CA1070213A - Diver support apparatus - Google Patents

Diver support apparatus

Info

Publication number
CA1070213A
CA1070213A CA287,164A CA287164A CA1070213A CA 1070213 A CA1070213 A CA 1070213A CA 287164 A CA287164 A CA 287164A CA 1070213 A CA1070213 A CA 1070213A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
diver
heat
support apparatus
pump
liquid
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.)
Expired
Application number
CA287,164A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John R. Colston
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
CBS Corp
Original Assignee
Westinghouse Electric Corp
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 Westinghouse Electric Corp filed Critical Westinghouse Electric Corp
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1070213A publication Critical patent/CA1070213A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B63SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
    • B63CLAUNCHING, HAULING-OUT, OR DRY-DOCKING OF VESSELS; LIFE-SAVING IN WATER; EQUIPMENT FOR DWELLING OR WORKING UNDER WATER; MEANS FOR SALVAGING OR SEARCHING FOR UNDERWATER OBJECTS
    • B63C11/00Equipment for dwelling or working underwater; Means for searching for underwater objects
    • B63C11/02Divers' equipment
    • B63C11/28Heating, e.g. of divers' suits, of breathing air

Abstract

DIVER SUPPORT APPARATUS

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
Apparatus for supporting the life, safety, comfort, and usefulness of an underwater diver by pumping seawater, or other ambient water in which the diver may be located, under pressure from a surface site to the submerged diver site, and locally converting at the diver site the hydraulic energy of such pumped seawater into diver-warming heat and mechanical energy for operating tools, pumps, ect.

Description

~` ` BACKGP~OUND OF THE INV~NTION `
~ld o~ ~he I~ ntio~: ..
~. '~
D ~er heati~ d ~ork e~erg~ app~ra~u~" .
D~scrip~lo~ o~ th~ Prior Art:
~ , . .
Prese~tlr a comDon method Or heatl~g ~ dives wh~le ~lub~erg~ and a~nbulator~ lnvol~s the heati~g of ~at~r at ~
di,r~r-remote ~it~ and the pu~pl~g ~ uch hot da'cer ~o the .`
diver ~or circul~e~o~ thro~gh c~u~ ln hl~ di~
This ~ ddit~ni ~ tra~smitklng po~er e~erg~ to hl~ for 1:
op~ra~ing ~ tool8 wh~ required. Tra~ ion o~ ~u~h hot ~ater ~ th~ diver oectl~s by ~ray of a ~lexibl~ hose ~hat ¦ ;
.
i~ ~ub~ d ~t it~ ~xker~r to the lo~ rature ~i~n~
~ater which tands ~o pr~voke ~on~id~rabl~ ~hermal ~ 330 Tho J
u~e o~ therlDal i~qsulat~on arouad ths ~at ho~0 t~d0 to ¦
er the hose bulky and fi~cult t~ 2~an~pulat~
Pr~ inary ~Dvellty ~earch in the U.S. Patent ~nd Trademar~ O~i~e ha~ ~nc0v~red several Bs~bn~: that discl~e the p~rer-ga~eratl~n u~e o~ seawater to a limite~ 2xten'c and ~or ~ ~hor~ dllratl~ o~ an eD~rge~cy basi~ b~ flo~ ~ro~ ~h~
e~*erior t~ ~ iaterioi e~mber 1~ a æub~srg~d ~essel: :
' .. . .
, ~, .. . . . .. . ... . . . .... . . . . . .
' , ' ' '' , : - :

,. ' i , :: . ; ~ ' :

~l~'7~3~

3,504 Krisdt; 3,41~?~1g Vi~c~t et al; 3,163t9~5 Bou~ou-co~; and 3,003,~,4~ Gay Jr. One~, 3,1~3~195 ~60 C~usteau ~ al, discl~es u8e o~ bottled-gas driveP. ~eawater pu~p5 i~r ves~el propulsion, and anolt~ r, 1,466~315 ~o Thors~n, ~perates an d.~ ull ~crubber d~vlce ~hat u~es ~he d~Gk ;~
~rater conduit ~n ~h~ ~hip b~ing ~3erubbl~dO
A Ru~ab~r of paten~ discl~e apparatu~ Por ge~er~
tion OI hsat from ~l~w Or h~drauli¢ ~luid i~ a cl~ loop through a ~;~.0~ mean~; 39~13,036 to Lutz ~ ~ re~ldent~al :~;
heating 3y ~em; 3,333,771 t~ Graham for a b~ t vulcan~
izer; 2~764,1~7 t~ ner for ar~ aircraf~ hydr~ulie ~gste .
heater; and 29107,933 to Cr~cket~ et al or a ~y~tem for ::
heating building~, ~ehicle~, ~ompar~n~, ekc.
O~e pater~t " 3, ~15, $73 bo M~rcu~, di$clb~es a eom-pressed-ga~-vperated ~ex-tub0 type h~at ge~era~r i!0r hea~i~g a diver'~ ~ult by cir~u~Za~ion o~ hot l~quld ~hr~ugh :~
~ g~to-liquld heat exch~ager~ The ga~ u~ed 1~ the b0~tl~d bre~thillg ~a~ carried by the di~r, or fur~ h~d a~ bre~thi~g air via line fr~m 'Ghe ~ur~ace.

Tho pre~en~ in~nt~on, i~ tran~mltting rel~ ely l-w tomperat~re ~eaw~ter to ~he ~ or Conver#iQ~ l~t~
heatl rather ~han high temperature h~t water, ~reatly re-duce~ ~he poten~ial thermal l~s8 via the h~at suppl~ ho~
a~d ~b~ia~e~ ~eed f~r ~umber~ome thermal insula~lon o~ ~h~
he3~. T~0~us~of 0s~atsr, or o~h~r a~bi~nt wate~, a~ the e~s~ ~a~ be, ~r tra~mis~on to ~h~ di~e~ i3 expe~7!.~n~
i~asm~h ~ is r~dil~ a~allable and l~all~ exhau~tible withou~ polluting.
The u~e ~ seawater *~ tran~ lon to ~he di~e~ ---2-- ~

~i7~Z~3 also is relatively practical~ as compared to the use of compressed gas for such transmiss:Lon. The column of sea-water in the downwardly extending supply hose develops the same hydrostatic elevation pressure as that of the surrounding sea, so that the liquid pumping means at the surface need deliver only that work required to overcome friction in the supply hose, plus any pressure head needed for the intended work function at the diver site. Pumping pressurized gas, on the other hand~ requires compression of the gas ~ust to enable it to overcome the hydrostatic head of the water column tending to be forced into the lower end of the hose. At diver depths of many hundreds of feet, such energy-demanding hydrostatic-head-overcoming ;
gas compression can be considerable. At the same time, expansion of compressed gas for creation of heat or per-forming work results in cooling of such gas to a relative-ly low temperature at its exhaust. This~ coupled with a low ambient water temperature can lead to complication of the equipment in behalf of avoiding freeze-up.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
. _ _ _ .... . ... _ . _ Fig. 1 is an elevation view, partly in outline and partly in section, of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention as affiliated with several divers at two different submerged sites as availed with sea- `;~
water under pressure from a support vessel at the sur-face; ~ ;~
Figs. 2a to 2d are schematic showings of differ~
ent hydraulic circuit arrangements which may be embodied in the apparatus of the present invention to produce heat at the diver site by flow of seawater under pressure to -3- ~;

. ' ,~, ,:

~70;213 such site from a surface site;
Fig. 3 is a schematic showing of a reciprocating~
piston motor and pump arrangement suitable for embodiment in such as the exemplified hydraulic circuits of Figso 2a -to 2d; and Fig. 4 is a cross section view o~ a rotary hy-.~
draulic motor and pump construction suitable for use in the present invention as an alternative to the reciprocat~
, ing-piston motor-pump used in the Fig. 3 arrangement.
DESCRIPTION OF_THE PRRFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to Fig. 1 the diver support apparatus of the present invention is shown affiliated with a sup~
port vessel 1 floating on a sea surface 2 above submerged divers 3 and 4 at two dif~erent underwater sites; one be-ing located within a submerged breathing chamber 5 and the other being outside such chamber and furnished with breathing gas from the chamber by way of push-pull breath- , ing gas lines 6 and 7, respectively. ~
According to the present invention, water from ~ -the body of ambient water 8 in which the chamber 5 and divers 3 and 4 are submerged is drawn into a precharge pump 9 via a filter-inlet 10, thence to a supply pump 11 ~ ;
via a filter 12 for pressurizing and delivery to breathing gas chamber 5 and to diver 4 via a pump outlet 13 and a flexible pressurized water supply line 14 and branches thereof.
At the breathing chamber 5, the pressurized seawater arriving via supply line 14 wlll ~low through a conversion means including a seawater-operated turbine ;

15, or other suitable hydraulic motor, to operate such , ~:

g~7~13 a~ an ele~ric gen~rat:or 76 to e~rg~z~ llghting mea~$ 17, for exampls; a ga~ compre~or 17 for opera~irg p~eUIui~tiG
equlp~ont, f~r examp~; a h~aulic pump 1~ for oparating hydraull~ equipDl~n'c, ~or ex~pl~ sa~ clrculati0n bl~w0r 19 ~or circula~s brea~hi~ hi-l ~h~ c~a3~b~r; a~d a pu~p 20 ~or cirQ~l~ti~g liquid s0quentl~ thro~gh ~ w restri ~ an~ 21 ~o craa~es heat ~hi~ 3uch liqu~LB and the~a ~hrough ~ he~ ~xchR~g~r 22 to trazl~er ~uch heat ~
~he l~er~os e~ such ch~bes~. ~ ho~ l~quld ~Gorags ~h~m;; ~ .
b~r 23 eo~pl0tes the hea~in~ ltqui t lo~p ~fflugh the pump ~0. ;~, ' Th~ t~rior of the chamber 5 ia ava~led w~th breathin~6~ gaa, such as a m~xtu~- o~ heliu~ ~nd oxyge~, .
~rom ~rage ~anks 25 meu~ted ~ut~id~s the chamber a~d regulated automatically to maintain ~ de~ired OX~gQ~ le~- :
el by ga~ control mean~ 26 that incl~des a s~rubber me~3 f0r rs~o~al ot carbon dioxide fr~m ~he ch~ber g~c ~ ::
~iv~r, ~uch a~ ~hs dlver 3, di~p0~ed ~ithi~ ~h~ ahamb~
5 si~ ree ~o re~ove h~s hol~et, m~k, or hea~ge~r a~d bre~h~ 'che ga~ wi'ch~n the chambsr, a~
i~ the ar~ a~d, ill ~ccord with the pre~ent i~v~ nl to b0 a~ail¢d o~ he~t) l~ghting, p~eu~atic p~wer., h~rauli~
p~er, etc, produced by the flow of ~eawater under pre~-~ure ~m the sur~ace site at V1~19el 1 tG ~he turb~}le 15.
Dischar~e oP seawater ~r~m ~he ~2rbl~e 15 i8 ~ t~ OC:~
cur into ~Ghe ~a ~ via an ~ uab~ q At another site the dlver ~ is availed o~ brea~h~
ing ga~ ~rom the intexi~ of ~he ch~mber 5 by way of ~he ~upply and retu~ lines 6 ~ad 7 , hi~ di~ing hel~et 30 and ~ ::
~u~table ~Ye ~sa~ ~not ~hown)~ acsord wil;h ~ature~
:.

- . - ~ .. , of the present invention, supply and return pumps 31 and 32 for the breathing gas lines 6 and 7, respectively, are driven by a hydraulic motor 33 operated by seawater under pressure from a branch of the supply line 14. At the same time, another branch of such pressurized seawater supply line 14 extends to the dlver 4 at a site outside the cham- ;
ber 5 to a hydraulically operated conversion device 35.
Device 35 is designed to be compact~ lightweight, and ef-ficient, for disposition on the diver, such as at his waist~ as shown, or at any other suitable location at the diver. Device 35 contalns a means for converting the flow of pressurized seawaker from the line 14 into heat, and for passing a liquid medium containing such heat through passages 36 in the diverls suit 37 to maintain comfort and warmth of the diver. The heated liquid med-ium supplied to the heating ~assages 36 in the diver's suit 37 may be the seawater or it may be a secondary liq~
uid. Different hydraulic circuits and pumping means suit-able ~or use in the apparatus o~ the present invention are ~
20 shown in Figs. 2, 3, and 4. Some may be more suitable for ~`
use at the diver site within the breathing chamber 5, while others may be more suitable for use at the external diver site mounted on the diver.
For example, referring to Fig. 2a, the circuitdisclosed therein includes a hydraulic motor 40 operated from .seawater from line 14 and driving a pump 41 that forces seawater also from the line 14 through a heat-producing flow restriction means 42 and a heat exchanger 43. Exhaust from the motor 40 and from the heat exchanger 30 may simply bleed into the sea 8. ~;

~07~213 :, Referring to Fig. 2b, a hydraulic motor 40 -~
driven by seawater ~rom line 14 and exhausting into the ambient water 8 drives a pump 41 that circulates a liq~
uid medium through a closed loop that includes a heat- : :
pro~ucing flow restricting means 42 and a heat exchanger ~:
means 43. :
Fig. 2c shows an arrangement where part of the ~ : .
discharge ~rom the hydraulic motor 40 serves as input to the pump 41 which forces the seawater through the heat-producing flow restriction means 42 and heat exchanger means 43 Some discharge from the restriction means 43 ~ !
ie allowed to recirculate through the pump 41, however, via a by-pass line 44.
Fig. 2d is similar to the circuit of Fig. 2c, but includes an additional recirculation loop llne 45 around the heat exchanger 43. ~ :
It will be apparent that other variations may be employed to advantage to suit particular component characteristics or preferred operating parametsrs, such as use of recovery heat exchangers, all within the spir-it and scope of the present invention.
Several different types of motor-pump combina-tions may be employed in the foregoing hydraulic circuits.
Fig. 3 depicts a reciprocating type in which a motor pis- : :
ton 47 is reciprocably driven by periodic supply of sea-water pressure from supply line 14 alternately to its op-posite faces under control of a four-way valve means 48, ~ :
and a pump piston 50 driven by motor piston 47. Pump piston 50 discharges alternately from its opposite faces 30 to force the flow of liquid medium through the flow ~:

- ' ~

~:
:- . . , - ~ .

~ ~376~ 3 ~ ~
restrlction means 42 and heat exchanger means 43 via a system of check valves arranged like a full-wave bridge rectifier in simple AC to DC electrical conversion cir-cuitry. By compounding the number of motor and pump pis-tons, a triplex orquadraflex arrangement can be obtained ~or smoother di~charge flow. The several pump pistons can be made to operate in an out-of-phase relationship to obtain the desired pulsation-reducing effect.
A ~otor-pump assemblage that appears to be particularly suited ~or use in the device 35 at the diver 4 is shown in Fig. 4. Here the assemblage em-ploys motor and pump of the rotary type. A water tur~
bine rotor 52 driven,by seawater flow from the line 14 turns a high-loss pump rotor 53 that creates consider-able heat-generating friction during its operation.
The assemblage includes a liquid heating medium inlet 54 and outlet 55 for the pump rotor 53, a shaft 56 ~oin~
ing the two rotors 52 and 53, and anti-friction rotary bearing means 57 for the shaft 56. It has been calculated that a rotor diameter of about one inch can be operated to convert five kilowatts of hydraulic power into heat for a working diver. This indicated that the size of the appar-atus components can be small enough to be practical. An inlet pressure to the supply hose of about 2500 p.s.i. and a supply hose diameter of one half inch were used in the calculations. It will be apparent that pump and motor -rotors can be of the positive displacement type, if de~
sired or found to be more suitable ln a particu~ar system. ~-' , :
:~ .

Claims (7)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. Support apparatus for a diver submerged in a body of ambient liquid, comprising, ambient liquid pump means at the surface of said body of liquid for pressurizing and displacing ambient liquid from said body, a flexible supply line for conveying pressurized ambient liquid from said pump meals at the surface to a submerged diver site, and heat-producing conversion means at such submerged diver site for converting hydraulic flow energy of the relatively cool pressurized ambient liquid passing through said supply line into diver warming heat energy.
2. The support apparatus of claim 1, wherein said heat-producing conversion means is affiliated with a submerged chamber containing breathing gas at such diver site.
3. The support apparatus of claim 1, wherein said heat-producing conversion means is diver-worn.
4. The support apparatus of claim 1, wherein said heat-producing conversion means includes a turbine pump.
5. The support apparatus of claim 1, wherein said heat-producing conversion means includes hydraulic flow restricting means.
6. The support apparatus of claim 1, wherein said heat-producing conversion means includes, a hydraulic motor operated by flow of pressurized ambient liquid from said supply line, a liquid flow restricting means, a heat exchanger means, and a pump operated by said hydraulic motor for cir-culating a liquid medium through said flow restricting means and through said heat exchanger means.
7. The support apparatus of claim 1, further including other means operable by pressurized ambient liquid from said supply line.
CA287,164A 1976-10-19 1977-09-21 Diver support apparatus Expired CA1070213A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US73374476A 1976-10-19 1976-10-19

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1070213A true CA1070213A (en) 1980-01-22

Family

ID=24948951

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA287,164A Expired CA1070213A (en) 1976-10-19 1977-09-21 Diver support apparatus

Country Status (6)

Country Link
JP (1) JPS5353897A (en)
CA (1) CA1070213A (en)
DE (1) DE2746746A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2368404A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1592865A (en)
IT (1) IT1091936B (en)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5328298A (en) * 1993-07-07 1994-07-12 Maffatone Anthony N Safe ascent/decompression device
JP2003011887A (en) * 2001-06-28 2003-01-15 Asia Kaiyo Kk Diving suit and warming method therefor
US20060204723A1 (en) * 2005-03-11 2006-09-14 Rachelle Bentley Method of making absorbent core structures

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1575616A (en) * 1968-02-29 1969-07-25
US3762392A (en) * 1971-05-19 1973-10-02 R Long Hot water heater system for divers
US3815573A (en) * 1972-12-12 1974-06-11 Schwartz J Diving suit heater

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS5353897A (en) 1978-05-16
GB1592865A (en) 1981-07-08
FR2368404A1 (en) 1978-05-19
IT1091936B (en) 1985-07-06
DE2746746A1 (en) 1978-04-20

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