US1039243A - Sterilizer. - Google Patents

Sterilizer. Download PDF

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US1039243A
US1039243A US43477208A US1908434772A US1039243A US 1039243 A US1039243 A US 1039243A US 43477208 A US43477208 A US 43477208A US 1908434772 A US1908434772 A US 1908434772A US 1039243 A US1039243 A US 1039243A
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cylinder
tank
piston
shelf
pipe
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US43477208A
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Robert P Barnstead
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L2/00Methods or apparatus for disinfecting or sterilising materials or objects other than foodstuffs or contact lenses; Accessories therefor
    • A61L2/26Accessories or devices or components used for biocidal treatment

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  • the object of this invention is the construction of improved means for raising and lowering such receiver, and also for simultaneously opening and closing the tankcover.
  • Figure l is a central, transverse, vertical section of a sterilizer embodying my invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view of the same with a part broken away and the cover removed.
  • Fig. 3 is a sectional elevation of the lower part of the operating cylinder shown on a larger scale.
  • Fig. 4L is a central vertical section of the three-way valve used in connection with the apparatus.
  • Fig. 5 is a horizontal section of the same.
  • the sterilizer tank l with which my improvements are connected, is provided with a hinged cover 2, and'mounted upon a suitable supporting frame 3.
  • the receiver or tray 4 is supported upon a skeletonized shelf 5 which is fixed upon the upper end of the piston rod 6, the latter being provided at its lower end with a leather piston or plunger 7 movable within the cylinder 8.
  • the shelf is elevated sufficiently to bring the tray 4L above the level of the sterilizer solution in the tank, and to hold the same at such point while the treated utensils are being removed, and as long thereafter as maybe desired.
  • the tray descends by the weight of itself and contents down into the solution again.
  • the pipe l0 which Specification of Letters Patent.
  • the casting 16 which forms the bottom head of the cylinder 8, has a boss 18 into which is tapped the end of the pipe 10, and the opening in said boss between the pipeend and the cylinder is given a downward inclination in order to bring the mouth 1S) iiush with the bottom of the cylinder-space.
  • the object of this is two-fold, rst, to enable the plunger to descend to as low a point as possible without shutting 0E the water-inlet.
  • the second obj ect is that while thus permitting the plunger to descend to the bottom of the cylinder, enough water will be permitted to remain at such bottom, and which will not be forced up and out.
  • the shelf 5 To keep the shelf 5 from turning on the rod 6 as an axis and rubbing its corners against the interior of the tank when rising and falling, and so badly scratching the surface of the latter, the shelf is provided with an antifriction roll 26 near each corner, as shown in Figs. l and 2.
  • the bars 26 are pivoted to the ends of the shelf 5 and passed up through the confining-straps or eyes 27 fixed to the tank.
  • an antifriction roll 28 At the upper end of each bar is an antifriction roll 28.
  • the shelf rises said rolls are pressed upward against the cover and force it to open synchronously therewith.
  • the bars 26 are made to cant over more and more as they rise, and so open the cover to substantially its full width.
  • the shelf-raising means refuse to work, the attendant can instantly raise the cover by hand and so have access to the utensils in the tray. This is a most important feature, inasmuch as in surgical operations there must be no possibility of the sterilized articles being kept for a moment out of reach.
  • the utensils having been placed in the tray, the attendant applies her knee to the forks of the lever 14 and swings it to its extremity of right-hand movement, and can then as before attend to other tasks; for, when all the water has been forced from beneath the plunger, the shelf is at the bottom of the tank.
  • the lever can therefore remain in this position without detriment, the only utility of the intermediate position c of the lever being that it enables the tray to be held at any level intermediate of the abovedescribed extremes.
  • piston ⁇ fitted to the cylinder and having a piston rod rising therefrom within the tank, a shelf supported ⁇ by said rod, and means for admitting fluid under pressure to the cylinder beneath the piston.

Description

R. P. BARNSTEAD.
. STERILIZER. APPLICATION FILED MAY 25, 1908. 1,039,243. Patented sept.24,1912.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
gf By M/ Attorney,
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
ROBERT I. IBARNSTEAD, OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS.
STERILIZER.
To all whom it may concern.'
Be it known that I, ROBERT P. BARN- s'rnAD, a citizen of the United States, residing at Boston, in the county of Suffolk and State of Massachusetts, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Sterilizers, of which the following is a specification.
In sterilizers for surgical utensils and appliances, it is customary to place the same in a shallow receiver adapted to be submerged in a tank containing a sterilizing solution.
The object of this invention is the construction of improved means for raising and lowering such receiver, and also for simultaneously opening and closing the tankcover. For such purpose, I prefer to employ water under pressure acting upon a piston connected with said receiver, directing the water to and from the cylinder containing such piston, by means of a kneecontrolled valve.
Referring to the drawings forming part of this specification, Figure l is a central, transverse, vertical section of a sterilizer embodying my invention. Fig. 2 is a plan view of the same with a part broken away and the cover removed. Fig. 3 is a sectional elevation of the lower part of the operating cylinder shown on a larger scale. Fig. 4L is a central vertical section of the three-way valve used in connection with the apparatus. Fig. 5 is a horizontal section of the same.
The sterilizer tank l, with which my improvements are connected, is provided with a hinged cover 2, and'mounted upon a suitable supporting frame 3. The receiver or tray 4 is supported upon a skeletonized shelf 5 which is fixed upon the upper end of the piston rod 6, the latter being provided at its lower end with a leather piston or plunger 7 movable within the cylinder 8.
Vater under pressure being let into the cylinder beneath the piston, the shelf is elevated sufficiently to bring the tray 4L above the level of the sterilizer solution in the tank, and to hold the same at such point while the treated utensils are being removed, and as long thereafter as maybe desired. By allowing the water within the cylinder to escape to any suitable waste, the tray descends by the weight of itself and contents down into the solution again. To thus control the operating fluid, whether water, air under pressure or steam, the pipe l0 which Specification of Letters Patent.
Application filed May 25, 1908.
Patented Sept. 24, 1912.
Serial No. 434,772.
opens into the base of the cylinder, is brought up to approximately the level of the bottom of the tank, and there connected with both the water intake pipe 11 and the waste pipe l2. At such juncture is a three-way valve 13 controlled by a knee-operated lever 14. The lever being swung to the position a in Fig. 5, the water from the intake 11 flows to the pipe 10 and thence into the cylinder; if swung to the point b, the pipe 10 is put into communication with the waste pipe 12; while if swung to the intermediate position c, all communication to and from the cylinder is shut off.
I prefer to form the extremity of the lever 14 with a rounded fork l5 into which the operator can press her knee in operating the same, and so more positively control it.
The casting 16 which forms the bottom head of the cylinder 8, has a boss 18 into which is tapped the end of the pipe 10, and the opening in said boss between the pipeend and the cylinder is given a downward inclination in order to bring the mouth 1S) iiush with the bottom of the cylinder-space. The object of this is two-fold, rst, to enable the plunger to descend to as low a point as possible without shutting 0E the water-inlet. The second obj ect is that while thus permitting the plunger to descend to the bottom of the cylinder, enough water will be permitted to remain at such bottom, and which will not be forced up and out. through t-he pipes 10 and 12, to insure the cont-inued moistening of the leather plunger 7 and its consequent pliability and readiness for immediate use. A similar arrangement is provided for the connection with the upper end of the cylinder of the pipe 20, which is joined to the water-inlet pipe 2l and waste pipe 23, and communicates with either or neither by means of a suitable three-way valve 22, as indicated in Figs. l and 2. By this method of connecting the intake and exhaust pipes to the upper end of the cylinder and having the latter formed with an opening or openings 25 up into the tank, the latter can be filled or emptied without further openings through its walls than the one provided for the cylinder.
I prefer to have the circular member 25a through which are the small holes 25, and through which rises the piston rod 6, adapted to be removable in order that at any time the shelf 5 and p iston 7 can be withdrawn,
both for purposes of cleaning the parts, and for renewing or repairing the piston and its packing.
To keep the shelf 5 from turning on the rod 6 as an axis and rubbing its corners against the interior of the tank when rising and falling, and so badly scratching the surface of the latter, the shelf is provided with an antifriction roll 26 near each corner, as shown in Figs. l and 2.
To cause the cover 2 to automatically7 open and shut as the tray rises and sinks, the bars 26 are pivoted to the ends of the shelf 5 and passed up through the confining-straps or eyes 27 fixed to the tank. At the upper end of each bar is an antifriction roll 28. When the shelf rises, said rolls are pressed upward against the cover and force it to open synchronously therewith. By having the iv otal points 29 in advance of the confiningstraps 27 the bars 26 are made to cant over more and more as they rise, and so open the cover to substantially its full width. By thus having the cover rest upon these bars, it can be raised by hand at any time Wit-hout interference. Hence should, through anv possible means, the shelf-raising means refuse to work, the attendant can instantly raise the cover by hand and so have access to the utensils in the tray. This is a most important feature, inasmuch as in surgical operations there must be no possibility of the sterilized articles being kept for a moment out of reach.
In using this sterilizer, the attendantfin case the shelf is down within the liquid,- presses with her knee the lever 14 over toward the left, and thereby causes the water under pressure to enter the cylinder and raise the piston, shelf and tray. She can then attend to some other duties, and return to the sterilizer when the opened position of the cover shows the tray to be suitably elevated. It can do no harm if she delay somewhat her return, inasmuch as when the plunger reaches the cylinder-top, it comes to rest and no further water can enter. The utensils having been placed in the tray, the attendant applies her knee to the forks of the lever 14 and swings it to its extremity of right-hand movement, and can then as before attend to other tasks; for, when all the water has been forced from beneath the plunger, the shelf is at the bottom of the tank. The lever can therefore remain in this position without detriment, the only utility of the intermediate position c of the lever being that it enables the tray to be held at any level intermediate of the abovedescribed extremes.
What I claim as my invention and for which I desire Letters Patent is as follows, to witg- 1. The combination with a sterilizer tank, of a cylinder located beneath the same, a
piston `fitted to the cylinder and having a piston rod rising therefrom within the tank, a shelf supported `by said rod, and means for admitting fluid under pressure to the cylinder beneath the piston.
2. The combination with a sterilizer tank, of a cylinder located beneath the center of the same, a piston fitted to the cylinder, a piston rod rising from the iston into the tank, supporting devices carried by said rod, means for admittin fiud under pressure to the cylinder beneat the piston, and closing means for said means.
3. The combination with a sterilizer tank, of a cylinder fixed beneath the center of the bottom of the tank, a piston fitted to the cylinder, a piston rod rising from the piston into the tank, a shelf fitted to receive the upper end of the rod, and means for introducing a fiuid under pressure to the cylinder beneath the piston.
4. The combination with a tank, of a cylinder fixed beneath the center of the bottom of the tank, a piston fitted to `the cylinder, a iston rod rising from the piston, a removab e ide penetrated by the rod and located at t e juncture of the cylinder and tank, means for introducing a fluid under pressure to the c linder beneath the piston, and valve-contro led pipes connected to the upper end and the lower end of the cylinder.
5. The combination with a tank, of a cylinder fixed beneath the same, a piston `fitted to the cylinder, a piston rod rising from the piston into the tank, an object-carrying means supported by said rod, a ipe communicating with the lower end ofjsaid cylinder and rising to a oint close beneath said tank, a fluid receiving pipe and a discharge pipe both communicatin with the upper end of the first-named pipe, and a three-way valve at the juncture of said pipes and controllin the same.
6. lThe combination with a tank, of a cylinder fixed beneath the same, a piston fitted to said cylinder, a piston rod rising from said cylinder into the tank, an object-carrying means supported by said rod, a pipe communicating with the lower end of said cylinder and rlsing to a point close beneath said tank, a threeway valve at the upper end of said pipe, a fluid receivin pipe and a discharge pipe both controlle by said valve and communicating through `it with the first-named pipe, and a lever having a bfurcated free end and adapted to control said valve.
7. The combination with a sterilizer chamber, of a shelf thereof, Huid-pressure means for elevating said shelf, a push-bar pivoted at its flower end to an end of said shelf, a confining eye loosely receiving said `bar and fixed to the chamber near its upper edge, an antifriction roll at the upper end of said bar, and a hinged cover contacting `with said roll; said pivotal point being in advance of said eye.
8. The combination with a sterilizer chamber, of a vertical cylinder communicating at its upper end with the bottoni of the chamber, a plunger in the cylinder, a shelf supported by said plunger, means for admitting fluid under pressure beneath said plunger, and a pipe connected with said cylinder close to its upper end for admitting and re- Ibnoving fluid through the latter to the cham- 9. The combination with a sterilizing chamber, of a cylinder located below the center of the bottom thereof, a plunger in said cylinder, a piston rod rising from the plunger into the chamber, a shelf supported by the rod, and antifriction rolls carried by the shelf adapted to contact With the inner sides of the chamber and to thereby keep the latter from Wear by the shelf.
In testimony that I claim the oregoing invention, I have hereunto set my hand this 22 day of May, 1908.
ROBERT P. BARNSTEAD.
Witnesses:
A. B. UPHAM, WARREN N. AKERS.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for ve cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, D. C.
US43477208A 1908-05-25 1908-05-25 Sterilizer. Expired - Lifetime US1039243A (en)

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