US3454029A - Valves - Google Patents

Valves Download PDF

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US3454029A
US3454029A US445116A US3454029DA US3454029A US 3454029 A US3454029 A US 3454029A US 445116 A US445116 A US 445116A US 3454029D A US3454029D A US 3454029DA US 3454029 A US3454029 A US 3454029A
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Prior art keywords
valve
pressure
zone
piston
operator
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US445116A
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John V Fredd
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Otis Engineering Corp
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Otis Engineering Corp
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16KVALVES; TAPS; COCKS; ACTUATING-FLOATS; DEVICES FOR VENTING OR AERATING
    • F16K17/00Safety valves; Equalising valves, e.g. pressure relief valves
    • F16K17/02Safety valves; Equalising valves, e.g. pressure relief valves opening on surplus pressure on one side; closing on insufficient pressure on one side
    • F16K17/04Safety valves; Equalising valves, e.g. pressure relief valves opening on surplus pressure on one side; closing on insufficient pressure on one side spring-loaded
    • F16K17/0473Multiple-way safety valves
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/2496Self-proportioning or correlating systems
    • Y10T137/2559Self-controlled branched flow systems
    • Y10T137/2564Plural inflows
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/2496Self-proportioning or correlating systems
    • Y10T137/2559Self-controlled branched flow systems
    • Y10T137/2564Plural inflows
    • Y10T137/2567Alternate or successive inflows
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/8593Systems
    • Y10T137/86919Sequentially closing and opening alternately seating flow controllers

Definitions

  • a valve system or apparatus having communication with two separate pressure zones or areas .and communicating with a third separate zone or area, and closure means controlling flow between each of the separate dirst and second zones or areas and the third zone or area arranged to prevent fiow from either of said first and second zones or areas to the other of said first and second zones or areas, whereby the first and second pressure zones or areas are prohibited ⁇ from owing from one to the other at all times.
  • a valve for such system having first and second ports each communicating with a common third port, and valve closure members movable in response to fluid pressures in said ports to selectively open and close s'aid first and second ports to communication with said third while preventing flow from either of said first and second ports through the other of said first and second ports.
  • This invention relates to valves and more particularly relates to pressure operated valves.
  • FIGURE 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a valve constructed according to the invention, showing the Valve in closed position with no fluid communication between the zones interconnected by the valve;
  • FIGURE 2 is a longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE l showing the valve in one open position with communication betweeri rst and third pressure sources or zones;
  • FIGURE 3 is a longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE l illustrating the valve in a second open position providing communication between the second and third pressure sources;
  • FIGURE 4 is a longitudinal sectional view of another form of the valve constructed in accordance with the invention.
  • FIGURE 5 is a sectional view along the line 5 5 of FIGURE 4;
  • FIGURE 6 is a view in perspective of one of the ball valves and its operator assembly as used in the valve of FIGURE 4, showing the ball valve in closed position as shown in FIGURE 4;
  • FIGURE 7 is a view similar to FIGURE 6 showing the ball valve rotated to the open position
  • FIGURE 8 is a diagrammatic representation of one of the ball valves and surrounding tubular structure, such as the valve housing, showing the rotation of the ball required to move the valve between closed and open positions;
  • FIGURE 9 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE 4 showing one of the ball valves in open position to permit communication between two of the flow conduits;
  • FIGURE l0 is a longitudinal sectional view of an additional form of valve in accordance with the invention, illustrating one of the ball valves in open position and the other ball valve in closed position;
  • FIGURE l1 is a longitudinal view in section illustrating a still -further form of valve in accordance with the invention showing the ball valve in one open position.
  • valve 20 is shown connected to a first iiow conduit 21 leading to a first pressure source or zone, a second flow conduit 22 leading to a second pressure source or zone, and a third iiow conduit 23 leading to a third pressure source or zone.
  • the valve includes a housing 24 having a central flow passage 25 extending therethrough communicating with a lateral opening 30 to permit fluid communication with the conduit 23.
  • On opposite sides of the lateral opening the valve housing is reduced in internal diameter and internally threaded along the section 31 and the section 32.
  • the valve seat body 33 is threaded into the section 31 of the valve housing and provided with a bore 34 surrounded by an annular seat surface 35 formed around the bore at the inward end of the body.
  • the valve seat body 40 is threaded into the section 32 of the valve body and provided with an internal bore 41 surrounded by an annular valve seat 42 at the inward end of the body.
  • a dual reciprocable valve assembly 43 is positioned within the bore of the valve body between the valve seat bodies to cooperate with the valve seat surfaces 35 and 42 for controlling fluid flow through the valve.
  • the valve assembly includes a valve rod 44 with head members 45 and 50 secured on opposite ends.
  • a valve element 51 is slidably disposed on the valve rod ⁇ and provided with a conical surface 52 to cooperate with the valve seat 35 for controlling ow between the bore of the valve housing and the bore 34 through the valve seat body 33.
  • An O-ring 53 is positioned within the internal annular recess 54 of the valve element 51 to seal between the rod and the valve element against leakage along the rod through the valve element.
  • valve element 55 is slidably disposed on the valve rod to control the iuid ow between the bore of the valve housing and the bore 41 through the valve seat body 40.
  • the valve element 55 has a conical seat surface 60 which cooperates with the valve seat 42 to close oi fluid flow between the bore of the housing and the bore of the valve seat body.
  • An O- ring 61 within the internal annular recess 62 of the valve element 55 seals between the valve element and the valve rod.
  • a spring ⁇ 63 around the valve rod biases the valve elements 51 and 55 away from each other toward the ends of the rod and the valve seats.
  • the valve is shown in FIGURE 1 in the fully closed position in which there is no flow through the valve between any of the interconnected zones.
  • the valve assembly is movable by the pressure in the conduits 21 and 22 from the position shown in FIGURE 1 to either of the positions illustrated in the FIGURES 2 and 3.
  • the valve cannot be moved from the fully closed position shown in FIGURE l by the pressure within the conduit 23.
  • the valve will remain closed as in FIG- URE 1 with each of the valve elements positioned on its respective seat so long as the pressure within the conduit 23 and the bore 25 of the valve housing remains greater than the pressure in both of the conduits 21 and 22. In this position of the Valve there can be no fluid communication between the conduits 21 and 22 or between either of these conduits and the conduit 23.
  • the pressure within the conduit 22 is raised to a value in excess of the pressure within the conduits 21 and 23 to displace the valve element 55 from the seat 42 to open the bore 41 into communication with the bore 25 as illustrated in FIGURE 2.
  • the spring 63 is compressed and the valve rod slides through the other valve element 51 with the end member 45 and a portion of the valve rod moving the farther into the bore 34.
  • valve assembly will be returned to the position shown in FIGURE 1 with the valve element 55 seating on the surface 42 to close the bore 41.
  • valve assembly will remain substantially in the position illustrated so long as the pressure within the bore 25 is of a suflicient value that the force of the pressure acting across the section of the value rod within the O-ring ⁇ 61 exceeds the force resulting from the pressure within the bore 41 together with the force exerted by the spring 63.
  • iluid may flow in either direction between the conduits 21 and 23 and the valve assembly will continue to remain open even when iluid ow ceases so long as the pressure within the chamber 25 is of suicient value to hold the valve assembly in the position. shown.
  • Fluid communication may be established from both the conduits 21 and 22 simultaneously into the conduit 23.
  • the pressures in both the conduits 21 and 22 are raised to levels substantially equal to each other and above the pressure in the chamber 25.
  • Both the valve elements 51 and 55 are displaced inwardly along the valve rod from their respective seats to permit simultaneous flow from both the conduits 21 and 22 through the chamber 25 into the conduit 23. It will be obvious, of course, that if a pressure differential develops between the conduits 21 and 22, the valve element controlling the ow vfrom the conduit having the lower pressure will close.
  • the valve arrangement illustrated in FIGURES 1-3 has wide application where the objective is to selectively connect a rst pressure source with second and third pressure sources without communication between the second and third pressure sources.
  • two producing zones often are in communication with the same -well bore and it may be desired to have fluid communication between a conduit in the well bore and each of the producing zones without encountering the problem of communication between the two zones.
  • treating fluids may be circulated between the conduit 23 and either of two producing zones which might ⁇ be connected with the conduits 21 and 22 without encountering the problem of mixing the fluids in the zones connected with the conduits 21 and 22.
  • the valve y is enclosed in the housing 71 which is connected to conduits 72, 73, and 74.
  • the valve permits fluid communication between the conduit 74 and either of the conduits 72 and 73 but not directly between the conduits 72 and 73.
  • the valve assembly is retained in the housing between the internal annular shoulder 75 formed in the housing against which one end of the assembly rests and the internal annular retainer ring threaded into the housing at the other end of the assembly.
  • the valve includes an annular operator piston 81 slidably disposed within the valve housing to enclose and operate the ball valve elements in response to pressure changes in the several conduits connected to the valve.
  • the operator piston is supported at opposite ends around the tubular shaped valve seat bodies 82 and 83 which cooperate with the central dual valve seat body 84 to rotatably support the ball valve elements 85 and 90.
  • the valve seat bodies 82 and 83 are threaded into the end seal assemblies 91 and 92, respectively, which support the valve and seal with the inner wall of the housing at opposite ends of the valve.
  • the annular piston heads 93 and 94 are threaded into the opposite ends of the operator piston around the valve seat bodies 82 and 83, respectively.
  • An O-ring 95 in the internal annular recess 100 within the piston head 93 seals between the piston head and the external surface of the tubular valve seat body 82.
  • An external annular flange 101 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body 82 within the operator piston to engage the inner wall of the piston.
  • O-ring 102 within the external annular recess 103 around the flange seals between the flange and the inner wall of the piston.
  • the inward end 104 of the piston head and the outer shoulder 105 on the flange 101 cooperate with the outer surface of the valve seat body 82 and the inner surface of the piston to form an annular variable volume cylinder 110.
  • a plurality of ports 111 through the wall of the valve seat body connect the annular cylinder with the bore 112 of the valve seat body.
  • An annular valve seat surface 113 is formed on the inward end of the valve seat body around the bore 112 to seat against the ball valve 85.
  • the annular piston head 94 is threaded into the other end of the operator piston around the valve seat body 83.
  • the O-ring 114 in the internal annular recess 115 of the piston head seals between the outer surface of the valve seat body and the piston head.
  • the external annular flange 120 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body 83 and provided with an external annular recess 121 in which the O-ring 122 is positioned to seal between the flange and the inner wall of the operator piston.
  • the shoulder 123 ⁇ on inward end of the piston head 94 cooperates with the shoulder A124 on the outer end of the ange 120 and the outer wall of the valve seat body and the inner wall of the operator piston to define the variable volume annular cylinder 125.
  • a plurality of ports 130 through the valve seat body into the annular cylinder provide fluid communication between the cylinder and the bore 131 of the valve seat body.
  • An annular valve seat surface 132 is formed around the bore 131 on the inward end of the valve seat body to seat against the ball valve 90.
  • the central valve seat body 84 is supported between the ball valves 85 and 90 by engagement of the annular seat surface 133 with the valve 90 and with the annular seat surface 134 on the annular cap 135 with the ball valve 85.
  • the cap 135 is threaded over one end of the central valve seat body to facilitate assembly of the valve structure.
  • the ball valve 85 is rotated by the operator assembly 140 including the operator arms 141 each of which has an operator knob 142 engaging one of the holes 143 in the ball valve to rotate the bore 144 of the ball valve between the closed position illustrated in FIGURES 4 and 6 and the open position shown in FIGURE 7.
  • the operator arms 141 extend from the base ring 145 which is slidably engaged around the central valve seat body and biased away from the ball valve by the spring 150 disposed around the body between the base ring and the shoulder 151 on the annular cap 135.
  • the ball valve is thus biased toward a closed position by the spring.
  • the two operator arms 141 are supported from the base ring spaced apart from each other approximately 120 degrees around the ring to correspond with the spacing of the operator holes 143 in the ball valve.
  • the operator knobs must move laterally or circumferentially a small distance as well as longitudinally to rotate the ball valve between open and closed positions. Therefore, the operator arms are slender and sufficiently flexible to permit the small lateral movement required of the operator knobs.
  • the ball valve is rotatable to move its bore 152 between open and closed positions by engagement of the operator knobs 153 in the operator holes 154 through the valve.
  • the operator knobs are formed on the operator arms 155 extending from the base ring 160 which is slidably disposed around the valve seat body 83 and biased away from the base ring by the spring 161 to urge the valve toward a closed position.
  • the spring 161 is confined between the external annular shoulder 162 on the valve seat body and the outer face of the base ring 163.
  • the base ring along with its associated operator arms and knobs forms an operator assembly 164 which is structurally and functionally the same as the operator assembly 140.
  • Al plurality of radially spaced ports 165 extend through the central valve body 84 substantially along the middle of the body to permit the fluid communication from the bore of the body into the operator piston.
  • An internal annular flange 171 is formed within and along the center of the operator piston and provided with a plurality of radially spaced ports 172 to permit fluid to flow from within the operator piston through the piston wall.
  • the annular flange 171 forms an internal annular shoulder 173 which is engageable with the base ring 145 of the operator assembly 140 and an internal annular shoulder 174 engageable with the base ring 160 of the operator assembly 164.
  • Rcciprocation of the. ⁇ operator piston 81 causes engagement between its internal annular flange and one of the base rings of one of the operator assemblies depending upon the direction of reciprocation to effect rotation of one of the ball valves.
  • the end support and seal assembly 91 includes an annular cap 175 having an external packing recess 180 in which is disposed the packing 181 held in place by the threaded retainer ring 182. 'Ihe assembly 91 supports one end of the valve and seals around the valve with the inner wall of the housing 71. The other end of the valve is supported by the assembly 92 which includes the annular cap member 183 having an external packing recess 184 in which the packing 185 is positioned to seal with the inner wall of the housing 71. The packing is held ou the cap by the threaded retainer cap 190.
  • the space between the end assemblies 91 and 92 around the operator piston and the valve seat bodies defines the annular chamber 191 through which fluid flows from within the operator piston toward the conduit 74.
  • the valve 70 is connected to the conduits 72, 73 and 74 with the objective being to selectively provide fluid communication between the conduit 74 and either the conduit 72 or 73 as desired.
  • the valve With the ball valves 85 and 90 positioned as illustrated in FIGURE 4 the valve is considered as fully closed with no fluid communication from the conduit 74 to either of the conduits 72 and 73 or between the conduits 72 and 73 themselves.
  • Pressure increases within the conduit 74 to levels in excess of the pressure within the other two conduits will not affect the position of either of the ball valves, leaving them closed as illustrated.
  • the pressure within the conduit 74 is exerted throughout the annular chamber 191 and through the openings 172 and 165 into both the operator 4piston and the central valve seat.
  • the pressure within the conduit 73 is raised to a level higher than the pressure in the conduit 72.
  • the pressure in the conduit 73 is communicated through the openings 130 into the annular cylinder 125.
  • the pressure from within the conduit 74 is ineffective to move the operator piston as it is applied completely around the operator piston 81 between the seals 181 and 185 within the annular chamber 191 and also through the ports 172 and 165 to the interior of both the operator piston and the central valve seat body.
  • the lower pressure from the conduit 172 is applied through the openings 111 into the annular cylinder 110.
  • the higher pressure from the conduit 73 is within the cylinder 125 while the cylinder 110 is exposed to the lower pressure within the conduit 72.
  • FIGURES 5-8 are presented in terms of the lower valve 85 and its related structure, it will be understood that the upper valve 90 and its operator assembly are identical in all respects to the lower valve mechanism.
  • the perspective views of FIGURES 6 and 7 along with the FIGURE 8 best illustrate the movement of the operator assembly and the ball valve as the valve is rotated from the closed to the open position.
  • the operator knobs, as shown in FIGURE 5, are spaced circumferentially substantially 120 degrees apart.
  • each of the operator holes in the ball valve follows the arcuate path shown by the dotted lines in FIGURE 8.
  • the operator knob engaged in the operator hole in order to rotate the ball valve, moves longitudinally the distance L and oscillates a distance C around the circumference of the ball valve as ⁇ diagrammatically represented in FIGURE 8. ⁇ It will be seen, therefore, that the operator members are sufficiently flexible to tolerate the lateral or circumferential movement the distance C to permit the operator knobs to follow this arcuate path of the operator holes in the ball valves in order to rotate the ball valves between the closed and the open positions.
  • valve may be held open -by the pressure in the conduit 74 after having been opened by a pressure increase in either of the conduits 72 and 73.
  • the valve is opened by the pressure in the conduit 73 with the pressure relationship then being shifted with llow occurring from the conduit 74.
  • the higher pressure from the conduit 74 will be applied in the cylinder 125 to hold the operator piston upwardly and the valve open.
  • the lball valve 90y is closed by lowering the pressure within the conduits 73 and 74 to a level which permits the force of the spring 161 to return the operator piston to the neutral position shown in FIGURE 4. Also the pressure in the conduit 72 may be raised above the conduits 73 and 74 to effect the same results.
  • the spring moves the operator assembly 164 toward the center of the valve, the inward end of the base range 160 engages the internal annular shoulder 174 forcing the operator piston back toward the neutral position.
  • This movement of the base ring of the operator assembly causes the operator knobs 153 to rotate the ball valve 90 ⁇ back to the closed position illustrated in FIGURE 4.
  • With the ball valve 90 returned to the closed position the valve is once again fully closed with communication being prevented between the conduit 74 and either of the conduits 72 and 73 and also between the conduits 72 and 73 themselves.
  • the valve will remain open.
  • the pressure relationships may 'be adjusted so that a condition of either no flow or flow in either direction may be maintained through the valve between the conduits 72 and 74. If the pressure in the conduits 73 and 74 are equal and higher than in the conduit 72, the valve 90 will remain open with no flow. If the pressure in the conduit 74 is higher than 72 and 73, the valve will remain open with flow from the conduit 74 to the conduit 73.
  • the valve is again returned to closed position when desired by lowering the pressures in the conduits 72 and 74 sufliciently to lower the pressure in the cylinder 125 to a level relative to the cylinder 110 ⁇ for the spring 150 to expand drawing the ball valve 85 back to the closed position and returning the operator piston again to the neutral position.
  • the procedure of opening the ball valves in the valve of FIGURES 4-9 may be varied by use of different pressure relationship from those described above in order t bring about the necessary longitudinal movement of the operator piston. For example, if the ball valve 90 is to be opened the pressure within the conduit 72 may be lowered to a level below the pressure within the conduit 73 so that the pressure within the annular cylinder 125 will exceed the pressure within the annular cylinder 110 to cause the higher pressure within the cylinder 125 to force the operator piston upwardly.
  • the net effect of this procedure is identical to those previously described but is merely effected by lowering a pressure in one conduit as distinguished from raising the pressure in another conduit.
  • FIGURE 10 Another valve constructed in accordance with the invention is illustrated in FIGURE 10.
  • the valve 200 controls fluid iiow between the conduit 201 and either of the conduits 202 and 203.
  • the conduit 201 may be in communication with either of the other conduits but not both at the same time while the conduits 202 and 203 do not communicate with each other.
  • a tubular housing 204 is supported within the conduits between the seal assemblies 205 and 210.
  • the assembly 205 includes a seal mandrel 211 threaded into the housing and having an external annular recess 212 in which the seal assembly 213 is retained by the retainer ring 214.
  • the seal assembly 210 Threaded into the other end of the tubular housing is the seal assembly 210 which includes the seal mandrel 215 which is provided with an external annular recess 220 in which is positioned the seal assembly 221 held by the retainer ring 222.
  • a fishing neck 223 having an external annular flange 224 is formed on the seal mandrel to facilitate insertion and removal of the valve through the conduit 203.
  • the seals 212 and 221 seal with the inner surface of the conduits 203 and 202 to define an annular space 225 within the conduits around the tubular housing.
  • a lower valve seat body 230 threaded into the mandrel 211 extends into the tubular housing and is provided on its inward end with an annular valve seat surface 231 around the bore 232 through the body.
  • the external annular flange 233 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body providing an annular shoulder 234.
  • An annular piston 235 is slidably disposed around the valve seat body Vwith an O-ring 240 in the internal annular recess 241 within the piston sealing between the outer surface of the valve Seat body and the inner surface of the piston.
  • the O-ring 242 within the external annular recess 243 around the piston seals between the outer surface of the piston and the inner surface of the tubular housing 204.
  • the annular cylinder 244 is defined by the inner wall of the housing, the outer wall of the valve seat body, the inward end of the mandrel 211 and the outward end of the piston 235.
  • the cylinder 244 and the bore 232 are connected through a plurality of ports 245 radially positioned around and extending through the wall of the valve seat body.
  • An external annular recess 250 is formed around the inward end of the piston 235.
  • the upper' valve seat -body 251 is threaded into the upper seal mandrel 215 projecting 1nto and concentric with the tubular housing 204.
  • the inward or lower end of the valve seat body is provided with an annular valve seat surface 252 around the bore 253 through the body in alignment with the bore 254 through the mandrel 215.
  • An external annular flange 255 around the lower end of the body 251 provides a shoulder 260 around the body.
  • the annular piston 261 iS slidably positioned around the valve seat body within the tubular housing with the O-ring seals 262 and 263 positioned in the annular recess 264 and 265 respectively, to seal between the piston and the external surface of the valve seat body and the internal surface of the tubular housing.
  • the inward ends of the mandrel 215, the outward end of the piston 261, the inner surface of the tubular housing, and the outer surface of the valve seat body define an annular cylinder 270 which communicates with the bore 253 through a plurality of radially positioned ports extending through the wall of the valve seat body.
  • the inward end of the annular piston 261 is provided with an external annular recess 272.
  • the ball valves 273 and 274 are held on the valve seats 231 and 252, respectively, by the central valve seat body 275.
  • the annular seal surface 280 around the lower end of the central valve seat body along with the seat surface 231 supports the ball valve 273.
  • the annular valve seat surface 281 on the upper end of the central 'body and the seat surface 252 support the ball valve 274.
  • the ball valves are linked with each other and with the pistons 235 and 261 by the operator members 283 which extend between and engage the recesses 250 in the piston 235 and 272 in the piston 261.
  • the operator members are connected to the ball valves by the operator knobs 284 and 285 which engage the operator holes 290 and 291 in the ball valves 273 and 274, respectively.
  • Each of the ball valves has two operator holes spaced apart substantially degrees as previously discussed in connection with the valve 70 illustrated in FIGURE 4.
  • Two operator members 283 are employed to interconnect the ball valves with each other and with the annular pistons 235 and 261 so that the pistons may rotate the ball valves between open and closed positions.
  • the operator holes in the ball valves are aligned longitudinally so that the two operator members extend substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the tubular housing and to each other spaced apart as shown in FIGURE 5 so that the operator members may function as those of the valve of FIGURE 4 in moving through the longitudinal and circumferential paths followed by the operator knobs in rotating the ball valves between their open and closed positions.
  • Fluid may flow through the bore 282 of the central valve seat body, through the radially positioned ports 293 into the housing, and through the ports 294 of the housing to permit fluid communication into the annular space 225 from the ball valves.
  • each of the annular pistons is provided with a detent assembly, piston 235 with a detent assembly 295 and piston 261 with detent assembly 300.
  • the detent assembly 295 includes a plurality of outwardly extending radially spaced collet lingers 296 -formed around the piston 235.
  • the collet lingers are laterally flexible so that they may be expanded and contracted radially for locking and unlocking the piston 235 at the extreme downward end of its stroke.
  • Each of the collet fingers is provided with an inwardly extending boss 297 to engage the split ring 298 disposed around the valve seat body in the external annular recess 299 to provide a locking flange for the collet lingers.
  • the collet lingers spring outwardly and around the split ring with the lingers retracting inwardly when the bosses have passed the split ring.
  • the bosses engage the lower surface of the split ring to hold the piston in its lowermost position until the pressure within the cylinder 244 is suliciently high to push the piston with adequate force to cause the collet lingers to spring outwardly and disengage the split ring allowing the piston to move upwardly.
  • the pressure at which the collet lingers disengage is high enough that when the collet fingers unlock the piston the piston will move the ball valves completely between positions so that the valves are not left in a partially open or closed condition.
  • the detent assembly 300 at the other end of the valve includes the collet lingers 301 formed on and extended outwardly from the annular piston 261.
  • the collet lingers have the inwardly projecting bosses 302 which releasably engage the split ring 303 positioned in the external recess 304 around the valve seat body 251.
  • the collet lingers are laterally flexible so that when the piston moves to the upper end of its stroke the collet lingers will spring outwardly with the bosses sliding over the split ring to again spring inwardly when the bosses have passed the split ring as shown in FIGURE 10 to lock the piston to the split ring at the upper end of its stroke.
  • the pressure within the cylinder 270 is raised to the desired predetermined level for moving the valves completely between open and closed position the collet lingers will disengage to permit the piston to be displaced downwardly.
  • the valve 200 is moved between the position connecting the conduits 1 with 203 and the position connecting the conduits 201 and 202 by the action of the pressure from the conduits on the annular pistons 235 and 261.
  • the pressure is raised within the conduit 202 to a level sulciently in excess of the pressure in the conduits 201 and 203 to cause the higher pressure within the conduits 202 to be applied through the ports 271 into the annular cylinder 270 to displace the piston 261 downwardly.
  • the lower cylinder 244 is exposed to the lower pressure of the conduits 203 and 201 through the port 245 while the upper cylinder is exposed to the higher pressure of the conduit 202 through the port 271.
  • the piston 261 is forced downwardly to rotate the ball valve 274 to the open position while rotating the ball valve 273 to the closed position.
  • the detent assemblies on each of the annular pistons are adjusted to retain each piston until the pressure within its respective cylinder is built up to a sufficiently high level to displace the piston the required distance to fully close one ball valve and open the other.
  • the detent assembly 300 holds the piston 261 in the position illustrated until the pressure within the annular cylinder 270 is high enough that upon release the piston will immediately move the full length necessary to fully open the valve 274 and fully close the valve 273.
  • FIGURE l0 is not operable in response to the pressure within the conduit 201 but rather operation must be initiated by a pressure differential between the conduits 202 and 203. Once, however, the valve is in a given open position a condition of flow in either direction or no liow may exist between the two particular conduits which are in communication so long as the pressure in either or both of the communicating conduits is above the pressure in the closed conduit.
  • FIGURE 1l A still further form of valve constructed according to the invention is illustrated in FIGURE 1l wherein a single ball Valve is rotatable between two positions to selectively place one zone in communication with one of two other zones.
  • the valve 310 is positioned within the conduits 311 and 312 which are interconnected with the conduit 313.
  • the tubular valve housing 314 is supported at the opposite ends by the seal assemblies 315 and 320.
  • the assembly 315 includes a seal mandrel 321 with an external annular recess 322 for the packing assembly 323 to seal with the inner wall of the conduit 311.
  • the packing assembly is secured on the mandrel by the retainer ring 324.
  • the seal assembly 320 includes the seal mandrel 325 which supports the packing assembly 330 in the annular recess 331 to seal between the end member and the inner surface of the conduit 312.
  • the packing assembly is held on the mandrel by the annular retainer ring 332.
  • a fishing neck 333 having an external annular ange 334 is formed on the end member to permit the connection of a suitable running and pulling tool with the valve.
  • the valve seat bodies 335 and 340 are threaded into the seal mandrels 321 and 325, respectively, and extend toward each other within the tubular housing.
  • the ball valve 341 is supported by the valve seat bodies between the annular seat 342 on the body 335 and the annular seat 343 on the body 340.
  • the L-shaped flow passage 344 through the ball valve allows fluid liow from either the bore 345 through the body 33S or the bore 350 through the body 340 into the annular space 350a around the valve seat bodies. Fluid may then liow through the ports 351 in the tubular housing 314 into the conduit 313.
  • the ball valve is interconnected with the annular pistons 353 and 354 by the operator members 352.
  • the operator members are engaged at opposite ends into the annular recesses 361 around the inward end of the pistons 353 and 362 around the inward end of the piston 354.
  • the ball valve 341 has two operator holes spaced approximately degrees apart in which are engaged the operating knobs of two operator members. The movements of both the ball valve and the operator members in rotating the ball valve between open and closed positions are identical to the movements of the corresponding members of the ⁇ other ernbodiments of the valve previously discussed.
  • the O-ring 363 in the annular recess 364 seals between the piston 353 and the seat body 335 Iwhile the O-ring 365 in the recess 370 seals between the piston and the housing 314.
  • the O-ring 371 in the internal annular re- ⁇ cess 372 of the annular piston 364 and the O-ring 373 in the recess 374 of the piston seals betweenthe piston and the seat body 340 at the housing 314, respectively.
  • An annular cylinder 37-5 is defined by the valve seat body 335 and the tubular housing between the inward end of the seal mandrel 321 and the outer end of the piston 353.
  • the cylinder 375 is connected with the bore 345 by the port 376 through the seat body.
  • a detent assembly 380 detachably engages the annular piston 353 at the outward end of its stroke to insure movement of the ball valve from the fully closed to the fully open position.
  • a detent assembly 392 detachably engages the annular piston with the valve seat -body until a predetermined pressure differential is reached in the cylinder to insure that the ball valve moves from the closed to the open position without lingering at an intermediate positionp
  • the detent assembly 380 comprises a plurality of collet lingers 381 formed on and extending outwardly from the annular piston 353 with the inwardly extending bosses 382 being engageable over the split lock ring 383 ⁇ positioned in the external annular recess 384 around the valve seat body 335.
  • the collet fingers are l-aterally flexible so that when the piston moves to the lower end of its stroke the bosses engage the lock ring causing the collet fingers to spring outwardly until the bosses have passed the lock rngwhen the fingers spring inwardly to lock the lingers over the lock rin'g thus holding the piston at its lowermost position until the pressure within the cylinder 375 is raised to a sufiiciently high level to disengage the collet -ngers and allow the piston to be forced upwardly.
  • the pressure at which disengagement of the piston is effected is determined by the pressure necessary to move the pistons and ball valve completely from one position to another position without the valves lingering between such positions.
  • the detent assembly 392 at the other end of the valve includes the collet fingers 393 extending outwardly and radially positioned around the annular piston 354.
  • Each of the detent fingers has an inwardly projecting boss 394 engageable over the split lock ring 395 positioned in the external annular recess 396 around the valve seat body 340.
  • the collet fingers are illustrated in FIGURE 11 engaged over the ⁇ lock ring holding the piston in the upper position at the upper end of its stroke. When the pressure is raised to a predetermined level in the cylinder 390, the collet fingers will be cammed outwardly by the lock ring disengaging the fingers fromthe lock ring to permit the piston to be forced downwardly.
  • the colletv fingers hold the piston in the upper position until the pressure is high enough to fully displace the piston downwardly to move the ball valve from the illustrated position to the other position at which the valve ow passage connects with the flow passage 350.
  • the ball valve 341 is positioned to allow fluid flow between the conduits 311 and 313 through the bore 345, the flow passage 350, and the ports 351 in the tubular housing 314. So long as the pressure within the bore 345 is maintained higher than the pressure within the bore 350 the valve will remain in the position illustrated permitting fluid flow in either direction between the conduits 311 and 313.
  • the pressure in the bore 345 may result from a higher pressure in either or both of the conduits 311 and 313.
  • the detent assembly 392 In raising the pressure within the annular cylinder 390 the detent assembly 392 retains the annular piston in the position shown until a predetermined pressure level is reached which is sufliciently high to cause the pistons, the operator members, and the valve to move sufficiently to shift the valve to the desired position without lingering at an intermediate position which would place the flow passage 360 in communication With both of the bores 344 and 345 simultaneously.
  • the detent mechanism 380 engages the annular piston 353 to hold the piston in the downward position until movement of the Valve is again desired by raising the pressure within the annular cylinder 375.
  • operation of the valve may be initiated from the second and third pressure sources to selectively connect each of the sources with the first pressure source but operation of the valve is not initiatable from the first pressure source.
  • valve assembly which selectively connects either of the second and third pressure sources with the first pressure source by initiating valve action from either of the second and third pressure sources and which subsequent to connection between the desired two pressure sources will remain open so long as a predetermined pressure differential is maintained to permit a state of either no flow between the connected sources or flow in either direction between the sources.
  • Valve assembly includes interconnected plug type valves reciprocable between four positions for interconnecting a first pressure zone with either of second and third pressure zones or prohibiting all flow between any of such pressure zones.
  • valve assembly includes two rotatable ball valves between a central flow passage end connecting first and second flow passages.
  • the ball valves being rotatable to connect the control flow passage with either of the other fiow passages but not to connect the other fiow passages with each other.
  • valve according to the invention includes two ball valves each of which is independent of the other and spring biased toward a closed position while the valves are rotatable in response to movement of a flange on a reciprocable tubular type operator piston encompassing both of the valves.
  • valves in another form of a valve according to the invention includes two ball valves interconnected with each other so that one ball valve is in an open position while the other is in closed position, such relative positions being reversed upon rotation of the valves by a common interconnecting operator member actuated by pressure responsive pistons exposed to the pressure in two zones which are connectable with another zone by the valve.
  • valve according to the invention includes .a single rotatable ball valve positioned between two tubular seat bodies and rotatable by an interconnected pressure responsive annular piston between a first position for connecting a first pressure zone with a second pressure zone to a second position for connecting the first pressure zone with a third pressure zone.
  • Apparatus for cont-rolling fluid fiow [between a plurality of zones comprising:
  • valve means in said housing coacting with said openings and movable between a plurality of positions for interconnecting selected groups of said openings from said zones; and valve means actuating means operable in response to the pressure in one of said zones of a selected group for moving said va-lve means to one position closing ofi one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, and operable in response ⁇ to the pressure in one olf the zones of another selected group of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off a second one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings; said Valve means being constructed to prevent fow communication between said one opening and said second opening; Isaid valve means actuating means being operable in response to the pressure in said one zone and said second zone in excess of the pressure in said third zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously communicating said one zone and said second zone with said third zone and operable to prevent flow between said one zone
  • Apparatus for controlling fluid ow between a plurality of zones comprising: :a housing having a bore and a plurality of flow openings into said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means for selectively interconnecting a first of said zones with a second and a third of said zones and for preventing fiuid communication between said second zone and said third zone; valve actuating means connected ywith said valve means and operable in response to the pressure 'within said second zone for moving said valve means to a first position interconnecting said first zone and said second zone and preventing communication between said third zone and said second zone; valve actuating means connected with said valve means and operable in -response to the pressure within said third zone for moving said valve means to a second position interconnecting said first zone and said third zone and preventing fluid communication fbetween said second zone and said third zone; and means coacting with said valve means and operable in response to pressures in said second zone and in said third zone in excess of the pressure in said first zone for moving said valve means
  • a valve -for selectively controlling fiuid ow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means; means -associated with said valve housing means tor permitting fiuid flow between said housing means and said first zone; means associated with said housing means for permitting fluid fow between said housing means .and said second zone; means associated with said housing means [for permitting fluid fow between said housing means and said third zone; valve means positioned within said housing means and coacting with said means permitting fiow between said second zone and said housing for cont-rolling fitow therethrough and coacting with said means permitting fiow between :said third zone and said housing for controlling flow therethrough, said valve means being pressure responsively movable to a first position for permitting fluid flow between said first zone and said second zone while prohibiting fluid flow between said first zone and said third zone and between said second zone and said third zone; and said valve means being pressure responsively movable to a second position permitting fiuid flow Ibetween said first zone and said third zone while prohibiting fluid fow between said first zone and said second
  • a valve for controlling fluid fiow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means provided with means forming a fiow passage to said first zone, a ow passage to said second zone, and a flow passage to said third zone; valve means supported within said housing means, said valve means coacting with said flow passages leading to said second and said third zones for controlling flow into said housing means from said second zone and said third zone and prohibiting fiuid flow between said second and third zones, said valve means being movable between a first position permitting fiuid fiow through said iiow passage leading to said second zone into said housing means while closing said flow passage leading from said housing means to said third zone and a second position opening said flow passage leading from said housing to said third zone while closing said fiow passage leading from said housing means to said second zone, said valve means being operable to move between said first and said second positions in response to pressure differentials 1between said second and said third zones, said valve means being retainable in either of said positions after 4being moved to said positions by a pressure differential between said housing means
  • a valve for controlling fluid flow between a irst zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means provided with means forming a liow path to said first zone, a ow path to said second zone, and a flow path to said third zone; valve means within said housing means, said Valve means coacting with said flow paths leading to said second and third zones for controlling ow from said zones into said housing means and prohibiting ow between said second and third zones; -said valve means being movable between a first position interconnecting said housing means and said liow path leading to said second zone while closing said flow path leading to said third zone; said valve means -being movable to a second position interconnecting said fiow path leading to said third zone and said housing means while closing said ilow path leading from said housing means to said second zone; and reciprocable valve operator means exposable at one end to the pressure in said path leading to said second zone and exposable at the other end to the pressure in said path leading to said third zone, said operator means being movably
  • a valve for controlling uid flow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: housing means; said housing means being provided with means forming a ilow path to said first zone, with means providing a tiow path to said second zone, and with means providing a flow path to said third zone; valve means coacting with said flow path leading to said second zone for opening and closing said flow path; valve means coacting with said ow path leading to said third zone for opening and closing said ow path; support means slidably extending through each of said valve means for supporting each of said valve means as each of said valve means moves between an open and a closed position; and biasing means associated with each of said valve means and said support means for biasing each of said valve means toward a closed position.
  • a valve for controlling fluid iiow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: a valve housing provided with a port leading to said first zone; means associated with said housing forming ⁇ a flow passage leading to said second zone, said means including an annular valve seat surrounding said fiow passage; means associated with said housing providing a flow passage leading to said third zone, said means including yan annular valve seat around said liow passage; a first valve engageable with said valve seat around said flow passage leading to said second zone; -a second valve engageable with said valve seat around said flow passage leading to said third zone; a valve rod extending in slida-ble relationship through said rst valve and said second valve to permit each of said valves to move laway from its respective valve seat; to 'an open position and to -support each of said valves while in said open position; and a spring disposed around said rod between and engageable with said valves for biasing each of said valves toward a closed position.
  • a valve for controlling liuid fiow between a iirst zone and second and third zones comprising: a valve housing having means providing a port leading to said first zone; means lassociated with said housing providing ⁇ a flow passage to said second zone and a lvalve seat formed yaround -said flow passage; means associated with said housing providing a ow passage to said third zone and a valve seat surrounding said flow passage; said valve seats being spaced apart from each other along a a longitudinal axis of said housing; a first valve engageable with one of said valve seats to control fluid flow through the passage associated therewith; a second val-ve engageable with the other of said valve seats for controlling the fluid flow through the passage associated with said valve seat; a valve rod extending through each of said valves and slidable relative to said valves for maintaining said valves in alignment with said seats ⁇ andsupporting each of said valves when in open position; and a spring around said valve rod between and in engagement with said valves for biasing said valves away from
  • a valve in accordance with claim 8 including in addition thereto a head member on opposite ends of said valve rod for retaining said valves on said rod.
  • a valve in accordance with claim 9 including seal means within each of said valves around said rod for seating between each valve and said rod to prevent fluid leakage along said rod through each of said valves.
  • Apparatus for controlling iiuid flow between a plurality of zones comprising: a housing having a bore and a plurality of ow openings into said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means in said housing coacting 'with said openings movable between a plurality of positions for interconnecting selected groups of said openings from said zones; valve means actuating means operable in response to the presence in one of said zones of a selected group for moving said Valve means to one position closing off one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, and operable in response to the pressure in one of the zones of another selected group of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off a second one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, said valve means being constructed to prevent fiow communication between said one opening 'and said second opening at all times; and second valve means actuating -means operable in response to the pressure in a third one of the .zones other than said one zone and said second zone for moving said -valve means
  • Apparatus for controlling fluid flow between a plurality of zones comprising: a housing having a bore and a plurality of iiow openings in said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means in said housing coacting with said openings for selectively interconnecting a first zone and a second zone with a third zone; means operable in response to the pressure in the second of said zones for moving of said valve means to one position closing off the opening to said first zone and communicating the openings to said second and said third zones; means operable in response to the pressure in the first of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off the opening to said second zone and communicating the openings to said lirst and said third zones, said valve means having means providing for movement of said valve means to close off flow communication between said openings to said lirst zone and to said second zone at all times; and means responsive to pressure in said third zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously closing ofi both the opening to said first zone and the opening to said second zone.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Multiple-Way Valves (AREA)

Description

July 8 1959 J. vl. FREUD 3,454,029
i VALVES Filed April 2, 1965 sheet of 4 30 42 2| Z4 K )J Um /4 i l i lr /K\/ A\ A@ 2| 35 34 43 55 60 40 22 4| 4 .-wl/frrss''gf'g'f INVENTOR HQ Johnv. Fredd BY if/M@ my d ATTORNEYS J. V. FREUD July s, 1969 VALVES Filed April 2, 1965 Sheet INVENTOR ,J ohh V. Fredd ATTORNEYS A f f July 8, 1969 1 FRDD 3,454,029
VALVES Filed April 2, 1965 Y sheet of 4 F l G 5 INVENTOR JOHN V. FRE DD @wmfi Wwffm United States Patent O "ice 3,454,029 VALVES John V. Fredd, Dallas, Tex., assgnor to Otis Engineering Corporation, Dallas, Tex., a corporation of Delaware Filed Apr. 2, 1965, Ser. No. 445,116 Int. Cl. Gd 11/02; F161: 17/04 U.S. Cl. 137-112 13 Claims ABSTRACT 0F THE DISCLOSURE A valve system or apparatus having communication with two separate pressure zones or areas .and communicating with a third separate zone or area, and closure means controlling flow between each of the separate dirst and second zones or areas and the third zone or area arranged to prevent fiow from either of said first and second zones or areas to the other of said first and second zones or areas, whereby the first and second pressure zones or areas are prohibited `from owing from one to the other at all times. A valve for such system having first and second ports each communicating with a common third port, and valve closure members movable in response to fluid pressures in said ports to selectively open and close s'aid first and second ports to communication with said third while preventing flow from either of said first and second ports through the other of said first and second ports.
This invention relates to valves and more particularly relates to pressure operated valves.
It is a principal object of this invention to provide a new and improved valve.
It is another object of the invention to provide a valve which is selectively operated by fluid pressure to position the valve for control of iuid flow between selected groups of zones.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a valve connectable to at least three pressure sources with the 'first source being selectively connectable with the second and third sources while the second and third sources are not connectable with each other.
It is another object `of the invention to provide a valve connectable to three pressure sources and operable by the pressure of either the second or third sources but not by the pressure of the rst source.
It is an additional object of the invention to provide a valve connectable to three pressure sources and operable by the pressure in either the second or third sources and when opened may be maintained in such position by pressure from Veither the source which effected the opening or by the pressure of the first source irrespective4A of whether or not liow is occurring through the valve.
It is a particularly important object of the inventipn to provide a valve connectable to at least three pressure sources and operable by only the pressure in either of `two of the sources to move the valve to a position to communicate with the source which effected opening the valve and the third source but which after opening permits holding the valve open by the pressure of either source and allows fiow in either direction between the communicating sources.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide an apparatus for controlling fiuid fiow between one zone and either of two other zones wherein a valve means is operable between one position for controlling iiow between first and second zones while closing off a third zone and another position for controlling the How between the rst and third zones while closing the second 3,454,029 Patented `July 8, 1969 zone, the valve -being operable in response to a pressure differential between the second and third zones.
It is another object of the invention to provide uid fiow control apparatus for interconnecting a first zone with either of two other zones which includes plug type valves which are reciprocable between four positions for controlling fiow between selected groups of the zones and closing off all flow between the zones.
It is a further object of the invention to provide apparatus vfor controlling fluid ow between a first zone and either of two additional zones which includes a ball type valve element in the flow path leading to each of the additional zones.
It is also an object of the invention to provide apparatus for controlling fluid iiow between a first zone and either of second and third zones including a ball valve which is rotatable between two positions for interconnecting either the first and second zones or the rst and third zones.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be readily apparent Ifrom the reading of the following description of a device constructed in accordancewith the invention, and reference to the accompanying drawings thereof, wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a valve constructed according to the invention, showing the Valve in closed position with no fluid communication between the zones interconnected by the valve;
FIGURE 2 is a longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE l showing the valve in one open position with communication betweeri rst and third pressure sources or zones;
FIGURE 3 is a longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE l illustrating the valve in a second open position providing communication between the second and third pressure sources;
FIGURE 4 is a longitudinal sectional view of another form of the valve constructed in accordance with the invention;
FIGURE 5 is a sectional view along the line 5 5 of FIGURE 4;
FIGURE 6 is a view in perspective of one of the ball valves and its operator assembly as used in the valve of FIGURE 4, showing the ball valve in closed position as shown in FIGURE 4;
FIGURE 7 is a view similar to FIGURE 6 showing the ball valve rotated to the open position;
FIGURE 8 is a diagrammatic representation of one of the ball valves and surrounding tubular structure, such as the valve housing, showing the rotation of the ball required to move the valve between closed and open positions;
FIGURE 9 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of the valve of FIGURE 4 showing one of the ball valves in open position to permit communication between two of the flow conduits;
FIGURE l0 is a longitudinal sectional view of an additional form of valve in accordance with the invention, illustrating one of the ball valves in open position and the other ball valve in closed position; and,
FIGURE l1 is a longitudinal view in section illustrating a still -further form of valve in accordance with the invention showing the ball valve in one open position.
Referring to FIGURE 1 the valve 20 is shown connected to a first iiow conduit 21 leading to a first pressure source or zone, a second flow conduit 22 leading to a second pressure source or zone, and a third iiow conduit 23 leading to a third pressure source or zone. The valve includes a housing 24 having a central flow passage 25 extending therethrough communicating with a lateral opening 30 to permit fluid communication with the conduit 23. On opposite sides of the lateral opening the valve housing is reduced in internal diameter and internally threaded along the section 31 and the section 32. The valve seat body 33 is threaded into the section 31 of the valve housing and provided with a bore 34 surrounded by an annular seat surface 35 formed around the bore at the inward end of the body. The valve seat body 40 is threaded into the section 32 of the valve body and provided with an internal bore 41 surrounded by an annular valve seat 42 at the inward end of the body.
A dual reciprocable valve assembly 43 is positioned within the bore of the valve body between the valve seat bodies to cooperate with the valve seat surfaces 35 and 42 for controlling fluid flow through the valve. The valve assembly includes a valve rod 44 with head members 45 and 50 secured on opposite ends. A valve element 51 is slidably disposed on the valve rod `and provided with a conical surface 52 to cooperate with the valve seat 35 for controlling ow between the bore of the valve housing and the bore 34 through the valve seat body 33. An O-ring 53 is positioned within the internal annular recess 54 of the valve element 51 to seal between the rod and the valve element against leakage along the rod through the valve element. Another valve element 55 is slidably disposed on the valve rod to control the iuid ow between the bore of the valve housing and the bore 41 through the valve seat body 40. The valve element 55 has a conical seat surface 60 which cooperates with the valve seat 42 to close oi fluid flow between the bore of the housing and the bore of the valve seat body. An O- ring 61 within the internal annular recess 62 of the valve element 55 seals between the valve element and the valve rod. A spring `63 around the valve rod biases the valve elements 51 and 55 away from each other toward the ends of the rod and the valve seats.
The valve is shown in FIGURE 1 in the fully closed position in which there is no flow through the valve between any of the interconnected zones. The valve assembly is movable by the pressure in the conduits 21 and 22 from the position shown in FIGURE 1 to either of the positions illustrated in the FIGURES 2 and 3. The valve cannot be moved from the fully closed position shown in FIGURE l by the pressure within the conduit 23. During operation, the valve will remain closed as in FIG- URE 1 with each of the valve elements positioned on its respective seat so long as the pressure within the conduit 23 and the bore 25 of the valve housing remains greater than the pressure in both of the conduits 21 and 22. In this position of the Valve there can be no fluid communication between the conduits 21 and 22 or between either of these conduits and the conduit 23.
When fluid communication is desired between the conduits 22 and 23, the pressure within the conduit 22 is raised to a value in excess of the pressure within the conduits 21 and 23 to displace the valve element 55 from the seat 42 to open the bore 41 into communication with the bore 25 as illustrated in FIGURE 2. In order for the valve element to be moved from its seat the spring 63 is compressed and the valve rod slides through the other valve element 51 with the end member 45 and a portion of the valve rod moving the farther into the bore 34. With the valve opened to the position shown in FIGURE 2 the pressure differential between the bore 25 and the bore 34 acts on the cross section of the valve rod through the O-ring 53 in the valve element 51 and so long as such pressure differential exists, the valve assembly will remain in the open position to permit uid flow in either direction between the conduits 22 and 30. Even if ow between the conduits 22 and 23 ceases, the valve will remain open so long as there is a pressure differential between bores 25 and 34 to hold the valve in the position illustrated in FIGURE 2. When the pressure within the bore 25 decreases to a value at wlliCh. the pressure dilerential between the bore 25 and the bore 34 acting on the valve rod is below the combined force on the rod of the pressure within the bore 34 and the compressed spring 63, the valve assembly will be returned to the position shown in FIGURE 1 with the valve element 55 seating on the surface 42 to close the bore 41.
If fluid communication is desired between the conduits 21 and 23, the pressure within the conduit 21 is raised to a valve which will cause such pressure acting through the bore 34 to displace the valve element 51 from the seat 35 compressing the spring 63 and sliding the end member 50 and the valve rod farther into the bore 41 as illustrated in FIGURE 3. After the valve element 51 has been moved away from the seat 35 as shown in FIG- URE 3 the valve assembly will remain substantially in the position illustrated so long as the pressure within the bore 25 is of a suflicient value that the force of the pressure acting across the section of the value rod within the O-ring `61 exceeds the force resulting from the pressure within the bore 41 together with the force exerted by the spring 63. With the valve assembly in such open position iluid may flow in either direction between the conduits 21 and 23 and the valve assembly will continue to remain open even when iluid ow ceases so long as the pressure within the chamber 25 is of suicient value to hold the valve assembly in the position. shown.
Fluid communication may be established from both the conduits 21 and 22 simultaneously into the conduit 23. The pressures in both the conduits 21 and 22 are raised to levels substantially equal to each other and above the pressure in the chamber 25. Both the valve elements 51 and 55 are displaced inwardly along the valve rod from their respective seats to permit simultaneous flow from both the conduits 21 and 22 through the chamber 25 into the conduit 23. It will be obvious, of course, that if a pressure differential develops between the conduits 21 and 22, the valve element controlling the ow vfrom the conduit having the lower pressure will close. For example, if the pressure in the conduit 22 exceeds the pressure in the conduit 21 with -both valve elements open, the higher pressure in the conduit 22 will be transmitted into the chamber 25 to cause a pressure differential across the valve element 21 to force it back to its seat and close the bore 34. Flow will not therefore occur between the conduits 21 and 22 even if both valve elements are in open position. It will therefore be obvious that for simultaneous ow from both the conduits 21 and 22 into the lconduit 23, the pressure in both the conduits 21 and 22 must be maintained substantially equal to each other.
The valve arrangement illustrated in FIGURES 1-3 has wide application where the objective is to selectively connect a rst pressure source with second and third pressure sources without communication between the second and third pressure sources. For example, in the production of oil two producing zones often are in communication with the same -well bore and it may be desired to have fluid communication between a conduit in the well bore and each of the producing zones without encountering the problem of communication between the two zones. By use of the illustrative valve structure treating fluids may be circulated between the conduit 23 and either of two producing zones which might `be connected with the conduits 21 and 22 without encountering the problem of mixing the fluids in the zones connected with the conduits 21 and 22.
Another valve constructed according to the invention is illustrated in FIGURES 4-9. Referring to FIGURE 4 the valve y is enclosed in the housing 71 which is connected to conduits 72, 73, and 74. The valve permits fluid communication between the conduit 74 and either of the conduits 72 and 73 but not directly between the conduits 72 and 73. The valve assembly is retained in the housing between the internal annular shoulder 75 formed in the housing against which one end of the assembly rests and the internal annular retainer ring threaded into the housing at the other end of the assembly. The valve includes an annular operator piston 81 slidably disposed within the valve housing to enclose and operate the ball valve elements in response to pressure changes in the several conduits connected to the valve. The operator piston is supported at opposite ends around the tubular shaped valve seat bodies 82 and 83 which cooperate with the central dual valve seat body 84 to rotatably support the ball valve elements 85 and 90. The valve seat bodies 82 and 83 are threaded into the end seal assemblies 91 and 92, respectively, which support the valve and seal with the inner wall of the housing at opposite ends of the valve.
The annular piston heads 93 and 94 are threaded into the opposite ends of the operator piston around the valve seat bodies 82 and 83, respectively. An O-ring 95 in the internal annular recess 100 within the piston head 93 seals between the piston head and the external surface of the tubular valve seat body 82. An external annular flange 101 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body 82 within the operator piston to engage the inner wall of the piston. O-ring 102 within the external annular recess 103 around the flange seals between the flange and the inner wall of the piston. The inward end 104 of the piston head and the outer shoulder 105 on the flange 101 cooperate with the outer surface of the valve seat body 82 and the inner surface of the piston to form an annular variable volume cylinder 110. A plurality of ports 111 through the wall of the valve seat body connect the annular cylinder with the bore 112 of the valve seat body. An annular valve seat surface 113 is formed on the inward end of the valve seat body around the bore 112 to seat against the ball valve 85.
The annular piston head 94 is threaded into the other end of the operator piston around the valve seat body 83. The O-ring 114 in the internal annular recess 115 of the piston head seals between the outer surface of the valve seat body and the piston head. The external annular flange 120 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body 83 and provided with an external annular recess 121 in which the O-ring 122 is positioned to seal between the flange and the inner wall of the operator piston. The shoulder 123` on inward end of the piston head 94 cooperates with the shoulder A124 on the outer end of the ange 120 and the outer wall of the valve seat body and the inner wall of the operator piston to define the variable volume annular cylinder 125. A plurality of ports 130 through the valve seat body into the annular cylinder provide fluid communication between the cylinder and the bore 131 of the valve seat body. An annular valve seat surface 132 is formed around the bore 131 on the inward end of the valve seat body to seat against the ball valve 90.
The central valve seat body 84 is supported between the ball valves 85 and 90 by engagement of the annular seat surface 133 with the valve 90 and with the annular seat surface 134 on the annular cap 135 with the ball valve 85. The cap 135 is threaded over one end of the central valve seat body to facilitate assembly of the valve structure. The ball valve 85 is rotated by the operator assembly 140 including the operator arms 141 each of which has an operator knob 142 engaging one of the holes 143 in the ball valve to rotate the bore 144 of the ball valve between the closed position illustrated in FIGURES 4 and 6 and the open position shown in FIGURE 7. The operator arms 141 extend from the base ring 145 which is slidably engaged around the central valve seat body and biased away from the ball valve by the spring 150 disposed around the body between the base ring and the shoulder 151 on the annular cap 135. The ball valve is thus biased toward a closed position by the spring. As illustrated in FIGURE 5 the two operator arms 141 are supported from the base ring spaced apart from each other approximately 120 degrees around the ring to correspond with the spacing of the operator holes 143 in the ball valve. As will be explained in more detail in connection with the operation of the ball valve the operator knobs must move laterally or circumferentially a small distance as well as longitudinally to rotate the ball valve between open and closed positions. Therefore, the operator arms are slender and sufficiently flexible to permit the small lateral movement required of the operator knobs.
The ball valve is rotatable to move its bore 152 between open and closed positions by engagement of the operator knobs 153 in the operator holes 154 through the valve. The operator knobs are formed on the operator arms 155 extending from the base ring 160 which is slidably disposed around the valve seat body 83 and biased away from the base ring by the spring 161 to urge the valve toward a closed position. The spring 161 is confined between the external annular shoulder 162 on the valve seat body and the outer face of the base ring 163. The base ring along with its associated operator arms and knobs forms an operator assembly 164 which is structurally and functionally the same as the operator assembly 140.
Al plurality of radially spaced ports 165 extend through the central valve body 84 substantially along the middle of the body to permit the fluid communication from the bore of the body into the operator piston.. An internal annular flange 171 is formed within and along the center of the operator piston and provided with a plurality of radially spaced ports 172 to permit fluid to flow from within the operator piston through the piston wall. The annular flange 171 forms an internal annular shoulder 173 which is engageable with the base ring 145 of the operator assembly 140 and an internal annular shoulder 174 engageable with the base ring 160 of the operator assembly 164. Rcciprocation of the.` operator piston 81 causes engagement between its internal annular flange and one of the base rings of one of the operator assemblies depending upon the direction of reciprocation to effect rotation of one of the ball valves.
The end support and seal assembly 91 includes an annular cap 175 having an external packing recess 180 in which is disposed the packing 181 held in place by the threaded retainer ring 182. 'Ihe assembly 91 supports one end of the valve and seals around the valve with the inner wall of the housing 71. The other end of the valve is supported by the assembly 92 which includes the annular cap member 183 having an external packing recess 184 in which the packing 185 is positioned to seal with the inner wall of the housing 71. The packing is held ou the cap by the threaded retainer cap 190. The space between the end assemblies 91 and 92 around the operator piston and the valve seat bodies defines the annular chamber 191 through which fluid flows from within the operator piston toward the conduit 74.
In operation, the valve 70 is connected to the conduits 72, 73 and 74 with the objective being to selectively provide fluid communication between the conduit 74 and either the conduit 72 or 73 as desired. With the ball valves 85 and 90 positioned as illustrated in FIGURE 4 the valve is considered as fully closed with no fluid communication from the conduit 74 to either of the conduits 72 and 73 or between the conduits 72 and 73 themselves. Pressure increases within the conduit 74 to levels in excess of the pressure within the other two conduits will not affect the position of either of the ball valves, leaving them closed as illustrated. The pressure within the conduit 74 is exerted throughout the annular chamber 191 and through the openings 172 and 165 into both the operator 4piston and the central valve seat. body thus contacting the surfaces of both of the ball valves except for that portion of the valve 85 exposed to the bore 112 and of the valve 90 exposed to the bore 131. The net effect of the greater pressure within the operator piston upon each of the ball valves is to urge the valves 85 and 90 into tighter sealing engagement with the seats 113 and 132 respectively.
If fluid flow is desired between the conduit 73 and the conduit 74, the pressure within the conduit 73 is raised to a level higher than the pressure in the conduit 72. The pressure in the conduit 73 is communicated through the openings 130 into the annular cylinder 125. The pressure from within the conduit 74 is ineffective to move the operator piston as it is applied completely around the operator piston 81 between the seals 181 and 185 within the annular chamber 191 and also through the ports 172 and 165 to the interior of both the operator piston and the central valve seat body. The lower pressure from the conduit 172 is applied through the openings 111 into the annular cylinder 110. The higher pressure from the conduit 73 is within the cylinder 125 while the cylinder 110 is exposed to the lower pressure within the conduit 72. There is, therefore, a tendency for the cylinder 110 to be reduced in volume by movement of the operator piston upwardly. This sliding action of the operator piston may be considered to be brought about by the force of the higher pressure upon the outer end of the piston head 93 which is opposed only by the lower pressure from the conduit 72 being exposed to the inner face 104 of the piston. As the operator piston 81 moves upwardly the shoulder 174 around the internal flange 171 of the piston engages the base ring 160 moving the operator members 155 toward the ball valve causing the operator knobs on the members to rotate the ball valve from the closed position shown in FIG. 4 to the open position illustrated in FIGURE 9. During the movement of the operator piston upwardly the ball valve 85 remains in the closed position since the shoulder 173 on the internal flange of the piston moves away from the base ring 145 thus not contacting the operator assembly for the valve.
As the operator assembly 164 moves toward the ball Valve 90, the -valVe is moved from the position illustrated in FIGURES 4 and 6 to the position as shown in FIG- URES 7 and 9. While the FIGURES 5-8 are presented in terms of the lower valve 85 and its related structure, it will be understood that the upper valve 90 and its operator assembly are identical in all respects to the lower valve mechanism. The perspective views of FIGURES 6 and 7 along with the FIGURE 8 best illustrate the movement of the operator assembly and the ball valve as the valve is rotated from the closed to the open position. The operator knobs, as shown in FIGURE 5, are spaced circumferentially substantially 120 degrees apart. As the operator members move the ball valve between open and closed positions rotating the valve the 90 degrees required to effect such movement, each of the operator holes in the ball valve follows the arcuate path shown by the dotted lines in FIGURE 8. As each of the operator holes follows the arcuate path shown, the operator knob engaged in the operator hole, in order to rotate the ball valve, moves longitudinally the distance L and oscillates a distance C around the circumference of the ball valve as `diagrammatically represented in FIGURE 8. `It will be seen, therefore, that the operator members are sufficiently flexible to tolerate the lateral or circumferential movement the distance C to permit the operator knobs to follow this arcuate path of the operator holes in the ball valves in order to rotate the ball valves between the closed and the open positions.
With the ball valve 90 moved to the open position illustrated in FIGURE 9, flow may take place between the conduits 73 and 74 through the path defined lby the bore 131 in the valve seat body 83, the bore 152 of the ball valve 90, the bore 170` of the central valve seat body, the ports 165 and 172 of the central valve seat body and operator piston, respectively, and into the annular space 191 around the operator piston to the conduit 74. While the longitudinal displacement of the operator piston in moving the ball valve 90 to the open position shown in FIGURE 9 results in misalignment of the ports 165 and v172, as illustrated, the fluids flowing through the ports 165 move into the annular space between the central valve body and the operator piston and flow from such annular space through the ports 172 to the exterior of the annular piston. So long as the pressure within either the conduit 73 or 74 is maintained at a level sufficiently above the pressure within the conduit 72 the valve will remain in the open position of FIGURE 9 and flow may either be terminated or may occur in either direction between the conduits 73 and 74. It is again emphasized that while the valve cannot be opened in either direction by an increase in pressure within the conduit 74, the valve may be held open -by the pressure in the conduit 74 after having been opened by a pressure increase in either of the conduits 72 and 73. For example, if the valve is opened by the pressure in the conduit 73 with the pressure relationship then being shifted with llow occurring from the conduit 74. The higher pressure from the conduit 74 will be applied in the cylinder 125 to hold the operator piston upwardly and the valve open.
The lball valve 90y is closed by lowering the pressure within the conduits 73 and 74 to a level which permits the force of the spring 161 to return the operator piston to the neutral position shown in FIGURE 4. Also the pressure in the conduit 72 may be raised above the conduits 73 and 74 to effect the same results. As the spring moves the operator assembly 164 toward the center of the valve, the inward end of the base range 160 engages the internal annular shoulder 174 forcing the operator piston back toward the neutral position. This movement of the base ring of the operator assembly causes the operator knobs 153 to rotate the ball valve 90 `back to the closed position illustrated in FIGURE 4. With the ball valve 90 returned to the closed position the valve is once again fully closed with communication being prevented between the conduit 74 and either of the conduits 72 and 73 and also between the conduits 72 and 73 themselves.
vIf fluid communication is desired between the conduits 74 and 72 the pressure within the conduit is raised to a level above the pressure in the conduit 73 sufliciently to displace the operator piston downwardly to rotate the ball valve to the open position. The procedure of opening the ball valve y85 is identical to the opening of the ball valve 90. An increase in the pressure in the conduit 72 is applied through the bore 112 and the ports 111 into the annular cylinder 110. The pressure in the cylinder is now higher than the pressure in the cylinder 125. All surfaces exposed to any pressure from the conduit 74 are equal and opposite surfaces and thus the pressure from the conduit 74 cancels out and is not effective to move the operator piston. The higher pressure in the cylinder 110 acting against the lower pressure Within the cylinder tends to diminish the size of the cylinder 125 and increase the cylinder 110 causing the operator piston to move downwardly effecting engagement of the annular shoulder 172 within the operator piston with the base ring of the operator assembly 140 to move the operator members and operator knobs 142 rotating the ball valve 85 from the closed position shown in FIGURE 4 to the open position. When the ball valve is open, fluid may flow from the conduit 72 through the bore 112, the bore 144 in the ball valve, the bore 170 and the ports and 172 through the central valve seat body and the operator piston, respectively, into the chamber 191 and to the conduit 74. So long as the pressure within either of the conduits 72 and 74 is maintained higher than the pressure in the conduit 73 the valve will remain open. The pressure relationships may 'be adjusted so that a condition of either no flow or flow in either direction may be maintained through the valve between the conduits 72 and 74. If the pressure in the conduits 73 and 74 are equal and higher than in the conduit 72, the valve 90 will remain open with no flow. If the pressure in the conduit 74 is higher than 72 and 73, the valve will remain open with flow from the conduit 74 to the conduit 73. The valve is again returned to closed position when desired by lowering the pressures in the conduits 72 and 74 sufliciently to lower the pressure in the cylinder 125 to a level relative to the cylinder 110` for the spring 150 to expand drawing the ball valve 85 back to the closed position and returning the operator piston again to the neutral position.
The procedure of opening the ball valves in the valve of FIGURES 4-9 may be varied by use of different pressure relationship from those described above in order t bring about the necessary longitudinal movement of the operator piston. For example, if the ball valve 90 is to be opened the pressure within the conduit 72 may be lowered to a level below the pressure within the conduit 73 so that the pressure within the annular cylinder 125 will exceed the pressure within the annular cylinder 110 to cause the higher pressure within the cylinder 125 to force the operator piston upwardly. The net effect of this procedure is identical to those previously described but is merely effected by lowering a pressure in one conduit as distinguished from raising the pressure in another conduit.
When a ball valve at one end of the valve of FIGURE 4 is open, the pressure within the two conduits in communication and thus through the open portion of the valve is greater than the pressure within the closed conduit and therefore the other ball valve leading to the closed conduit is biased against the seat around the bore of the valve body leading to the closed conduit to more effectively seal between the ball valve and such seat. For example, if the conduits 73 and 74 are in communication by virtue of ball valve 90 being open the pressure within the bore 170 will exceed the pressure within the bore 112 causing the ball valve 85 to be urged more tightly against the seat 113 as the pressure within the bore 170 increases. It may therefore be seen that some flexibility may `be permitted in the construction of the valve with respect to the tolerances of the various parts including the ball valves and their respective seats as the pressure will tend to urge the ball valves more tightly against the seats through which there is a tendency toward leakage and therefore surface irregularities in the ball valves and seats may be compensated for by the biasing effect of pressure within the valve.
Another valve constructed in accordance with the invention is illustrated in FIGURE 10. The valve 200 controls fluid iiow between the conduit 201 and either of the conduits 202 and 203. As in the case of the previously discussed valves, the conduit 201 may be in communication with either of the other conduits but not both at the same time while the conduits 202 and 203 do not communicate with each other. A tubular housing 204 is supported within the conduits between the seal assemblies 205 and 210. The assembly 205 includes a seal mandrel 211 threaded into the housing and having an external annular recess 212 in which the seal assembly 213 is retained by the retainer ring 214. Threaded into the other end of the tubular housing is the seal assembly 210 which includes the seal mandrel 215 which is provided with an external annular recess 220 in which is positioned the seal assembly 221 held by the retainer ring 222. A fishing neck 223 having an external annular flange 224 is formed on the seal mandrel to facilitate insertion and removal of the valve through the conduit 203. The seals 212 and 221 seal with the inner surface of the conduits 203 and 202 to define an annular space 225 within the conduits around the tubular housing. A lower valve seat body 230 threaded into the mandrel 211 extends into the tubular housing and is provided on its inward end with an annular valve seat surface 231 around the bore 232 through the body. The external annular flange 233 is formed around the inward end of the valve seat body providing an annular shoulder 234. An annular piston 235 is slidably disposed around the valve seat body Vwith an O-ring 240 in the internal annular recess 241 within the piston sealing between the outer surface of the valve Seat body and the inner surface of the piston. The O-ring 242 within the external annular recess 243 around the piston seals between the outer surface of the piston and the inner surface of the tubular housing 204. The annular cylinder 244 is defined by the inner wall of the housing, the outer wall of the valve seat body, the inward end of the mandrel 211 and the outward end of the piston 235. The cylinder 244 and the bore 232 are connected through a plurality of ports 245 radially positioned around and extending through the wall of the valve seat body.
An external annular recess 250 is formed around the inward end of the piston 235.
At the other end of the valve, the upper' valve seat -body 251 is threaded into the upper seal mandrel 215 projecting 1nto and concentric with the tubular housing 204. The inward or lower end of the valve seat body is provided with an annular valve seat surface 252 around the bore 253 through the body in alignment with the bore 254 through the mandrel 215. An external annular flange 255 around the lower end of the body 251 provides a shoulder 260 around the body. The annular piston 261 iS slidably positioned around the valve seat body within the tubular housing with the O- ring seals 262 and 263 positioned in the annular recess 264 and 265 respectively, to seal between the piston and the external surface of the valve seat body and the internal surface of the tubular housing. The inward ends of the mandrel 215, the outward end of the piston 261, the inner surface of the tubular housing, and the outer surface of the valve seat body define an annular cylinder 270 which communicates with the bore 253 through a plurality of radially positioned ports extending through the wall of the valve seat body. The inward end of the annular piston 261 is provided with an external annular recess 272.
The ball valves 273 and 274 are held on the valve seats 231 and 252, respectively, by the central valve seat body 275. The annular seal surface 280 around the lower end of the central valve seat body along with the seat surface 231 supports the ball valve 273. The annular valve seat surface 281 on the upper end of the central 'body and the seat surface 252 support the ball valve 274. The ball valves are linked with each other and with the pistons 235 and 261 by the operator members 283 which extend between and engage the recesses 250 in the piston 235 and 272 in the piston 261. The operator members are connected to the ball valves by the operator knobs 284 and 285 which engage the operator holes 290 and 291 in the ball valves 273 and 274, respectively. Each of the ball valves has two operator holes spaced apart substantially degrees as previously discussed in connection with the valve 70 illustrated in FIGURE 4. Two operator members 283 are employed to interconnect the ball valves with each other and with the annular pistons 235 and 261 so that the pistons may rotate the ball valves between open and closed positions. The operator holes in the ball valves are aligned longitudinally so that the two operator members extend substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the tubular housing and to each other spaced apart as shown in FIGURE 5 so that the operator members may function as those of the valve of FIGURE 4 in moving through the longitudinal and circumferential paths followed by the operator knobs in rotating the ball valves between their open and closed positions. Fluid may flow through the bore 282 of the central valve seat body, through the radially positioned ports 293 into the housing, and through the ports 294 of the housing to permit fluid communication into the annular space 225 from the ball valves.
It will be obvious that since common operator members are employed for actuating both of the ball valves and thus the ball valves are rigidly interconnected with each other they must move simultaneously. Itis therefore necessary in order to interconnect the conduit 201 with either the conduit 202 or 203 and prevent the conduits 203 and 202 from communication with each other that the ball valves be positioned out of phase so that one is closed while the other is open. As illustrated in FIGURE 10, the ball valve 273 is open permitting communication between the conduits 201 and 203 while the ball valve 274 is closed. When the ball valve 274 is opened by the operator members, they Will close the valve 273. To insure that the valves do not linger between positions and thus move between completely open and completely closed positions, each of the annular pistons is provided with a detent assembly, piston 235 with a detent assembly 295 and piston 261 with detent assembly 300.
Referring to FIGURE the detent assembly 295 includes a plurality of outwardly extending radially spaced collet lingers 296 -formed around the piston 235. The collet lingers are laterally flexible so that they may be expanded and contracted radially for locking and unlocking the piston 235 at the extreme downward end of its stroke. Each of the collet fingers is provided with an inwardly extending boss 297 to engage the split ring 298 disposed around the valve seat body in the external annular recess 299 to provide a locking flange for the collet lingers. As the piston moves downwardly to the bottom end of the stroke the collet lingers spring outwardly and around the split ring with the lingers retracting inwardly when the bosses have passed the split ring. The bosses engage the lower surface of the split ring to hold the piston in its lowermost position until the pressure within the cylinder 244 is suliciently high to push the piston with adequate force to cause the collet lingers to spring outwardly and disengage the split ring allowing the piston to move upwardly. The pressure at which the collet lingers disengage is high enough that when the collet fingers unlock the piston the piston will move the ball valves completely between positions so that the valves are not left in a partially open or closed condition. The detent assembly 300 at the other end of the valve includes the collet lingers 301 formed on and extended outwardly from the annular piston 261. The collet lingers have the inwardly projecting bosses 302 which releasably engage the split ring 303 positioned in the external recess 304 around the valve seat body 251. The collet lingers are laterally flexible so that when the piston moves to the upper end of its stroke the collet lingers will spring outwardly with the bosses sliding over the split ring to again spring inwardly when the bosses have passed the split ring as shown in FIGURE 10 to lock the piston to the split ring at the upper end of its stroke. When the pressure within the cylinder 270 is raised to the desired predetermined level for moving the valves completely between open and closed position the collet lingers will disengage to permit the piston to be displaced downwardly.
The valve 200 is moved between the position connecting the conduits 1 with 203 and the position connecting the conduits 201 and 202 by the action of the pressure from the conduits on the annular pistons 235 and 261. For example, in order to close the valve 273 and open the Valve 274 to place the conduits 201 and 202 in communication, the pressure is raised within the conduit 202 to a level sulciently in excess of the pressure in the conduits 201 and 203 to cause the higher pressure within the conduits 202 to be applied through the ports 271 into the annular cylinder 270 to displace the piston 261 downwardly. The lower cylinder 244 is exposed to the lower pressure of the conduits 203 and 201 through the port 245 while the upper cylinder is exposed to the higher pressure of the conduit 202 through the port 271. When the pressure within the conduit 202 is raised sufficiently, the piston 261 is forced downwardly to rotate the ball valve 274 to the open position while rotating the ball valve 273 to the closed position. Since the inward ends of the annular pistons 235 and 261 are both exposed to the same liuid pressure within the tubular housing 204 the only pressure differential being imposed across the annular pistons is within the annular cylinders which are each exposed to the pressure within the conduits at the opposite ends of the valve and thus the higher pressure within one conduit such as 202 within the annular cylinder at that end will displace that cylinder and the operator members toward the ball valves since that piston is interconnected with the piston at the other end which is exposed to the lower pressure of the other conduit. In order to insure that the ball valves will move completely from one position to another position and thus avoid lingering between open and closed positions, the detent assemblies on each of the annular pistons are adjusted to retain each piston until the pressure within its respective cylinder is built up to a sufficiently high level to displace the piston the required distance to fully close one ball valve and open the other. For example, in moving the valve from the position of FIGURE 10l to the position in which the ball valve 274 is Open and 273 is closed, the detent assembly 300 holds the piston 261 in the position illustrated until the pressure within the annular cylinder 270 is high enough that upon release the piston will immediately move the full length necessary to fully open the valve 274 and fully close the valve 273. As in the case of the other forms of valves previously discussed, the embodiment of FIGURE l0 is not operable in response to the pressure within the conduit 201 but rather operation must be initiated by a pressure differential between the conduits 202 and 203. Once, however, the valve is in a given open position a condition of flow in either direction or no liow may exist between the two particular conduits which are in communication so long as the pressure in either or both of the communicating conduits is above the pressure in the closed conduit.
A still further form of valve constructed according to the invention is illustrated in FIGURE 1l wherein a single ball Valve is rotatable between two positions to selectively place one zone in communication with one of two other zones. Referring to FIGURE ll, the valve 310 is positioned within the conduits 311 and 312 which are interconnected with the conduit 313. The tubular valve housing 314 is supported at the opposite ends by the seal assemblies 315 and 320. The assembly 315 includes a seal mandrel 321 with an external annular recess 322 for the packing assembly 323 to seal with the inner wall of the conduit 311. The packing assembly is secured on the mandrel by the retainer ring 324. The seal assembly 320 includes the seal mandrel 325 which supports the packing assembly 330 in the annular recess 331 to seal between the end member and the inner surface of the conduit 312. The packing assembly is held on the mandrel by the annular retainer ring 332. A fishing neck 333 having an external annular ange 334 is formed on the end member to permit the connection of a suitable running and pulling tool with the valve.
The valve seat bodies 335 and 340 are threaded into the seal mandrels 321 and 325, respectively, and extend toward each other within the tubular housing. The ball valve 341 is supported by the valve seat bodies between the annular seat 342 on the body 335 and the annular seat 343 on the body 340. The L-shaped flow passage 344 through the ball valve allows fluid liow from either the bore 345 through the body 33S or the bore 350 through the body 340 into the annular space 350a around the valve seat bodies. Fluid may then liow through the ports 351 in the tubular housing 314 into the conduit 313. The ball valve is interconnected with the annular pistons 353 and 354 by the operator members 352. The operator balls 355 on the operator members lit into the operator holes 360 within the ball valve. The operator members are engaged at opposite ends into the annular recesses 361 around the inward end of the pistons 353 and 362 around the inward end of the piston 354. The ball valve 341 has two operator holes spaced approximately degrees apart in which are engaged the operating knobs of two operator members. The movements of both the ball valve and the operator members in rotating the ball valve between open and closed positions are identical to the movements of the corresponding members of the `other ernbodiments of the valve previously discussed.
The O-ring 363 in the annular recess 364 seals between the piston 353 and the seat body 335 Iwhile the O-ring 365 in the recess 370 seals between the piston and the housing 314. The O-ring 371 in the internal annular re- `cess 372 of the annular piston 364 and the O-ring 373 in the recess 374 of the piston seals betweenthe piston and the seat body 340 at the housing 314, respectively.
An annular cylinder 37-5 is defined by the valve seat body 335 and the tubular housing between the inward end of the seal mandrel 321 and the outer end of the piston 353. The cylinder 375 is connected with the bore 345 by the port 376 through the seat body. A detent assembly 380 detachably engages the annular piston 353 at the outward end of its stroke to insure movement of the ball valve from the fully closed to the fully open position.
At the other end of the valve the outward end of the annular piston 354 with the inward end of the seal mandrel 325 and the i-nner surface of the tubular housing and the outer surface of the valve body 340 form another annular cylinderf390 which is in fluid communication with the bore 345 through the radially positioned ports 391 through the valve seat body. A detent assembly 392 detachably engages the annular piston with the valve seat -body until a predetermined pressure differential is reached in the cylinder to insure that the ball valve moves from the closed to the open position without lingering at an intermediate positionp The detent assembly 380 comprises a plurality of collet lingers 381 formed on and extending outwardly from the annular piston 353 with the inwardly extending bosses 382 being engageable over the split lock ring 383 `positioned in the external annular recess 384 around the valve seat body 335. The collet fingers are l-aterally flexible so that when the piston moves to the lower end of its stroke the bosses engage the lock ring causing the collet fingers to spring outwardly until the bosses have passed the lock rngwhen the fingers spring inwardly to lock the lingers over the lock rin'g thus holding the piston at its lowermost position until the pressure within the cylinder 375 is raised to a sufiiciently high level to disengage the collet -ngers and allow the piston to be forced upwardly. The pressure at which disengagement of the piston is effected is determined by the pressure necessary to move the pistons and ball valve completely from one position to another position without the valves lingering between such positions.
The detent assembly 392 at the other end of the valve includes the collet fingers 393 extending outwardly and radially positioned around the annular piston 354. Each of the detent fingers has an inwardly projecting boss 394 engageable over the split lock ring 395 positioned in the external annular recess 396 around the valve seat body 340. The collet fingers are illustrated in FIGURE 11 engaged over the` lock ring holding the piston in the upper position at the upper end of its stroke. When the pressure is raised to a predetermined level in the cylinder 390, the collet fingers will be cammed outwardly by the lock ring disengaging the fingers fromthe lock ring to permit the piston to be forced downwardly. The colletv fingers hold the piston in the upper position until the pressure is high enough to fully displace the piston downwardly to move the ball valve from the illustrated position to the other position at which the valve ow passage connects with the flow passage 350.
As illustrated in FIGURE l1, the ball valve 341 is positioned to allow fluid flow between the conduits 311 and 313 through the bore 345, the flow passage 350, and the ports 351 in the tubular housing 314. So long as the pressure within the bore 345 is maintained higher than the pressure within the bore 350 the valve will remain in the position illustrated permitting fluid flow in either direction between the conduits 311 and 313. The pressure in the bore 345 may result from a higher pressure in either or both of the conduits 311 and 313. When it is desired to move the ball valve from the posi- .tion illustrated to a second position interconnecting the conduits 312 and 313, the pressure within the conduit 312 is raised above the pressure within the conduits 311 and 313 a sufiicicnt amount to displace the annular piston 354 toward the ball valve to rotate the ball valve degrees to a position in which the fiow passage 350 is encompassed by the valve seat 343 to connect the flow passage with the bore 350. The pressure within the bore 350 is applied through the radial ports 391 into the annular cylinder 390 against the outward end of the annular piston 354. Through the ports 376 the pressure within the bore 345 is imposed on the outward end of the annular piston 353 and since this pressure is lower than the-pressure within the annular cylinder 390 the pressureu differential across the opposite ends of the interconnected pistons causes both of the pistons along with the operator members 352 to move downwardly rotating the ball valve from the position shown to the second position interconnecting the conduits 312 and 313. In raising the pressure within the annular cylinder 390 the detent assembly 392 retains the annular piston in the position shown until a predetermined pressure level is reached which is sufliciently high to cause the pistons, the operator members, and the valve to move sufficiently to shift the valve to the desired position without lingering at an intermediate position which would place the flow passage 360 in communication With both of the bores 344 and 345 simultaneously. When the annular pistons reach the other end of their travel path the detent mechanism 380 engages the annular piston 353 to hold the piston in the downward position until movement of the Valve is again desired by raising the pressure within the annular cylinder 375. When the ball valve is at either of the open positions, the higher pressure within the fiow passage 344 and around the outer surfaces of the valve exposed to the fluid flowing between the two conduits which are interconnected biases the ball valve toward the seat on the valve body associated with the conduit which is closed off and therefore leakage is minimized from the communicating conduits into the conduit which is closed.
It will now be seen that there has been described and illustrated a new and improved fluid flow control apparatus for selectively interconnecting a plurality of zones in response to pressure differentials established between communicating and noncommunicating zones.
It will be further seen that there has been described and illustrated a new and improved valve assembly for connection between three pressure sources with the first pressure source being selectively connectable to second and third pressure sources while the second and third pressure sources are not connectable with each other.
It will also be seen that operation of the valve may be initiated from the second and third pressure sources to selectively connect each of the sources with the first pressure source but operation of the valve is not initiatable from the first pressure source.
It will additionally be seen that there is provided a valve assembly which selectively connects either of the second and third pressure sources with the first pressure source by initiating valve action from either of the second and third pressure sources and which subsequent to connection between the desired two pressure sources will remain open so long as a predetermined pressure differential is maintained to permit a state of either no flow between the connected sources or flow in either direction between the sources.
It will additionally be seen that one form of Valve assembly according to the invention includes interconnected plug type valves reciprocable between four positions for interconnecting a first pressure zone with either of second and third pressure zones or prohibiting all flow between any of such pressure zones.
It will also be seen that another form of valve assembly according to the invention includes two rotatable ball valves between a central flow passage end connecting first and second flow passages. The ball valves being rotatable to connect the control flow passage with either of the other fiow passages but not to connect the other fiow passages with each other.
It will additionally be seen that a further form of valve according to the invention includes two ball valves each of which is independent of the other and spring biased toward a closed position while the valves are rotatable in response to movement of a flange on a reciprocable tubular type operator piston encompassing both of the valves.
It will also be seen that another form of a valve according to the invention includes two ball valves interconnected with each other so that one ball valve is in an open position while the other is in closed position, such relative positions being reversed upon rotation of the valves by a common interconnecting operator member actuated by pressure responsive pistons exposed to the pressure in two zones which are connectable with another zone by the valve.
It will be further seen that another form of valve according to the invention includes .a single rotatable ball valve positioned between two tubular seat bodies and rotatable by an interconnected pressure responsive annular piston between a first position for connecting a first pressure zone with a second pressure zone to a second position for connecting the first pressure zone with a third pressure zone.
The foregoing description of the invention is explanatory only, and changes in the details of the construction illustrated may be made by those skilled in the art, within the scope of the appended claims, without departing from the spirit of the invention.
What is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:
1. Apparatus for cont-rolling fluid fiow [between a plurality of zones comprising:
a housing having a bore and a plurality of fiow openings into said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means in said housing coacting with said openings and movable between a plurality of positions for interconnecting selected groups of said openings from said zones; and valve means actuating means operable in response to the pressure in one of said zones of a selected group for moving said va-lve means to one position closing ofi one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, and operable in response `to the pressure in one olf the zones of another selected group of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off a second one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings; said Valve means being constructed to prevent fow communication between said one opening and said second opening; Isaid valve means actuating means being operable in response to the pressure in said one zone and said second zone in excess of the pressure in said third zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously communicating said one zone and said second zone with said third zone and operable to prevent flow between said one zone and said second zone.
2. Apparatus for controlling fluid ow between a plurality of zones comprising: :a housing having a bore and a plurality of flow openings into said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means for selectively interconnecting a first of said zones with a second and a third of said zones and for preventing fiuid communication between said second zone and said third zone; valve actuating means connected ywith said valve means and operable in response to the pressure 'within said second zone for moving said valve means to a first position interconnecting said first zone and said second zone and preventing communication between said third zone and said second zone; valve actuating means connected with said valve means and operable in -response to the pressure within said third zone for moving said valve means to a second position interconnecting said first zone and said third zone and preventing fluid communication fbetween said second zone and said third zone; and means coacting with said valve means and operable in response to pressures in said second zone and in said third zone in excess of the pressure in said first zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously interconnecting said second zone and said third zone with said first zone to permit simultaneous fiow between said second zone and said rst zone and between said third zone and said first zone and operable to move said valve means to prevent flow between said second zone and said third zone.
3. A valve -for selectively controlling fiuid ow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means; means -associated with said valve housing means tor permitting fiuid flow between said housing means and said first zone; means associated with said housing means for permitting fluid fow between said housing means .and said second zone; means associated with said housing means [for permitting fluid fow between said housing means and said third zone; valve means positioned within said housing means and coacting with said means permitting fiow between said second zone and said housing for cont-rolling fitow therethrough and coacting with said means permitting fiow between :said third zone and said housing for controlling flow therethrough, said valve means being pressure responsively movable to a first position for permitting fluid flow between said first zone and said second zone while prohibiting fluid flow between said first zone and said third zone and between said second zone and said third zone; and said valve means being pressure responsively movable to a second position permitting fiuid flow Ibetween said first zone and said third zone while prohibiting fluid fow between said first zone and said second zone and between said second zone and said third zone; and means coacting with said valve means and operable in lresponse to pressures in said second zone and in said third zone in excess of the pressure in said first zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously interconnecting said second Zone and said third zone with said first zone to permit simultaneous flow between said second zone and said first zone and between said third zone and said first zone and `operable to move said valve means to prevent flow between said second zone and said third zone.
4. A valve for controlling fluid fiow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means provided with means forming a fiow passage to said first zone, a ow passage to said second zone, and a flow passage to said third zone; valve means supported within said housing means, said valve means coacting with said flow passages leading to said second and said third zones for controlling flow into said housing means from said second zone and said third zone and prohibiting fiuid flow between said second and third zones, said valve means being movable between a first position permitting fiuid fiow through said iiow passage leading to said second zone into said housing means while closing said flow passage leading from said housing means to said third zone and a second position opening said flow passage leading from said housing to said third zone while closing said fiow passage leading from said housing means to said second zone, said valve means being operable to move between said first and said second positions in response to pressure differentials 1between said second and said third zones, said valve means being retainable in either of said positions after 4being moved to said positions by a pressure differential between said housing means and the flow passage closed by said valve means in said position; and means coacting Iwith said valve means and operable in response to pressures in said second zone and in said third zone in excess of the pressure in said first zone for moving said valve means to la position simultanesously interconnecting said second zone and said third zone with said first zone to permit simultaneous flow between said second zone and said first zone and between said third zone and said first zone and operable to move said valve means to prevent flow between said second zone and said third zone.
5. A valve for controlling fluid flow between a irst zone and second and third zones comprising: valve housing means provided with means forming a liow path to said first zone, a ow path to said second zone, and a flow path to said third zone; valve means within said housing means, said Valve means coacting with said flow paths leading to said second and third zones for controlling ow from said zones into said housing means and prohibiting ow between said second and third zones; -said valve means being movable between a first position interconnecting said housing means and said liow path leading to said second zone while closing said flow path leading to said third zone; said valve means -being movable to a second position interconnecting said fiow path leading to said third zone and said housing means while closing said ilow path leading from said housing means to said second zone; and reciprocable valve operator means exposable at one end to the pressure in said path leading to said second zone and exposable at the other end to the pressure in said path leading to said third zone, said operator means being movably responsive to pressure differentials between said second and third zones for moving said valve means between said first and said second positions; said valve operator means 4being operable in response to pressures in said second zone and in said third zone in excess of the pressure in said first zone for moving Vsaid valve means to a position simultaneously interconnecting said second zone with said first zone and said third zone with said first zone and operable to prevent iiow between said second zone and said third zone in either direction.
l6. A valve for controlling uid flow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: housing means; said housing means being provided with means forming a ilow path to said first zone, with means providing a tiow path to said second zone, and with means providing a flow path to said third zone; valve means coacting with said flow path leading to said second zone for opening and closing said flow path; valve means coacting with said ow path leading to said third zone for opening and closing said ow path; support means slidably extending through each of said valve means for supporting each of said valve means as each of said valve means moves between an open and a closed position; and biasing means associated with each of said valve means and said support means for biasing each of said valve means toward a closed position.
7. A valve for controlling fluid iiow between a first zone and second and third zones comprising: a valve housing provided with a port leading to said first zone; means associated with said housing forming `a flow passage leading to said second zone, said means including an annular valve seat surrounding said fiow passage; means associated with said housing providing a flow passage leading to said third zone, said means including yan annular valve seat around said liow passage; a first valve engageable with said valve seat around said flow passage leading to said second zone; -a second valve engageable with said valve seat around said flow passage leading to said third zone; a valve rod extending in slida-ble relationship through said rst valve and said second valve to permit each of said valves to move laway from its respective valve seat; to 'an open position and to -support each of said valves while in said open position; and a spring disposed around said rod between and engageable with said valves for biasing each of said valves toward a closed position.
8. A valve for controlling liuid fiow between a iirst zone and second and third zones comprising: a valve housing having means providing a port leading to said first zone; means lassociated with said housing providing `a flow passage to said second zone and a lvalve seat formed yaround -said flow passage; means associated with said housing providing a ow passage to said third zone and a valve seat surrounding said flow passage; said valve seats being spaced apart from each other along a a longitudinal axis of said housing; a first valve engageable with one of said valve seats to control fluid flow through the passage associated therewith; a second val-ve engageable with the other of said valve seats for controlling the fluid flow through the passage associated with said valve seat; a valve rod extending through each of said valves and slidable relative to said valves for maintaining said valves in alignment with said seats `andsupporting each of said valves when in open position; and a spring around said valve rod between and in engagement with said valves for biasing said valves away from each other toward a closed position, said valves prohibiting flow between said second and third zones.
9. A valve in accordance with claim 8 including in addition thereto a head member on opposite ends of said valve rod for retaining said valves on said rod.
10. A valve in accordance with claim 9 including seal means within each of said valves around said rod for seating between each valve and said rod to prevent fluid leakage along said rod through each of said valves.
11. Apparatus for controlling iiuid flow between a plurality of zones comprising: a housing having a bore and a plurality of ow openings into said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means in said housing coacting 'with said openings movable between a plurality of positions for interconnecting selected groups of said openings from said zones; valve means actuating means operable in response to the presence in one of said zones of a selected group for moving said Valve means to one position closing off one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, and operable in response to the pressure in one of the zones of another selected group of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off a second one of said openings and interconnecting the other openings, said valve means being constructed to prevent fiow communication between said one opening 'and said second opening at all times; and second valve means actuating -means operable in response to the pressure in a third one of the .zones other than said one zone and said second zone for moving said -valve means to a position simultaneously closing off the openings to both said one zone and said second zone.
12. Apparatus for controlling fluid flow between a plurality of zones comprising: a housing having a bore and a plurality of iiow openings in said bore, one from each of said zones; valve means in said housing coacting with said openings for selectively interconnecting a first zone and a second zone with a third zone; means operable in response to the pressure in the second of said zones for moving of said valve means to one position closing off the opening to said first zone and communicating the openings to said second and said third zones; means operable in response to the pressure in the first of said zones for moving said valve means to another position closing off the opening to said second zone and communicating the openings to said lirst and said third zones, said valve means having means providing for movement of said valve means to close off flow communication between said openings to said lirst zone and to said second zone at all times; and means responsive to pressure in said third zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously closing ofi both the opening to said first zone and the opening to said second zone.
13. Apparatus of the character set forth in claim 12, and means responsive to pressures in said first zone and said second zone in excess of the pressure in said third zone for moving said valve means to a position simultaneously fiow communicating both said first zone and References Cited STATES PATENTS Fitch 137-112 Hollerth 137-113 Audemar 137-112 said second zone `with said third zone and operable to prevent How between said rst zone and said second zone.
20 2,680,016 6/1954 McLeod 137-112 XR 2,764,175 9/1956 Mericer 137-118 XR 3,008,481 11/1961 Matheson ALAN COHAN, Primary Examiner.
WILLIAM H. WRIGHT, Assistant Examiner.
U.S. C1. X.R. 137-111, 627.5
US445116A 1965-04-02 1965-04-02 Valves Expired - Lifetime US3454029A (en)

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Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3570521A (en) * 1969-02-04 1971-03-16 Western Electric Co Dual pressure range valve
US3896752A (en) * 1973-06-04 1975-07-29 Supramar Ag Hydrofoil for watercraft with lift generation through air supply of the foil underside
US4354518A (en) * 1980-09-08 1982-10-19 Nippon Air Brake Co., Ltd. Diaphragm piston operated valve device
WO1988007231A1 (en) * 1987-03-20 1988-09-22 John Ronald Pain A valve assembly
US4962791A (en) * 1987-09-25 1990-10-16 Mannesmann Rexroth Gmbh Seat valve
US5400823A (en) * 1989-01-13 1995-03-28 Kysor Industrial Corporation Viscous fluid shear clutches and control valves therefor
US6257268B1 (en) 1999-12-01 2001-07-10 Gilmore Valve Company Pressure biased shuttle valve
US6318400B1 (en) 1999-12-01 2001-11-20 Gilmore Valve Company Low interflow hydraulic shuttle valve
US6502640B2 (en) 2000-10-20 2003-01-07 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Hydraulic actuator
US6655405B2 (en) 2001-01-31 2003-12-02 Cilmore Valve Co. BOP operating system with quick dump valve
WO2006034580A1 (en) * 2004-09-27 2006-04-06 Industrial Sound Technologies Inc. System for generating high pressure pulses
US20060162935A1 (en) * 2005-01-25 2006-07-27 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Snorkel Device for Flow Control
US20100154896A1 (en) * 2008-12-20 2010-06-24 Dtl Engineering And Design, L.P. Shuttle valve
US20130037736A1 (en) * 2010-04-26 2013-02-14 Kevin Bresnahan Shuttle valve
CN103453177A (en) * 2013-08-13 2013-12-18 集美大学 Dual-pipeline hydraulic safety valve
US9976663B2 (en) * 2010-05-26 2018-05-22 Petrolvalves S.P.A. Intelligent pressure relief device for a double isolation valve

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US2416091A (en) * 1943-08-23 1947-02-18 Bendix Westinghouse Automotive Fluid pressure control mechanism
US2501941A (en) * 1948-03-13 1950-03-28 Goodrich Co B F Hydraulically actuated brake valve
US2634743A (en) * 1946-02-27 1953-04-14 Audemar Pierre Control valve mechanism
US2680016A (en) * 1950-12-15 1954-06-01 Detroit Harvester Co Power unit
US2764175A (en) * 1952-06-20 1956-09-25 Mercier Jean Gauge cut-off valve
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US2416091A (en) * 1943-08-23 1947-02-18 Bendix Westinghouse Automotive Fluid pressure control mechanism
US2634743A (en) * 1946-02-27 1953-04-14 Audemar Pierre Control valve mechanism
US2501941A (en) * 1948-03-13 1950-03-28 Goodrich Co B F Hydraulically actuated brake valve
US2680016A (en) * 1950-12-15 1954-06-01 Detroit Harvester Co Power unit
US2764175A (en) * 1952-06-20 1956-09-25 Mercier Jean Gauge cut-off valve
US3008481A (en) * 1959-05-22 1961-11-14 George W Dahl Company Inc Differential pressure selector

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3570521A (en) * 1969-02-04 1971-03-16 Western Electric Co Dual pressure range valve
US3896752A (en) * 1973-06-04 1975-07-29 Supramar Ag Hydrofoil for watercraft with lift generation through air supply of the foil underside
US4354518A (en) * 1980-09-08 1982-10-19 Nippon Air Brake Co., Ltd. Diaphragm piston operated valve device
WO1988007231A1 (en) * 1987-03-20 1988-09-22 John Ronald Pain A valve assembly
AU600356B2 (en) * 1987-03-20 1990-08-09 John Ronald Pain A flow equalization device
US4962791A (en) * 1987-09-25 1990-10-16 Mannesmann Rexroth Gmbh Seat valve
US5400823A (en) * 1989-01-13 1995-03-28 Kysor Industrial Corporation Viscous fluid shear clutches and control valves therefor
US6257268B1 (en) 1999-12-01 2001-07-10 Gilmore Valve Company Pressure biased shuttle valve
US6318400B1 (en) 1999-12-01 2001-11-20 Gilmore Valve Company Low interflow hydraulic shuttle valve
US6502640B2 (en) 2000-10-20 2003-01-07 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Hydraulic actuator
US6505684B2 (en) 2000-10-20 2003-01-14 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Hydraulic actuator
US6523613B2 (en) 2000-10-20 2003-02-25 Schlumberger Technology Corp. Hydraulically actuated valve
US6655405B2 (en) 2001-01-31 2003-12-02 Cilmore Valve Co. BOP operating system with quick dump valve
US20040107991A1 (en) * 2001-01-31 2004-06-10 Gilmore Valve Co., Ltd. Bop operating system with quick dump valve
US6779543B2 (en) 2001-01-31 2004-08-24 Gilmore Valve Co., Ltd. BOP operating system with quick dump valve
WO2006034580A1 (en) * 2004-09-27 2006-04-06 Industrial Sound Technologies Inc. System for generating high pressure pulses
US20080256947A1 (en) * 2004-09-27 2008-10-23 Industrial Sound Technologies Inc. System for Generating High Pressure Pulses
US20060162935A1 (en) * 2005-01-25 2006-07-27 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Snorkel Device for Flow Control
US7455114B2 (en) 2005-01-25 2008-11-25 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Snorkel device for flow control
US20100154896A1 (en) * 2008-12-20 2010-06-24 Dtl Engineering And Design, L.P. Shuttle valve
US8397742B2 (en) 2008-12-20 2013-03-19 Dtl Technologies, L.P. Shuttle valve
US20130037736A1 (en) * 2010-04-26 2013-02-14 Kevin Bresnahan Shuttle valve
KR20130092998A (en) * 2010-04-26 2013-08-21 파커-한니핀 코포레이션 Shuttle valve
US8991416B2 (en) * 2010-04-26 2015-03-31 Parker-Hannifin Corporation Shuttle valve
US9976663B2 (en) * 2010-05-26 2018-05-22 Petrolvalves S.P.A. Intelligent pressure relief device for a double isolation valve
CN103453177A (en) * 2013-08-13 2013-12-18 集美大学 Dual-pipeline hydraulic safety valve
CN103453177B (en) * 2013-08-13 2016-01-20 集美大学 A kind of Dual-pipeline hydraulic safety valve

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