, if a conventional diaphragm is coated with a protective layer, such as PTFE, it results in the protective coating cracking and splitting when the pump is in use, since the protective layer cannot cope with the repeated elastic deformation which the diaphragm experiences.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a pump diaphragm that substantiafly alleviates or overcome the problems mentioned above.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material having a substantially dished shape, the curvature of the disc being formed from a plurality of steps.
Preferably, the diaphragm is circular, but may also be oval.
The plurality of steps are preferably formed from a series of flat annular rings of increasing diameter axially displaced from one another and joined at their adjacent edges by shoulder portions extending in an axial direction.
In a preferred embodiment, the diaphragm has a substantially inelastic chemically resistant coating on at least one side thereof. The chemically resistant coating may be formed on the concave side of the diaphragm or may be formed on the convex side, or may be formed on both/all sides of the diaphragm.
Preferably, the chemically resilient material is PTFE.
The resilient material may be rubber. However, if the diaphragm is for use in a hydraulic pressure type pump in which the diaphragm deflection is achieved by alternating hydrauhc pressure of a driving fluid, then the resilient material will need to be compatible with the hydraulic media (e.g. oil). In such cases, the resilient material may be nitrile or a low-temperature resistant rubber material.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to Figures 3 -5 of the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 shows a schematic view of a prior art diaphragm pump; Figure 2 shows a series of cross-sectional views of a prior art pump diaphragm as used in the pump of Figure 1; Figure 3 shows a perspective view of a pump diaphragm according to the present invention in its un-deflected natural state; Figure 4 shows a cross-sectional view along the line X-X shown in Figure 3; and Figure 5 shows a cross- sectional view of the diaphragm of Figure 4 in a deflected position.
An example of a known diaphragm pump 10 is shown schematically in Figure 1 and comprises a chamber 11, through which fluid being pumped flows, having an inlet 12 and an outlet 13. The inlet 12 indudes a one- way valve 14 which allows fluid to flow into the chamber 11 though the inlet 12 but not out of the chamber 11 therethrough, and the outlet 13 includes a one-way valve 15 which allows fluid to flow out of the chamber 11 through the outlet 13 but not into the chamber 11 therethrough. A flexible diaphragm 16 is mounted in the wall of the chamber 11 separating the chamber 11 from a cavity 17. The diaphragm 16 is connected at its centre to a piston 18 of a pump driver 19. The piston 18 is driven backwards and forward in the direction shown by arrow A' to cause the diaphragm 16 to deform between position I in Figure 1 where it extends into the cavity 17, and position II in Figure 1, where it extends into the chamber 11. As discussed above, the prior art pump described here is of the type where the diaphragm deflection is actuated by a piston. However, alternative embodiments of prior art pumps use a driving fluid on the side of the diaphragm remote from the fluid being pumped, where the driving fluid pressure is alternated, which causes the diaphragm to flex. In such embodiments, the diaphragm clearly does not have the central aperture.
The fluid to be transported is caused to flow through the diaphragm pump chamber 11 by repeated reciprocation of the piston 18 between positions I and II. When the diaphragm 16 extends to position I, the volume of the chamber 11 is increased and the fluid pressure therein is reduced. This causes the fluid outside the chamber 11, which is unable to pass into the chamber 11 through the outlet one-way valve 15, to be drawn into the chamber 11 through the inlet 12 through the inlet one-way valve 14. Then, when the diaphragm 16 extends to position II, the volume of the chamber 11 is reduced and the fluid pressure therein is increased. Therefore, the fluid in the chamber 11, unable to pass through the inlet one-way valve 14, is forced out of the outlet 13 through the outlet one-way valve 15. As this cycle is repeated, the resulting repeated fluid displacement causes the fluid to be pumped through the diaphragm pump 10 from the inlet 12, through the chamber 11 and out of the outlet 13.
It will be appreciated that if the fluid being pumped is reactive or corrosive, then the to diaphragm 16 will need to be provided with a protective layer interposed between the fluid and the rubber material of the body of the diaphragm 16, to prevent the diaphragm 16 from being corroded and causing the pump 10 to fail. It is important then, that this protective layer remains intact at all times to protect the rubber diaphragm 16 underneath.
In the prior art pump shown, the diaphragm 16 deflects between positions I and II, and in doing so, the surface is stretched and compressed. This can be seen more clearly from Figure 2 which shows the prior art diaphragm 16 in more detail in three positions, namely positions I and II at the most concave and convex positions in its range of motion, and also at a third position III, which is intermediate positions I and II where the diaphragm is deflected into a flat shape. The side of the diaphragm exposed to the fluid being pumped is on the concave side in Figure I. A reference distance between two radially-spaced points a,b on the concave side of the diaphragm in position I is shown as d1. As the diaphragm is forced to deflect to position III, the deformation of the diaphragm causes the distance between the same two reference points a,b to reduce to d2, as the surface of the diaphragm compresses. Then, as the diaphragm deflecis further to position II, the distance between the same two reference points increases to d3 as the surface of the diaphragm stretches again. In this range of movement, the relationship between the distances is as follows: d3> d1 > d2 Therefore, if a protective layer is bonded to the diaphragm which has plastic properties, such as PTFE, the layer cannot cope with the repeated elastic stretching and compressing deformation that the diaphragm undergoes, and so the layer cracks. In use, these cracks would expose the rubber material of the diaphragm to the corrosive fluid being pumped, and so would cause the diaphragm to corrode and the pump to fail.
Figures 3-5 show a diaphragm 100 of the present invention for use in a pump such as that shown in Figure 1, that does not suffer the drawbacks described above of known prior art pump diaphragms.
It can be seen that the diaphragm 100 is generally dish-shaped, as are known pump diaphragms, but its dish-shape is formed by a series of tiers or stepped layers 101 in the diaphragm matenal which are each displaced from one another in an axial direction of the central axis Y-Y of the diaphragm 100. Each layer 101 is formed by a flat annular ring 102, the rings 102 increasing in diameter to form the tiers or steps, the inner peripheral edge lOla and the outer peripheral edge lOib of each ring being connected to the outer/inner peripheral edge 101 b, lOla respectively of the adjacent ring 101 by shoulder portions 102 which extend in an axial direction.
The embodiment of the invention is shown having a chemically protective layer 103 of PTFE coated on the concave side of the diaphragm, seen more clearly in Figures 3 -4.
However, the pump could be configured such that the diaphragm is secured the other way round in the pump, in which case, the chemically protective layer would be coated on the convex side of the diaphragm, so that it is on the side in contact with the fluid being pumped.
The diaphragm 100 includes a central aperture 104 for a piston of a driver of a fluid pump to be secured thereto in a known manner, as schematically illustrated with the prior art device in Figure 1.
As explained above in reference to Figures 1 and 2 of a prior art fluid pump and diaphragm, the diaphragm 100 of the present invention is repeatedly moved from its natural shape, shown in Figure 4 to a deflected position, as shown in Figure 5. In this repeated movement, the annular rings 101 do not stretch. Instead, they flex such that much of the deflection of the diaphragm 100 is effected at the annular rings 101. In addition, in the deformation of the diaphragm 100, the wall or shoulder portions 102 do not themselves bend or flex at all, but remain un-deformed. Therefore, the whole diaphragm is able to repeatedly deflect between concave and convex positions without any part of its surface stretching to any significant degree. Therefore, the coating of PTFE 104 on the concave side (or convex side, in reversed diaphragm embodiments of the pump) of the diaphragm 100 in Its natural position is not put under any strain to stretch during the repeated deflections and so the PTFE coating is not at any risk of cracking or fracturing in operation of a fluid pump having such a diaphragm 100 of the present invention.
The above embodiment is described having a protective coating of PTFE applied thereto.
However, the scope of the invention is not limited to the diaphragm having a protective coating and includes an uncoated diaphragm of the configuration to accept such a coating without fracturing in use, as defined in claim 1. In addition, other protective coatings may be used in conjunction with the diaphragm of the present invention aside from PTFE.
Although a coating is shown on the concave side of the diaphragm, it may also be provided on both sides thereof to entirely coat the diaphragm, or may be provided on the opposite side thereof.
Although the embodiment of the diaphragm shown is circular, it may also be an oval disc shape within the scope of the claims.
The embodiment shown and described is for use in a fluid pump where the diaphragm flexing is actuated by a driving piston. However, the invention is not limited to such a diaphragm, and also covers diaphragms for use in hydraulically actuated fluid pumps, as described above. In such embodiments, the diaphragm would not have a central aperture 104.
Although the embodiment shown and described is configured with the diaphragm positioned with the concave side proximate the fluid being pumped, the invention is not limited to this configuration, and the diaphragm may be suitable for use with the convex side proximate the fluid being pumped, in which case, the protective coating would be provided at least on the convex side of the diaphragm.

Claims (7)

  1. Claims 1. A diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material having a substantially dished shape, the curvature of the disc being formed from a plurality of steps.
  2. 2. A diaphragm according to claim I wherein the plurality of steps are formed from a series of flat annular rings of increasing diameter axially displaced from one another and joined at their adjacent edges by shoulder portions extending in an axial direction.
  3. 3. A diaphragm according to claim 1 or claim 2 having a substantially inelastic chemically resistant coating on at least one side thereof.
  4. 4. A diaphragm according to claim 3 wherein the chemically resistant coating is formed on the concave side of the diaphragm when in its natural un-deflected state.
  5. 5. A diaphragm according to claim 3 or claim 4 wherein the chemically resilient material is PTFE.
  6. 6. A diaphragm according to any preceding claim wherein the resihent material is an elastomeric material.
  7. 7. A diaphragm substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB0716294A 2007-08-21 2007-08-21 Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps Withdrawn GB2452047A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0716294A GB2452047A (en) 2007-08-21 2007-08-21 Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps
US12/190,274 US20090053081A1 (en) 2007-08-21 2008-08-12 Pump diaphragm

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0716294A GB2452047A (en) 2007-08-21 2007-08-21 Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0716294D0 GB0716294D0 (en) 2007-09-26
GB2452047A true GB2452047A (en) 2009-02-25

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GB0716294A Withdrawn GB2452047A (en) 2007-08-21 2007-08-21 Diaphragm for use in a fluid pump comprising a disc of resilient material whose curvature is formed from a plurality of steps

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GB (1) GB2452047A (en)

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HUE049431T2 (en) 2007-11-21 2020-09-28 Smith & Nephew Wound dressing
GB201015656D0 (en) 2010-09-20 2010-10-27 Smith & Nephew Pressure control apparatus
US9084845B2 (en) 2011-11-02 2015-07-21 Smith & Nephew Plc Reduced pressure therapy apparatuses and methods of using same
WO2013140255A1 (en) 2012-03-20 2013-09-26 Smith & Nephew Plc Controlling operation of a reduced pressure therapy system based on dynamic duty cycle threshold determination
US9427505B2 (en) 2012-05-15 2016-08-30 Smith & Nephew Plc Negative pressure wound therapy apparatus
SG11201704255WA (en) 2014-12-22 2017-07-28 Smith & Nephew Negative pressure wound therapy apparatus and methods
DE102015005692A1 (en) * 2015-05-06 2016-11-10 Mann + Hummel Gmbh Pressure control valve
US10967158B1 (en) * 2016-06-21 2021-04-06 PopFlow, LLC Cerebral shunt valve

Citations (3)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5659171A (en) * 1993-09-22 1997-08-19 Northrop Grumman Corporation Micro-miniature diaphragm pump for the low pressure pumping of gases
US20030143122A1 (en) * 2002-01-26 2003-07-31 Dietmar Sander Piezoelectrically controllable microfluid actor system
JP2005076493A (en) * 2003-08-29 2005-03-24 Toppan Printing Co Ltd Indirect fluid type diaphragm pump

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US2677741A (en) * 1950-12-01 1954-05-04 Honeywell Regulator Co Diaphragm type actuator, fulcrum, and seal
GB950678A (en) * 1961-11-16 1964-02-26 Nat Res Dev Improvements in and relating to diaphragms and diaphragm-operated machines
US3367270A (en) * 1964-12-11 1968-02-06 Panther Pumps & Equipment Comp Fluid power transfer apparatus
FR1432594A (en) * 1964-12-30 1966-03-25 Device for total support and, possibly, servo-control of a membrane
US3500961A (en) * 1968-01-16 1970-03-17 Hale Fire Pump Co Pressure balanced bearing lubrication system
US4772263A (en) * 1986-02-03 1988-09-20 Regents Of The University Of Minnesota Spring driven infusion pump
DE4443778A1 (en) * 1994-12-08 1996-06-20 Abel Gmbh & Co Double diaphragm pump
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JP3832338B2 (en) * 2001-12-25 2006-10-11 松下電工株式会社 Electrostrictive polymer actuator
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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5659171A (en) * 1993-09-22 1997-08-19 Northrop Grumman Corporation Micro-miniature diaphragm pump for the low pressure pumping of gases
US20030143122A1 (en) * 2002-01-26 2003-07-31 Dietmar Sander Piezoelectrically controllable microfluid actor system
JP2005076493A (en) * 2003-08-29 2005-03-24 Toppan Printing Co Ltd Indirect fluid type diaphragm pump

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Publication number Publication date
GB0716294D0 (en) 2007-09-26
US20090053081A1 (en) 2009-02-26

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