US3326295A - Self-operative fire extinguisher - Google Patents

Self-operative fire extinguisher Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3326295A
US3326295A US407418A US40741864A US3326295A US 3326295 A US3326295 A US 3326295A US 407418 A US407418 A US 407418A US 40741864 A US40741864 A US 40741864A US 3326295 A US3326295 A US 3326295A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sack
fire
extinguishant
liquid
self
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US407418A
Inventor
Kataoka Hiroshi
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.)
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
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3326295A publication Critical patent/US3326295A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A62LIFE-SAVING; FIRE-FIGHTING
    • A62CFIRE-FIGHTING
    • A62C13/00Portable extinguishers which are permanently pressurised or pressurised immediately before use
    • A62C13/003Extinguishers with spraying and projection of extinguishing agents by pressurised gas

Definitions

  • an object of this invention is to reduce the complexity and cost of self-operative fire extinguishers.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a simple, self-operative fire extinguisher which can be placed close to a potential source of fire so that the fire can be quickly extinguished before it has a chance to spread.
  • a further object of this invention is to increase the flexibility of such fire extinguishers by enabling its use for dry and liquid extinguishants.
  • an illustrative embodiment thereof which briefly comprises a closed bag of sack of a material which is contractable by heat of a certain temperature, and an extinguishant filled in the bag such that upon reaching the certain temperature the sack will contract and burst and scatter the extinguishant over a fire to put it out.
  • a float and a sharp pin attached thereto is disposed in the sack.
  • the float holds the pin away from the inner surface of the sack.
  • the sack will contract appropriately and cause the pin to pierce the sack and cause its rupture. The sack will then burst and spread the liquid over the fire.
  • a dry or solid extinguishant which is used herein may be sodium bicarbonate and the liquid extinguishant may be carbon tetrachloride.
  • Use of sulphuric acid with the sodium bicarbonate would increase its effectiveness by increasing the carbonic acid gas which is emitted at the temperature of the fire.
  • the sack may be made of polyethylene or other resinous material.
  • a feature of this invention is a closed sack which is con-tractable by heat, filled with a dry or liquid extinguishant, the sack being contractable by heat at or above ice a certain temperature until it bursts and causes the extinguishant to be scattered.
  • Another feature is the use of a sharp pin attached to a float and inserted inside the sack with a liquid extinquishant so that upon contraction of the sack the pin will rupture the sack to cause scattering of the liquid.
  • a further feature of this invention is use of polyethylene as the material of the sack and either carbon tetrachloride or sodium bicarbonate as the extinguishant.
  • FIG. 1 is a plan view depicting an illustrative embodiment of this invention utilizing a solid extinguishant
  • FIG. 2 depicts an alternative illustrative embodiment of this invention using'a liquid extinguishant and a float and pin arrangement for rupturing the sack upon contraction thereof.
  • FIG. 1 a wall 3 having a plurality of holes or closets 4 therein.
  • the wall may be of a flammable material, or itself be inflammable and located close to a potential source of fire.
  • a sack or sacks 1 holding a dry, solid extinguishant 2. Since the wall is shown in a plan view it may not be readily apparent that the sack is closed; however, a closed sack is desirable in order that upon contraction the extinguishant contained therein will not escape but will upon bursting of the sack will be caused to scatter.
  • the dry extinguishant 2 can be sodium bicarbonate or other suitable extinguishants.
  • the sack 1 is of a material which is contractable with increasing heat, such as, for example, polyethylene or other suitable resinous materials.
  • a desirable characteristic of the sack material is that it be contractable at about C., as with polyethylene, and that further increases in temperature will cause the sack to contract further until the sack bursts.
  • the extinguishant whether dry, solid or liquid, must not contract corre spondingly.
  • a fire burns or heats up area 11 to a temperature sufiicient to cause the sack 1 to contract against the dry extinguishant 2.
  • the sack 1 will burst and cause the dry extinguishant 2 to be scattered into the fire area.
  • the sack and dry extinguishant combination can be small in size and hence be inserted at almost any location in a wall, furniture or various other structures very close to a potential source of fire.
  • a fire when just starting and is close to one of the arrangements depicted in FIG. 1 it will cause the closest sack to burst immediately and scatter the extinguishant into the fire to cause its extinguishing before the fire has time to spread.
  • the elements used in the embodiments are plentiful, inexpensive and the embodiment can be manufactured very inexpensively.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an alternative embodiment of this invention having a sack 5 similar to the embodiment of FIG. 1, liquid extinguishant 6, a float 8 and a sharp pin 7 attached to the float 8.
  • the sack is attached by a holder 10 to wall 9.
  • the holder 10' can be glued or attached in any suitable manner to the sack 5.
  • the liquid can be of carbon tetrachloride or other suitable liquid extinguishants.
  • the sack will be caused to contract. This will compress the liquid 5 and cause float 8 and attached pin 7 to make contact with the inside of the sack 5. When the heat contracts the sack some more, the pin 7 will puncture the sack 5. This will cause the sack 5 to burst and scatter the liquid 6 immediately to extinguish a neighboring fire.
  • sodium bicarbonate can be used, at about 300 C. the temperature of a fire, the chemical will turn into gaseous carbonic acid which acts to smother the fire.
  • the sodium bicarbonate can'be mixed with sulphuric acid to increase its effectiveness in extinguishing fires by increasing the carbonic acid gas output of the mixture.
  • a fire extinguisher comprising a closed sack comprising a heat contractable material
  • a substantially non-contractable substantially liquid form fire extinguishing substance disposed to partially fill said sack
  • paraffin means coating the bottom of said sack
  • puncturing means attached to said float means such that a predetermined amount of heat causes said sack to contract and force said liquid substance to substantially fill said sack thereby causing said puncturing means to rupture said sack and scatter said liquid substance.
  • liquid substance comprises carbon tetrachloride.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Business, Economics & Management (AREA)
  • Emergency Management (AREA)
  • Fire-Extinguishing Compositions (AREA)

Description

June 20, 1967 HIROSHI KATAOKA SELF-OPERATIVE FIRE EXTINGUISHER Filed Oct. 29, 1964 INVENTOR HlROSI-H KATAOKA ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,326,295 SELF-OPERATIVE FIRE EXTINGUISHER Hiroshi Kataoka, 160 Muramatsu-cho, Iyo-Mishima-shi, Japan Filed Oct. 29, 1964, Ser. No. 407,418 Claims priority, application Japan, Mar. 24, 1964, 39/ 15,910 2 Claims. (Cl. 169-26) This invention relates generally to fire extinguishers and more particularly to an improved self-operative type of fire extinguisher capable of using liquid and solid chemical extinguishants.
In the prior art, one type of dry solid chemical extinguishant, such as sodium bicarbonate, was used to extinguish fire by manually throwing or scattering the extinguishant at the base of the fire. This method of extinguishing fires is clumsy, dangerous to the operator and when used is often too late to prevent spreading of the fire.
There are, of course, self-operative types of fire extinguishers, but they are mainly sprinkler systems, spraying water or other liquids on a fire when a certain temperature is reached. These systems are expensive and difficult to install and maintain and are unattractive. Moreover, these types of fire extinguishers are disposed some distance away from the source of a fire, and hence, are not instantaneous in response.
It is desirable to have a simple, inexpensive, self-operative type of fire extinguisher which can be used with both solid and liquid extinguishants and which can be disposable at close distance to a potential source of fire.
Accordingly, an object of this invention is to reduce the complexity and cost of self-operative fire extinguishers.
Another object of the invention is to provide a simple, self-operative fire extinguisher which can be placed close to a potential source of fire so that the fire can be quickly extinguished before it has a chance to spread.
A further object of this invention is to increase the flexibility of such fire extinguishers by enabling its use for dry and liquid extinguishants.
Further objects of this invention are to enable the rapid simple and inexpensive manufacture of self-operative fire extinguishers.
These and other objects of this invention are attained in an illustrative embodiment thereof which briefly comprises a closed bag of sack of a material which is contractable by heat of a certain temperature, and an extinguishant filled in the bag such that upon reaching the certain temperature the sack will contract and burst and scatter the extinguishant over a fire to put it out.
When a liquid extinguishant is used, a float and a sharp pin attached thereto is disposed in the sack. When a normal temperature is present (below the critical contracting temperature for the sack), the float holds the pin away from the inner surface of the sack. However, when the temperature increases above the critical temperature, the sack will contract appropriately and cause the pin to pierce the sack and cause its rupture. The sack will then burst and spread the liquid over the fire.
A dry or solid extinguishant which is used herein may be sodium bicarbonate and the liquid extinguishant may be carbon tetrachloride. Use of sulphuric acid with the sodium bicarbonate would increase its effectiveness by increasing the carbonic acid gas which is emitted at the temperature of the fire. The sack may be made of polyethylene or other resinous material.
A feature of this invention is a closed sack which is con-tractable by heat, filled with a dry or liquid extinguishant, the sack being contractable by heat at or above ice a certain temperature until it bursts and causes the extinguishant to be scattered.
Another feature is the use of a sharp pin attached to a float and inserted inside the sack with a liquid extinquishant so that upon contraction of the sack the pin will rupture the sack to cause scattering of the liquid.
A further feature of this invention is use of polyethylene as the material of the sack and either carbon tetrachloride or sodium bicarbonate as the extinguishant.
These and other objects, features and advantages of this invention may be more readily understood from the consideration of the following detailed description taken in connection with the attached drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a plan view depicting an illustrative embodiment of this invention utilizing a solid extinguishant; and
FIG. 2 depicts an alternative illustrative embodiment of this invention using'a liquid extinguishant and a float and pin arrangement for rupturing the sack upon contraction thereof.
Referring now to the drawing, there is depicted in FIG. 1 a wall 3 having a plurality of holes or closets 4 therein. The wall may be of a flammable material, or itself be inflammable and located close to a potential source of fire. Within the holes 4 are placed a sack or sacks 1 holding a dry, solid extinguishant 2. Since the wall is shown in a plan view it may not be readily apparent that the sack is closed; however, a closed sack is desirable in order that upon contraction the extinguishant contained therein will not escape but will upon bursting of the sack will be caused to scatter. The dry extinguishant 2 can be sodium bicarbonate or other suitable extinguishants. The sack 1 is of a material which is contractable with increasing heat, such as, for example, polyethylene or other suitable resinous materials. A desirable characteristic of the sack material is that it be contractable at about C., as with polyethylene, and that further increases in temperature will cause the sack to contract further until the sack bursts. Of course, the extinguishant, whether dry, solid or liquid, must not contract corre spondingly. Thus, it is necessary that the sack contract for increasing heat and that the dry extinguishant used in the sack not contract correspondingly in order that the contraction of the sack and the non-contraction of the dry extinguishant together will cause bursting of the sack and scattering of the dry extinguishant.
In the embodiment of FIG. 1, a fire burns or heats up area 11 to a temperature sufiicient to cause the sack 1 to contract against the dry extinguishant 2. As the heat increases and the contraction increases against the dry extinguishant, at a certain point the sack 1 will burst and cause the dry extinguishant 2 to be scattered into the fire area.
Advantageously, the sack and dry extinguishant combination can be small in size and hence be inserted at almost any location in a wall, furniture or various other structures very close to a potential source of fire. Thus, when a fire is just starting and is close to one of the arrangements depicted in FIG. 1 it will cause the closest sack to burst immediately and scatter the extinguishant into the fire to cause its extinguishing before the fire has time to spread.
As a further advantage, the elements used in the embodiments are plentiful, inexpensive and the embodiment can be manufactured very inexpensively.
FIG. 2 illustrates an alternative embodiment of this invention having a sack 5 similar to the embodiment of FIG. 1, liquid extinguishant 6, a float 8 and a sharp pin 7 attached to the float 8. The sack is attached by a holder 10 to wall 9. The holder 10' can be glued or attached in any suitable manner to the sack 5.
The liquid can be of carbon tetrachloride or other suitable liquid extinguishants.
Where the temperature of the surrounding area is sulficiently high, the sack will be caused to contract. This will compress the liquid 5 and cause float 8 and attached pin 7 to make contact with the inside of the sack 5. When the heat contracts the sack some more, the pin 7 will puncture the sack 5. This will cause the sack 5 to burst and scatter the liquid 6 immediately to extinguish a neighboring fire.
It has been found that loading the bottom of the sack with parafiin 12 or other suitable material which is sensitive to heat will increase the efliciency of this device by causing it to burst in a faster manner.
In the embodiment of FIG. 1 Where sodium bicarbonate can be used, at about 300 C. the temperature of a fire, the chemical will turn into gaseous carbonic acid which acts to smother the fire. The sodium bicarbonate can'be mixed with sulphuric acid to increase its effectiveness in extinguishing fires by increasing the carbonic acid gas output of the mixture.
While the specific embodiments of this invention have been shown and described, it will be understood that they are merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications may be made thereon without departing from the scope and spirit thereof.
What is claimed is;
1. A fire extinguisher comprising a closed sack comprising a heat contractable material,
a substantially non-contractable substantially liquid form fire extinguishing substance disposed to partially fill said sack,
paraffin means coating the bottom of said sack, and
float means disposed on top of said liquid substance and within said sack, and
puncturing means attached to said float means such that a predetermined amount of heat causes said sack to contract and force said liquid substance to substantially fill said sack thereby causing said puncturing means to rupture said sack and scatter said liquid substance.
2. The invention according to claim 1 wherein said liquid substance comprises carbon tetrachloride.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 4,855 4/ 1872 Lapham 169--2t6 2,006,300 6/ 1935 Meigs 169-36 2,711,346 6/1955 Irwin et a1. 239-57 2,857,971 10/1958 Ferris 16926 2,917,116 12/1959 Wyant 16936 3,062,373 11/ 1962 Reynolds 20665 EVERETT W. KIRBY, Primary Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPRISING A CLOSED SACK COMPRISING A HEAT CONTRACTABLE MATERIAL, A SUBSTANTIALLY NON-CONTRACTABLE SUBSTANTIALLY LIQUID FORM FIRE EXTINGUISHING SUBSTANCE DISPOSED TO PARTIALLY FILL SAID SACK, PARAFFIN MEANS COATING THE BOTTOM OF SAID SACK, AND FLOAT MEANS DISPOSED ON TOP OF SAID LIQUID SUBSTANCE AND WITHIN SAID SACK, AND PUNCTURING MEANS ATTACHED TO SAID FLOAT MEANS SUCH THAT A PREDETERMINED AMOUNT OF HEAT CAUSES SAID SACK TO CONTRACT AND FORCE SAID LIQUID SUBSTANCE TO SUBSTANTIALLY FILL SAID SACK THEREBY CAUSING SAID PUNCTURING MEANS TO RUPTURE SAID SACK AND SCATTER SAID LIQUID SUBSTANCE.
US407418A 1964-03-24 1964-10-29 Self-operative fire extinguisher Expired - Lifetime US3326295A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP1591064 1964-03-24

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3326295A true US3326295A (en) 1967-06-20

Family

ID=11901912

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US407418A Expired - Lifetime US3326295A (en) 1964-03-24 1964-10-29 Self-operative fire extinguisher

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3326295A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6161624A (en) * 1999-11-29 2000-12-19 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Linear fire extinguisher

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4855A (en) * 1846-11-14 Twyeb
US2003300A (en) * 1932-04-11 1935-06-04 Gas Fire Extinguisher Corp Du Fire extinguishing device
US2711346A (en) * 1950-04-17 1955-06-21 Jr August W Willert Shrunk sleeve package
US2857971A (en) * 1955-05-16 1958-10-28 Ferris Products Co Inc Fire extinguisher
US2917116A (en) * 1958-02-17 1959-12-15 Gerald W Wyant Fire retarding device
US3062373A (en) * 1958-10-28 1962-11-06 Reynolds Metals Co Package

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4855A (en) * 1846-11-14 Twyeb
US2003300A (en) * 1932-04-11 1935-06-04 Gas Fire Extinguisher Corp Du Fire extinguishing device
US2711346A (en) * 1950-04-17 1955-06-21 Jr August W Willert Shrunk sleeve package
US2857971A (en) * 1955-05-16 1958-10-28 Ferris Products Co Inc Fire extinguisher
US2917116A (en) * 1958-02-17 1959-12-15 Gerald W Wyant Fire retarding device
US3062373A (en) * 1958-10-28 1962-11-06 Reynolds Metals Co Package

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6161624A (en) * 1999-11-29 2000-12-19 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Linear fire extinguisher

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4256181A (en) Automatic stove top fire extinguisher
US4285403A (en) Explosive fire extinguisher
KR100419035B1 (en) Extinguishing Methods and Equipment
US2359573A (en) Means for fighting forest fires
US5573068A (en) Apparatus for extinguishing fires in oil storage tanks
WO1997006858A3 (en) Process and device for fighting fires from the air
US9149672B2 (en) Encapsulated fire extinguishing agents
US2115371A (en) Fire extinguisher
US3326295A (en) Self-operative fire extinguisher
US20090008103A1 (en) Rapid deployment fire retardent gel pack
US20030066660A1 (en) Fire suppression device
RU184841U1 (en) STAND-ALONE SELF-DESIGNING FIRE-FIGHTING DEVICE
US3070172A (en) Processes for extinguishing fires
US2723722A (en) Automatic fire extinguisher
US20050139367A1 (en) Fire extinguishing device and method
EP1878471A1 (en) Fire protection system
US1790995A (en) Itbe extinguishes
RU96777U1 (en) FIRE EXTINGUISHING EXTINGUISHER
US20160067533A1 (en) Fire Prevention Capsules and Method of Use
US1149975A (en) Fire-extinguishing bomb.
KR20160111713A (en) Extinguishing agentisbuilt-in insulationpanels
US1700465A (en) Fire extinguisher
US1435957A (en) Fire-extinguishing material
RU2318562C2 (en) Fire-extinguishing method and device
CN110314318B (en) Semi-automatic directional fire extinguishing device