GB2106786A - Breathing apparatus - Google Patents

Breathing apparatus Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2106786A
GB2106786A GB08228703A GB8228703A GB2106786A GB 2106786 A GB2106786 A GB 2106786A GB 08228703 A GB08228703 A GB 08228703A GB 8228703 A GB8228703 A GB 8228703A GB 2106786 A GB2106786 A GB 2106786A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
piston
chamber
valve
gas
breathing
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Granted
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GB08228703A
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GB2106786B (en
Inventor
Leonard John Feathers
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Chubb Panorama Ltd
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Chubb Panorama Ltd
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Publication date
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Priority to GB08228703A priority Critical patent/GB2106786B/en
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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A62LIFE-SAVING; FIRE-FIGHTING
    • A62BDEVICES, APPARATUS OR METHODS FOR LIFE-SAVING
    • A62B7/00Respiratory apparatus

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Pulmonology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Business, Economics & Management (AREA)
  • Emergency Management (AREA)
  • Respiratory Apparatuses And Protective Means (AREA)

Abstract

A breathing apparatus includes two parallel flowpaths 4 and 12 through which breathing gas can be supplied independently from a cylinder 1 to a facemask 6. The first flowpath 4 includes a shut-off valve 2, pressure reducer 3 and demand valve 5 and provides the normal route through which the user of the apparatus is supplied. In the event of a failure or malfunction of any component of this normal breathing circuit, however, the first flowpath can be isolated by closing the valve 2 and the user can breathe through the second or bypass flowpath by opening a second shut-off valve 11 which has a combined pressure reducer and leads directly to the mask 6. The two valves 2 and 11, together with a cylinder pressure gauge 14 and a safety burst disc 15, are incorporated in a compact valve assembly 13 secured to the cylinder 1. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Breathing apparatus The present invention relates to breathing apparatus such as may be worn eg by firemen, rescue workers and the like who are required to perform tasks in noxious or oxygen-depleted environments, or by divers.
Conventionally such apparatus comprises a cylinder of compressed air or oxygen supported by a harness worn by the user, and a facemask, mouthpiece orthe like breathing interface means to which gas is supplied from the cylinder via a flowpath which includes a so-called lung-controlled or demand valve responsive to the respiration of the user to admit gas to the mask or the like at the variable rate necessary to satisfy the breathing need. In some examples the pressure of the supplied gas is reduced from the value at which it is stored in the cylinder to a regulated intermediate value by a first stage pressure reducer located in the flowpath upstream of a separate demand valve, while in others the appropriate pressure reduction and flow control is achieved by the demand valve alone.In either case there is invariably a shut-off valve associated with the cylinder for shutting off the gas supply while the apparatus is not in use. Additionally it is usual to provide a pressure gauge located remote from the cylinder at a position where it can readily be seen by the user, eg supported by the harness on the user's chest, to indicate the state of charge of the cylinder during use. For this purpose a hose from the gauge is tapped in to the gas supply flowpath at a suitable position downstream from the shut-off valve but upstream of the pressure-reducing means.
With breathing apparatus as described above having only a single flowpath through which gas can be supplied from the cylinder to the mask or the like, in the event of malfunction or damage to the demand valve which results in a blockage of the flowpath the flow of gas to the mask or the like will be substantially reduced or completely interrupted, with potentially dire results. In recognition of this possibility, therefore, it is desirable that some additional means be provided for the supply of gas from the cylinder to the mask or the like which can be brought into operation in the event of such an occurence as is indicated above.
Breathing apparatus is known wherein in addition to a main gas supplyflowpath as described above there is provided an auxiliary flowpath leading to the mask or the like which bypasses the flow-controlling parts of the demand valve. This bypass flowpath incorporates a second shut-off valve which is normally closed but which can be opened if it becomes necessary, through some failure of the demand valve,forthe userto breathe through the bypass, and further includes a length of capillary hose to reduce the pressure of the supplied gas as it flows to the mask or the like.However, the use simply of a length of capillary hose to achieve pressure reduction in the bypass flowpath does not permit the most favourable flowrate characteristics to be achieved throughout the range of cylinder pressures and breathing rates to be expected in use of the apparatus and it is to the solution of this drawback that the present invention is directed.
The invention resides in breathing apparatus comprising a source of pressurised breathing gas; breathing interface means; a demand valve associated with said interface means arranged normally to control the flow of breathing gas from said source to said interface means; and means defining a bypass flowpath to lead breathing gas from said source to said interface means independently of the flowcontrolling means of said demand valve, the bypass flowpath including a combined shut-off and pressure-reducing valve.
The pressure-reducing part of said combined valve, which provides an automatic regulation in respect of the pressure and flowrate of gas passed to the interface means through the bypass path, may comprise a piston slidably sealed within a chamber; an inlet to the chamber at one end thereof; the one end of the piston which is adjacent to said one end of the chamber being adapted to cooperate with said inlet to control the flow of gas therethrough; means providing gaseous communication between said one end of the chamber and its opposite end; and the opposite end of the piston which is adjacent to said opposite end of the chamber being or greater effective cross-sectional area than said one end of the piston.To provide the shut-off function, the valve preferably also includes control means which are operable selectively to urge said piston into a position in which the aforesaid one end thereof seats in relation to said inlet to shut off gas flow therethrough, orto release the piston for sliding movement within said chamber.
These and other aspects of the present invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure lisa pictorial illustration of the respiratory system of a breathing apparatus according to the invention, as in use; Figure 2 is a schematic block diagram of the respiratory system of Figure 1; Figure 3 is a partly-sectioned bottom plan view of the cylinder valve assembly employed in the respiratory system of Figures 1 and 2; Figure 4 is a section on the line IV-IV of figure 3, to an enlarged scale; and Figure 5 is a section on the line V-V of Figure 4.
Referring to Figures 1 and 2, the breathing apparatus includes a cylinder 1 of compressed air which in use is supported on the user's back in the conventional inverted attitude by means of a suitable harness assembly (not shown). In normal operation air for breathing is lead out of the cylinder 1 through a shut-off valve 2 to a first stage pressure reducer 3 which in accordance with known techniques provides air via a low pressure hose 4to a demand valve 5 at a substantially constant, reduced pressure.
The demand valve 5, which functions to admit air to a facemask 6 at a variable rate in response to the respiratory efforts of the user, is preferably constructed in accordance with the invention disclosed in our published United Kingdom patent application no. 2054207 and coupled to a tubed inlet 7 of the facemask in accordance with the invention disclosed in our copending United Kingdom patent application 8111796. Exhaled air is vented from the facemask through a conventional exhalation valve 8.
Opening from the main air supply flowpath described above, art a position downstream of the shut-off valve 2 but upstream of the working parts of the pressure reducer 3, is a high pressure hose 9.
This hose leads to a remote pressure gauge and low cylinder pressure warning whistle 10 of conventional form, located e.g. on the user's chest at a position where the reading of the gauge, indicative of the state of charge of the cylinder 1, can be easily seen.
Connected to the cylinder 1 in parallel with the main shut-off valve 2 is a second shut-off valve 11 which also combines the function of a pressure reducer as will be more fully described hereinafter.
From the valve 11 a second low pressure (bypass) hose 12 leads to the facemask 6, to open into the inlet 7 of the mask through a connector 7A at a position downstream of the working parts of the demand valve 5. In normal operation the valve 11 is maintained closed. However, in the event of a malfunction of, or damage to, and of the components 2,3,4,5 of the main air supply flowpath or of the gauge/whistle spur, 9, 10 which results in a reduction of interruption ofthe flow of air to the mask 6, the valve 2 can be closed to isolate the main flowpath from the cylinder 1 and the valve 11 can be opened to maintain a supply of air from the cylinder to the mask via the hose 12.It wil be noted that the flowpath provided by the components 11 and 12 leads directly from the cylinder 1 to the mask 6, bypassing all of the components of the main supply flowpath including the valve 2.
The two valves 2 and 11 are incorporated in a unitary valve assembly 13 secured to the cylinder 1, together with two other components which form permanent parts of the cylinder assembly, viz a second pressure gauge 14 and a burst disc unit 15, the latter to protect against over-pressure in the cylinder. The construction of the valve assembly 13 will now be more fully described with reference to Figures 3,4 and 5.
The assembly 13 comprises a body 16 of generally rectangular planform with two long slab sides 17, 18 and a threaded spigot 19 by which the assembly is screwed into the neck of the cylinder (not shown) to be sealed thereagainst with an O-ring 20. Adjacent to the spigot 19 the body 16 has a neck provided with an external annular groove 21 whereby the cylinder assembly can be supported by a slotted mounting bracket in accordance with the invention disclosed in our published United Kingdom patent application no. 2064636A. The spigot 19 carries a dip tube 22 (Figure 4) through which air from the cylinder is lead to a central bore 23 in the body, the bore 23 intersecting with four further bores 24-27.
The first intersecting or sub-bore 24 is aligned with the longitudinal direction of the body 16 (i.e. as represented by the axis A in Figure 3) and receives the screw-threaded spigot 28 of the cylinder pressure gauge 14 (FigureS) sealed to the bore by an O-ring 29. The mechanism of the gauge can be of conventional form, including an automatic selfsealing valve which closes in the event of any leakage of air out of the bore through the gauge.
The second sub-bore 25 intersects with the bore 23 at right-angles to the longitudinal direction of the body 16 and leads to a screw-threaded spigot 30 opening from the side 17 of the body (Figures 3 and 4). In this part of the body there is a chamber 31 which receives in screw-threaded relation a barrel 32 retaining the conical head 33 of the main shut-off valve 2. The valve further comprises a handwheel 34 with a stem 35 journalled in an extension 36 of the chamber 31 and retained by a cap 37 screwed on to the spigot 30. An O-ring 38 surrounding the stem 35 seals the chambers 31/36 against leakage.
The valve head 33 co-operates with a seat defined at the junction of the bore 25 with the chamber 31, and the head can be moved towards or away from the seat to close or open the valve by rotation of the handwheel 34 in the appropriate sense. Rotation of the handwheel is transmitted from its stem 35 to the barrel 32 through a non-circular drive link 39 which permits the relative axial movement between the barrel and stem occasioned by the barrel's screwthreaded mounting. Rotation of the barrel 32 to withdraw the head 33 from its seat and thereby open the valve 2 permits air to flow from the bore 25 to the chamber 31 and thence through a bore 40 which leads from the chamber to a threaded spigot 41 opening from the opposite side 18 of the body 16, the axis of the bore 40 and spigot 41 being parallel to, but offset from, the axis of the bore 25 and spigot 30.
In the assembled breathing apparatus the bore 40 leads airtothe pressure reducer3 of the main flowpath, shown in chain line in Figure 3. This pressure reducer does not form part of the cylinder valve assembly 13 proper but is demountably attachable thereto by means of a knurled ring 42 held captive on the body of the reducer and screwed onto the spigot 41. In other words the reducer remains assembled with the demand valve, mask and harness of the breathing apparatus throughout each use of the apparatus, and when the cylinder assembly (i.e. the cylinder 1 together with the valve assembly 13) is replaced during use or between uses the reducer 3 is detached from the spigot 41 of the old cylinder assembly and reattached to the corresponding spigot of its replacement. The high pressure and low pressure hoses 9 and 4 lead from the body of the reducer 3 respectively upstream and downstream of its working parts. The spigot 41 is also used as the inlet to the cylinder assembly when being refilled.
The third sub-bore 26 (Figure 5) is aligned with the longitudinal direction of the body 16, i.e. parallel with the pressure gauge bore 24, and leads from the central bore 23 towards the same short side 43 of the body as does the bore 24. The bore 26 opens out into a larger diameter tapped bore 44 into which the burst disc unit 15 is screwed and sealed by an O-ring 45. The unit 15 comprises a housing 46 in the form of a hollow nut having a tapped bore 47 opening to the bore 44 and within which the burst disc itself (48) is clamped by means of a screw-threaded sleeve 49. A passage 50 leads from the downstream end of the bore 47 to openings 51 in the head of the housing 46 so that in use the disc 48 is subjected to the difference between the cylinder pressure transmitted to bore 44, and ambient.In the event of the cylinder becoming over-pressurised, through being overheated or otherwise, the disc 48 is adapted to rupture to vent the cylinder contents through the openings 51.
The fourth sub-bore 27 (Figure 5) is also aligned with the longitudinal direction of the body 16 and opens from the central bore 23 opposite to the burst disc bore 26. It leads to a stepped-diameter chamber 52A/B/Cwithin which is the piston 53 of the combined shut-off valve and pressure reducer 11 of the bypass flowpath. The piston 53 is of stepped diameter matching the first two sections 52A, 52B of the chamber and is slidably sealed thereagainst by respective O-rings 54 and 55. Between the two O-rings the chamber is vented through an opening 56. The valve further comprises a handwheel 57 with a stem 58 screwed into a tapped extension 59 of the chamber 52 and sealed against the chamber section 52C by an O-ring 60.The handwheel 57 is aligned at right-angles to the handwheel 34 of the main shut-off valve 2 and is of a different shape so that the user can readily distinguish between them by touch alone.
In the illustrated shut-off condition of the valve 11 the stem 58 is screwed in so that its nose portion 61 bears against the downstream face of the piston 53 to press the conical head 62 of the piston against a seat defined at the junction of the bore 27 with the chamber 52. This is the condition adopted in normal operation of the breathing apparatus, when the main shut-off valve 2 is open. However, in the event of an emergency which requires the user to breathe through the bypass flowpath he can close the valve 2 and open the valve 11 by turning the handwheel 57 to screw out the stem 58 until it abuts a stop pin 63.
With the stem 58 shifted to the right (in the sense of Figure 5) in this manner the piston 53 is free also to slide to the right under the influence of the cylinder pressure applied to bore 27, thereby admit ting air from the cylinder to the portion of the chamber 52 upstream of the O-ring 54. From here the air can flow through a passageway 64 in the piston to the portion of the chamber 52 downstream of the O-ring 55. This flow is permitted even when, as is the case initially, the piston is urged by the cylinder pressure hard against the nose 61 of the withdrawn stem, as the nose is provided with transverse slots 65 through which the air from passageway 64 can escape.
Intersecting the chamber section 52C at rightangles is a further bore 66 opening through the side 18 of the body 16 as indicated in Figure 3. This bore constitutes the outlet from the valve assembly 13 for the bypass flowpath and plugged into it is a hollow spigot 67 connected to the bypass hose 12. The spigot 67 is a simple push fit in the bore 66 and is sealed thereagainst by an O-ring 68. In use the spigot is held in place in the bore by virtue of the overlap of the knurled ring 42 of the main pressure reducer 3 with the flange 69 of the spigot, as indicated in Figures 3 and 5. This provides a simple but secure means of connecting up the bypass hose 12 to the cylinder assembly, together with the reducer 3, whenever a cylinder assembly is changed.
From the foregoing it will be appreciated how the shut-off function of the piston 53 is performed and that the route by which air from the cylinder 1 is made available to the bypass hose 12 is independent of the main shut-off valve 2. The piston 53, however, furthermore serves a regulatory function in respect of the pressure and flowrate of the air fed to the bypass hose 12, as will now be described.
If the valve 11 is opened while the cylinder remains at its full pressure, conditions are estab lished, it is speculated, such that the flow of air passing through the bore 27 and into the chamber section 52A attains a supersonic velocity, or in other words that the flow of air in the bore 27 becomes "choked"; under these choked conditions the rate of flow which the bore 27 is capable of passing is limited. These conditions prevail so long as the ratio of the cylinder pressure upstream of the bore 27 to the pressure in the chamber section 52A downstream of the bore 27 is above a certain critical value.
However, as the cylinder becomes progressively depleted the upstream pressure will begin to fall until at a certain value the conditions for choked flow no longer exist and the flow velocity through bore 27 falls to a subsonic value. At this juncture, in the absence of the piston 53, the transition to subsonic flow would normally lead to an increase in the overall flow rate through the bypass path to a value considerably in excess of that required for respiration and, bearing in mind that the bypass hose leads directly into the facemask and the bypass flow is not subject to the regulatory effects of the demand value, the excess air would vent directly from the facemask through its exhalation valve, thereby rapidly exhausting the air remaining in the cylinder.
However, in order to conserve the air supply and prevent such wastage the piston 53 now takes on a regulatory function, as follows.
The position of the piston at any time is determined by the balance of thrust on its upstream and downstream faces, or in other words on the difference between the pressure upstream of the O-ring 54 integrated over the effective upstream surface area of the piston and the pressure downstream of the O-ring 55 integrated over the effective downstream surfade area of the piston. As will be appreciated, the piston has a greater effective downstream surface area than upstream surface area.
Furthermore the pressure downstream of O-ring 55 and the pressure upstream of O-ring 54 are related by virtue of the connection made between the upstream and downstream ends of the piston by its passageway 64, a certain pressure drop being encountered by the flow passing through this passageway.
While the cylinder pressure remains at a value which results in choked flow in the bore 27, the balance of thrust on the piston 53 is such as to maintain it in its rightward position against the nose 61 of the withdrawn stem 58. After the transition to subsonic flow, however, both the upstream and downstream pressures acting on the piston increase to the extent that the thrust on the downstream face now overcomes that on the upstream face with the result that the piston shifts leftwards back towards its seated position. As the piston moves in this direction its conical head 62 encounters the orifice at the junction of the bore 27 with the chamber 52 and restricts the cross-sectional area available for air flow through this orifice, thereby limiting the overall flow-rate through the bypass path and reducing the upstream and downstream pressures acting on the piston.The actual position adopted by the piston is of course that in which the orifice is restricted to the extent which results in the upstream and downstream thrusts on the piston cancelling out. As the cylinder gradually exhausts and its pressure reduces so the piston moves gradually rightwards again under the balance of the upstream and downstream pressure forces, so that its head 63 opens up the associated orifice to compensate for the falling cylinder pressure. The result of this action is to give an approximately constant bypass flow for the period following the transition from choked flow and to permit the air supply to be conserved for a period long enough for the user of the apparatus to make an escape following the change-over to "bypass" breathing, even if that change-over is made at a relatively late stage during a working cycle.
The geometry of the valve assembly described in relation to Figures 3 to 5 permits its various component parts to be disposed in juxtaposition in a highly compact manner, as will be appreciated from a consideration of those figures. In particular an assembly 13 as illustrated, together with the pressure reducer 3, can be mounted to a cylinder of, say, seven inches (178 mm) diameter with no part of the assembly protruding outside the bounds of the project area of the cylinder, as indicated at 1 in Figure 3. By shrouding all of the components beneath the cylinder in this way the risks of, say, damage to the pressure gauge 14 or inadvertent turning of the handwheels 34 and 57, are reduced.

Claims (10)

1. Breathing apparatus comprising a source of pressurised breathing gas; breathing interface means; a demand valve associated with said interface means arranged normally to control the flow of breathing gas from said source to said interface means; and means defining a bypass flow path to lead breathing gas from said source to said interface means independently of the flow-controlling means of said demand valve, the bypass flowpath including a combined shut-off and pressure-reducing valve.
2. Breathing apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said combined valve comprises a piston slidably sealed within a chamber; an inlet to the chamber at one end thereof; the one end of the piston which is adjacent to said one end of the chamber being adapted to cooperate with said inlet to control the flow of gas therethrough; means providing gaseous communication between said one end of the chamber and its opposite end; and the opposite end of the piston which is adjacent to said opposite end of the chamber being of greater effective cross-section area than said one end of the piston.
3. Breathing apparatus according to claim 2 wherein said communication means comprise a passageway provided through the piston.
4. Breathing apparatus according to clairn 2 or claim 3 wherein said combined valve includes control means which are operable selectively to urge said piston into a position in which said one end thereof seats in relation to said inlet to shut off gas flow therethrough, or to release the piston for sliding movement within said chamber.
5. Breathing apparatus according to claim 4 wherein said control means comprise a manuallyrotatable screwthreaded member adapated to engage with said opposite end of the piston.
6. Breathing apparatus according to any one of claims 2 to 5 wherein said chamber is defined within a valve body which defines also a supply passage to which gas from said source is lead, a first branch opening from said passage to lead gas to the demand valve and a second branch opening from said passage to lead gas to said inlet.
7. Breathing apparatus according to claims 5 and 6 wherein said manually-rotatable member engages a complementary screwthread provided on said body.
8. Breathing apparatus according to any one of claims 2 to 7 wherein said chamber is of stepped bore and said piston is of stepped diameter with the different diameter portions of the piston being slidably sealed against respective portions of the chamber bore; and the said one end of the piston is provided as a conical nose adapted to seat in relation to said inlet and to control gas flow through said inlet into the chamber as a function of the axial position of the piston in the chamber.
9. Breathing apparatus according to claims 3 and 8 wherein one end of said passageway opens to said chamber through the piston at a position between said conical nose and the slidable sealing means of the smaller-diameter portion of the piston, and the other end of said passageway opens to said cham berthrough said opposite end of the piston.
10. Breathing apparatus according to any preceding claim wherein pressurised breathing gas is supplied from the source to said combined valve without significant reduction in pressure in the flowpath upstream of that valve.
GB08228703A 1980-09-10 1982-10-07 Breathing apparatus Expired GB2106786B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08228703A GB2106786B (en) 1980-09-10 1982-10-07 Breathing apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8029301 1980-09-10
GB8102795 1981-01-30
GB08228703A GB2106786B (en) 1980-09-10 1982-10-07 Breathing apparatus

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2106786A true GB2106786A (en) 1983-04-20
GB2106786B GB2106786B (en) 1984-08-01

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB08228703A Expired GB2106786B (en) 1980-09-10 1982-10-07 Breathing apparatus

Country Status (1)

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GB (1) GB2106786B (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2106786B (en) 1984-08-01

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 20010906