US3326212A - Breathing apparatus - Google Patents

Breathing apparatus Download PDF

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US3326212A
US3326212A US292523A US29252363A US3326212A US 3326212 A US3326212 A US 3326212A US 292523 A US292523 A US 292523A US 29252363 A US29252363 A US 29252363A US 3326212 A US3326212 A US 3326212A
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cartridge
canister
compartment
space
mouthpiece
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US292523A
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Phillips Lewis Raymond
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Siebe Gorman and Co Ltd
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Siebe Gorman and Co Ltd
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A62LIFE-SAVING; FIRE-FIGHTING
    • A62BDEVICES, APPARATUS OR METHODS FOR LIFE-SAVING
    • A62B7/00Respiratory apparatus
    • A62B7/06Respiratory apparatus with liquid oxygen or air; Cryogenic systems
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A62LIFE-SAVING; FIRE-FIGHTING
    • A62BDEVICES, APPARATUS OR METHODS FOR LIFE-SAVING
    • A62B7/00Respiratory apparatus
    • A62B7/10Respiratory apparatus with filter elements

Definitions

  • breathing apparatus of the kind known as self-contained oxygen breathing apparatus, in which a chemical charge is contained in a housing usually in the form of a canister, the carbon dioxide being removed from the air exhaled by the user by passing it through the chemical charge, which is gas adsorbent.
  • the present trend is to completely enclose the apparatus to protect it, and recharging of the chemicalcontaining canister after the charge has become too contaminated for further use has hitherto entailed the removal of the housing or canister from the apparatus so that it can be emptied, cleaned and recharged.
  • the term canister will be used to identify the housing, but it should be understood thatany suitable compartment which may be used in the same manner as hereinafter described is contemplated under the term canister, and in this connection, the present invention is also concerned with cartridges charged with the said chemical and particularly adapted for use with the canister of a form of the present invention.
  • breathing apparatus includes a canister for containing the said chemical and is characterised in that the canister has opposed end wall parts one of which is formed with an inlet for the exhaled air, the other end wall part being adapted to afford a seating for one end of a cartridge charged with the said chemical and insertable in and removable from the canister, one end wall being adapted to serve as a closure lid for the canister and being displaceable relative to the remainder of the canister to permit of insertion and removal of the cartridge.
  • a. special container for storing a cartridge prior to loading it into the said canister including means to seal the interior of the cartridge from terial, or a pre-filled refillable cartridge if made from a more durable material, for example metal.
  • FIGURE 1 is a broken part sectional elevation view showing a closed circuit self-contained breathing apparatus with a cartridge loaded therein.
  • FIGURE 3 is an axial section showing a cartridge loaded in a storage container.
  • FIGURE 1 of the drawings the outer casing which isprovided with the usual harness for carrying -it on the person, is indicatedby the reference numeral 1,
  • the wall or lid 19 has in its peripherysemi-circular cutouts 19c which line up with semicircular lugs 15c bent inwards from the rim of the cartridge casing 15, so that when wall or lid 19 is placed in cartridge 15 and rotates a few degrees it will be secured firmly in position.
  • the cartridge In normal use, the cartridge is refilled with soda-lime, the rubber pad 18 placed in position and flange or end wall 19 inserted and rotated to a locked position. The cartridge is then placed inside canister 12 and the T- piece 8 and flange 20 then fitted, making gas-tight joints by the seals 8b and 2% simultaneously.
  • the main purpose for including the rubber pad 18 is to prevent a possible uninterrupted gas path across the end of the cartridge.
  • Each cartridge may be provided with its own end wall 19 carrying the spring 23, and pending use of a cartridge it may be stored in a cylindrical casing 24 as shown in FIGURE 3.
  • a closed circuit breathing apparatus in which the side walls of the said canister and compartment are formed in continuity with each other, and in which the breathing bag has its upper end secured closely about the base of the said compartment, the end walls of the said canister being stepped inwardly relative to the end walls of the said compartment, the inhale conduit at its end remote from the mouthpiece being rigidly joined to the said compartment at one of the steps and thereby extending upwardly alongside the adjacent end wall of the canister, said exhale tube extending closely alongside the other end wall of said canister so as to lie axially in opposition to the other of said steps, an outer casing enclosing the canister, compartment and breathing bag and the parts of the inhale and exhale conduits located alongside the ends of the canister.
  • the said canister and compartment being united as a unitary structure, a breathing bag united directly to said compartment, an outlet in said canister establishing direct communication between the space around the cartridge and the space between the compartment and the liquid air or liquid oxygen container accommodated in said compartment, a mouthpiece, an exhale conduit connecting said mouthpiece to one end of said tube, said tube being perforated to release radially therefrom exhaled air derived from said exhale conduit into said material, a relatively fixed end wall closing one end of said canister and the other end of said tube, an outer wall of said cartridge being perforated so as to release radially throughout its length the purified air from the said material into said space in the canister surrounding the cartridge, an inhale conduit extending directly from said space in said compartment to the mouthpiece, means connecting the said latter space di- 5 rectly to the breathing bag, and a removable lid closing the other end of the canister and formed with a central tubular part mating with the said one end of the said tube.

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

Description

June 20, 1967 R. PHILLIPS 3,326,212
BREATHING APPARATUS Filed July 5, 1963, 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 29 I '3 "I :3 ll! 3 i) I! v// 7 v 6 13 20b {9a I 2 15 1 20 I \o o o o O 0,80 0 o a a a a 80 Q 9 2- I Z E a g 7\ l a q o a o o c 0 ,7
I o] o o l 8 9 0 T o 0 o 0 E e Z 1- Z I 1: Z
2 z 2 2 --z5a INVEN'TOR ATTORNEY June 20, 1967 L. R. PHILLIPS BREATHING APPARATUS 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed July 5, 1963 LEWIS RHITEUES j ATTQRNEY United States Patent 3,326,212 BREATHING APPARATUS Lewis Raymond Phillips, Frimley, Aldershot, Hants, England, assignor to iebe Gorman & Company Limited, Surrey, England, a British company Filed July 3, 1963, Ser. No. 292,523 Claims priority, application Great Britain, July 7, 1962, 26,153/ 62 3 Claims. (Cl. 128147) This invention relates to carbon dioxide trapping means for use with breathing apparatus, e.g. breathing apparatus of the kind known as self-contained oxygen breathing apparatus, in which a chemical charge is contained in a housing usually in the form of a canister, the carbon dioxide being removed from the air exhaled by the user by passing it through the chemical charge, which is gas adsorbent.
The present trend is to completely enclose the apparatus to protect it, and recharging of the chemicalcontaining canister after the charge has become too contaminated for further use has hitherto entailed the removal of the housing or canister from the apparatus so that it can be emptied, cleaned and recharged. Hereinafter, the term canister will be used to identify the housing, but it should be understood thatany suitable compartment which may be used in the same manner as hereinafter described is contemplated under the term canister, and in this connection, the present invention is also concerned with cartridges charged with the said chemical and particularly adapted for use with the canister of a form of the present invention.
According to the present invention, breathing apparatus includes a canister for containing the said chemical and is characterised in that the canister has opposed end wall parts one of which is formed with an inlet for the exhaled air, the other end wall part being adapted to afford a seating for one end of a cartridge charged with the said chemical and insertable in and removable from the canister, one end wall being adapted to serve as a closure lid for the canister and being displaceable relative to the remainder of the canister to permit of insertion and removal of the cartridge.
Further, in accordance with the present invention, breathing apparatus comprises a canister, a compartment adapted to contain a liquid oxygen evaporator, means to support within the canister a cartridge containing the chemical charge for absorbing carbon dioxide, said supporting means being adapted to locate the cartridge in perimetrically spaced relationship relative to the canister and to seal the exhaled air inlet of said cartridge from -the space between the cartridge and canister, said space communicating with an air passage leading to said compartment, a pair of end walls with said canister, one of which is fixed relative to the canister, a seating with said lat ter end wall for the end of the cartridge remote from the end admitting exhaled air to the cartridge, the other end wall comprising a removable lid for the canister and provided with means to seal the exhaled air inlet of the cartridge from said space and to connect such end of the cartridge to the exhaling conduit of the apparatus.
Still further, in accordance with the present invention, breathing apparatus comprises a cartridge in the form of a receptacle charged with carbon dioxide absorbing material, a compartment containing a liquid oxygen evapora- Patented June 20, 1967 "ice tor, a canister into which the cartridge is loaded, a conduit extending axially along the interior of the cartridge and between which and the surrounding wall of the cartridge is loaded with said material, a relatively fixed end wall with said canister, a seating with said end wall for an opposed end of the cartridge, a removable lid to close the other end of the canister and formed with a central tubular part adapted to mate with one end of said conduit and connect such conduit to an exhaled air conduit, resilient means loading said lid axially with the opposed end of the cartridge and sealing means in said latter end of the cartridge to seal said material from the lid receiving end of the canister, said loading of the cartridge being transmitted to the cartridge from said resilient means via the said lid, sealing means and material, said cartridge being spaced perimetrically from the canister and its said conduit and its perimetrical wall being reticulated, the space between the perimeter of the cartridge and the canister communicating with the compartment containing the liquid oxygen evaporator.
Desirably, as an accessory of the present invention, a. special container for storing a cartridge prior to loading it into the said canister is provided, such container including means to seal the interior of the cartridge from terial, or a pre-filled refillable cartridge if made from a more durable material, for example metal.
The invention may be performed in variousways, but one specific embodiment in which the canister is to be included in a closed circuit self-contained oxygen breathing apparatus will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a broken part sectional elevation view showing a closed circuit self-contained breathing apparatus with a cartridge loaded therein.
FIGURE 2 is an exploded side elevation view in perspective showing the canister, cartridge and junction unit for connecting the canister to the exhaled air circuit, some of the parts-being broken away for clarity.
FIGURE 3 is an axial section showing a cartridge loaded in a storage container.
Referring to FIGURE 1 of the drawings, the outer casing which isprovided with the usual harness for carrying -it on the person, is indicatedby the reference numeral 1,
the compartment therein for the liquid'oxygen evaporation and its evaporator by the reference numerals 2 and 3 respectively, it being understood that the compartment 2 at its base communicates as at 4 with the usual breathing bag 5. The air exhaled by the user is from the mouthpiece 6 via a hose 7, junction T-piece 8 into a cartridge, indicated generally by the reference numeral 9, from the cartridge to the narrow space 10 in the compartment 2 surrounding the evaporator 3 via an outlet 11 in a canister 12 into which the cartridge is loaded. The cartridge 9 contains the granular chemical charge 31 (see FIGURE 2) by which the carbon dioxide is absorbed, the purified air then being re-circulated back to the mouthpiece 6 via a hose 13 after having negotiated the space 10. Desirably the cartridge 9 is of the radial flow type, the chemical charge being arranged in the form of an annulus between a perforated tube 14 and the cylindrical wall 15 of the cartridge, this wall being reticulated for the passage of purified air into the canister 12. Thus, the exhaled air flows radially outwardly through the granular charge, the carbon dioxide being absorbed on the surface of the granules and the cleaned air being tapped off from the outer surface of the cartridge.
It will be understood that the ends of the mouthpiece 6 which receives the appropriate ends of the hose members 7 and 13 are provided with the usual non-return exhale and inhale valves 29 and 30 respectively.
The canister 12 (also see FIGURE 2) in which the chemical charge is loaded comprises a main substantially cylindrical body integral with or fixed alongside the compartment 2. One end of the canister is closed by an end wall plate 16 provided with a concentric conical rubber seating 17 which abuts in the opposed end of the tube 14, about the other ends of which is fitted a cellular annular rubber sealing member 18 between which and the closed end wall 16, the charge of chemical material 31, e.g. soda-lime, is placed under axial pressure. The tube 14 is integral with an end wall 15a of the cartridge casing.
The other end of the cartridge casing is open for loading it with the chemical charge, and when charged it is closed by means of a removable wall 19 which is in the form of a dished lid, the flange 19a of which mates in the cartridge wall 15 and abuts against and desirably partly overlaps, the annual sealing member 18. Formed integrally with the removable wall 19 is a concentric hollow boss 1% which mates as a close plug fit in the tubular limb 8a of the T-piece 8. A sealing ring 819 is provided in the limb 8a to isolate the canister 12 from the intake end of the tube 14, the limb 8a being formed with a flange 20 provided with radial pins 21 which engage in bayonet slots 22 in the appropriate end of the canister 12.
The wall or lid 19 has in its peripherysemi-circular cutouts 19c which line up with semicircular lugs 15c bent inwards from the rim of the cartridge casing 15, so that when wall or lid 19 is placed in cartridge 15 and rotates a few degrees it will be secured firmly in position.
Interposed between the wall 19 closing the open end of the cartridge casing 15 and the flange 20 is an involute compression spring 23, so that when the flange 20 is locked by the bayonet joint in the canister 12 the spring 23 is compressed to load the wall or lid 19 and cellular rubber member 18 against the charge of chemical material to maintain it in a compacted condition.
The flange 20 is stepped as at 20a to carry a sealing ring 20b, desirably of the chevron or channel section type as shown, and the outer diameter part of such flange, with the sealing ring 20 makes a gas-tight joint with the open end of the canister 12. Thus it will be seen that in order to remove the cartridge for replacement thereof, it is only necessary to impart a slight twist to the T-piece 8 to disengage the pins 21 from the slots 22, and free the end assembly 8 and 20 from the canister 12 to leave the cartridge loose for removal.
In normal use, the cartridge is refilled with soda-lime, the rubber pad 18 placed in position and flange or end wall 19 inserted and rotated to a locked position. The cartridge is then placed inside canister 12 and the T- piece 8 and flange 20 then fitted, making gas-tight joints by the seals 8b and 2% simultaneously. The main purpose for including the rubber pad 18 is to prevent a possible uninterrupted gas path across the end of the cartridge.
Each cartridge may be provided with its own end wall 19 carrying the spring 23, and pending use of a cartridge it may be stored in a cylindrical casing 24 as shown in FIGURE 3.
The cartridge storage casing is closed at one end by an integral wall 24a provided with a rubber pad 25 against which the appropriate end of the cartridge is loaded by the compression of the spring 23 between the wall 19 and a lid 26 fitted onto the casing 24 and provided with a sealing ring 27, any suitable form of fastening means, e.g. snap action latches 28 being provided to retain the lid 26 in position.
I claim:
1. In a closed circuit liquid air or liquid oxygen breathing apparatus, a container for the liquid air or liquid oxygen, a cartridge charged with carbon dioxide absorbing material, a canister accommodating and spaced about the cartridge, an intake tube for exhaled air extending along said cartridge, a compartment spaced about and accommodating the said container for the liquid air or liquid oxygen, said canister and compartment being united as a unitary structure and communicating directly one with the other, a breathing bag united directly to said compartment, a mouthpiece, an exhale conduit connecting said mouthpiece to one end of said intake tube of the cartridge, an inhale conduit extending directly to the mouthpiece from the space between the said compartment and the container for liquid air or liquid oxygen, means connecting said latter space directly to the breathing bag, said intake tube of the cartridge communicating with the said space between the canister and cartridge via the said material in the cartridge, an end wall closing one end of said canister and fixed relative to the canister and joined to said compartment, means securing the cartridge detachably on said canister and sealing said intake tube from direct communication with the said space between the canister and cartridge, said latter means including a lid mated removably in the end of the canister remote from said end wall of the canister.
2. A closed circuit breathing apparatus according to claim 1, in which the side walls of the said canister and compartment are formed in continuity with each other, and in which the breathing bag has its upper end secured closely about the base of the said compartment, the end walls of the said canister being stepped inwardly relative to the end walls of the said compartment, the inhale conduit at its end remote from the mouthpiece being rigidly joined to the said compartment at one of the steps and thereby extending upwardly alongside the adjacent end wall of the canister, said exhale tube extending closely alongside the other end wall of said canister so as to lie axially in opposition to the other of said steps, an outer casing enclosing the canister, compartment and breathing bag and the parts of the inhale and exhale conduits located alongside the ends of the canister.
3. In a closed circuit liquid air, or liquid oxygen, breathing apparatus provided with a container for the liquid air or liquid oxygen, and with a cartridge charged with carbon dioxide absorbing material, a tube extending axially along and surrounded by said material, a canister accommodating the said cartridge and spaced about the cartridge, 2. compartment spaced about and accommodating the said container, the said canister and compartment being united as a unitary structure, a breathing bag united directly to said compartment, an outlet in said canister establishing direct communication between the space around the cartridge and the space between the compartment and the liquid air or liquid oxygen container accommodated in said compartment, a mouthpiece, an exhale conduit connecting said mouthpiece to one end of said tube, said tube being perforated to release radially therefrom exhaled air derived from said exhale conduit into said material, a relatively fixed end wall closing one end of said canister and the other end of said tube, an outer wall of said cartridge being perforated so as to release radially throughout its length the purified air from the said material into said space in the canister surrounding the cartridge, an inhale conduit extending directly from said space in said compartment to the mouthpiece, means connecting the said latter space di- 5 rectly to the breathing bag, and a removable lid closing the other end of the canister and formed with a central tubular part mating with the said one end of the said tube.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 6 FOREIGN PATENTS 910,754 2/ 1946 France. 1,228,600 3/1960 France.
816,874 7/ 1959 Great Britain.
RICHARD A. GAUDET, Primary Examiner.
W. E. KAMM, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. IN A CLOSED CIRCUIT LIQUID AIR OR LIQUID OXYGEN BREATHING APPARATUS, A CONTAINER FOR THE LIQUID AIR OF LIQUID OXYGEN, A CARTRIDGE CHARGED WITH CARBON DIOXIDE ABSORBING MATERIAL, A CANISTER ACCOMMODATING AND SPACED ABOUT THE CARTRIDGE, AN INTAKE TUBE FOR EXHALED AIR EXTENDING ALONG SAID CARTRIDGE, A COMPARTMENT SPACED ABOUT AND ACCOMMODATING THE SAID CONTAINER FOR THE LIQUID AIR OR LIQUID OXYGEN, SAID CANISTER AND COMPARTMENT BEING UNITED AS A UNITARY STRUCTURE AND COMMUNICATING DIRECTLY ONE WITH THE OTHER, A BREATHING BAG UNITED DIRECTLY TO SAID COMPARTMENT, A MOUTHPIECE, AN EXHALE CONDUIT CONNECTING SAID MOUTHPIECE TO ONE END OF SAID INTAKE TUBE OF THE CARTRIDGE, AN INHALE CONDUIT EXTENDING DIRECTLY TO THE MOUTHPIECE FROM THE SPACE BETWEEN THE SAID COMPARTMENT AND THE CONTAINER FOR LIQUID AIR OR LIQUID OXYGEN, MEANS CONNECTING SAID LATTER SPACE DIRECTLY TO THE BREATHING BAG, SAID INTAKE TUBE OF THE CARTRIDGE COMMUNICATING WITH THE SAID SPACE BETWEEN THE CANISTER AND CARTRIDGE VIA THE SAID MATERIAL IN THE CARTRIDGE, AN END WALL CLOSING ONE END OF SAID CANISTER AND FIXED RELATIVE TO THE CANISTER AND JOINED TO SAID COMPARTMENT, MEANS SECURING THE CARTRIDGE DETACHABLY ON SAID CANISTER AND SEALING SAID INTAKE TUBE FROM DIRECT COMMUNICATION WITH THE SAID SPACE BETWEEN THE CANISTER AND CARTRIDGE, SAID LATTER MEANS INCLUDING A LID MATED REMOVABLY IN THE END OF THE CANISTER REMOTE FROM SAID END WALL OF THE CANISTER.
US292523A 1962-07-07 1963-07-03 Breathing apparatus Expired - Lifetime US3326212A (en)

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Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3397693A (en) * 1965-01-02 1968-08-20 Drager Otto H Breathing apparatus
US3457918A (en) * 1967-02-13 1969-07-29 Gen Electric Permeable protective suit in combination with means for maintaining a viable atmosphere
US3710553A (en) * 1970-01-28 1973-01-16 Biomarine Industries Carbon dioxide scrubber and breathing diaphragm assembly for diving apparatus
US4200092A (en) * 1977-01-20 1980-04-29 Dragerwerk Aktiengesellschaft Respirator having an oxygen-releasing chemical cartridge
US4213453A (en) * 1977-01-20 1980-07-22 Dragerwerk Aktiengesellschaft Breathing device having oxygen donor chemical cartridge
US4461291A (en) * 1978-02-28 1984-07-24 Werner Mascher Respirator
US20040200478A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 William Gordon Rebreather apparatus
US20140000592A1 (en) * 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Intertechnique Chemical oxygen generator with bimetal reaction control

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2191958A (en) * 1986-06-27 1987-12-31 Sabre Safety Ltd Breathing system
US5016628A (en) * 1990-04-23 1991-05-21 Environmental Support Systems, Inc. Disposable carbon dioxide absorber

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1585113A (en) * 1924-03-31 1926-05-18 Soc Et Et De Construction De M Respirator for gas masks
FR910754A (en) * 1944-12-13 1946-06-18 Cartridge for the purification and, if necessary, the regeneration of the stale air
US2852023A (en) * 1956-11-06 1958-09-16 Mine Safety Appliances Co Closed circuit breathing apparatus
GB816874A (en) * 1955-06-06 1959-07-22 Normalair Ltd Improvements in or relating to liquid oxygen breathing apparatus
FR1228600A (en) * 1959-06-09 1960-08-31 Self-contained breathing apparatus

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1585113A (en) * 1924-03-31 1926-05-18 Soc Et Et De Construction De M Respirator for gas masks
FR910754A (en) * 1944-12-13 1946-06-18 Cartridge for the purification and, if necessary, the regeneration of the stale air
GB816874A (en) * 1955-06-06 1959-07-22 Normalair Ltd Improvements in or relating to liquid oxygen breathing apparatus
US2852023A (en) * 1956-11-06 1958-09-16 Mine Safety Appliances Co Closed circuit breathing apparatus
FR1228600A (en) * 1959-06-09 1960-08-31 Self-contained breathing apparatus

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3397693A (en) * 1965-01-02 1968-08-20 Drager Otto H Breathing apparatus
US3457918A (en) * 1967-02-13 1969-07-29 Gen Electric Permeable protective suit in combination with means for maintaining a viable atmosphere
US3710553A (en) * 1970-01-28 1973-01-16 Biomarine Industries Carbon dioxide scrubber and breathing diaphragm assembly for diving apparatus
US4200092A (en) * 1977-01-20 1980-04-29 Dragerwerk Aktiengesellschaft Respirator having an oxygen-releasing chemical cartridge
US4213453A (en) * 1977-01-20 1980-07-22 Dragerwerk Aktiengesellschaft Breathing device having oxygen donor chemical cartridge
US4461291A (en) * 1978-02-28 1984-07-24 Werner Mascher Respirator
US20040200478A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 William Gordon Rebreather apparatus
US7520280B2 (en) * 2003-04-08 2009-04-21 William Gordon Rebreather apparatus
US20140000592A1 (en) * 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Intertechnique Chemical oxygen generator with bimetal reaction control
US9649514B2 (en) * 2012-06-28 2017-05-16 Zodiac Aerotechnics Chemical oxygen generator with bimetal reaction control

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