WO2013068941A1 - Autonomous variable buoyancy device - Google Patents

Autonomous variable buoyancy device Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2013068941A1
WO2013068941A1 PCT/IB2012/056228 IB2012056228W WO2013068941A1 WO 2013068941 A1 WO2013068941 A1 WO 2013068941A1 IB 2012056228 W IB2012056228 W IB 2012056228W WO 2013068941 A1 WO2013068941 A1 WO 2013068941A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
chamber
immersion portion
cylinder
captation
volume
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/IB2012/056228
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Francesco Fornai
Gabriele FERRI
Giacomo SAVIOZZI
Barbara Mazzolai
Cecilia Laschi
Paolo Dario
Original Assignee
Scuola Superiore Di Studi Universitari E Di Perfezionamento Sant'anna
Fondazione Istituto Italiano Di Tecnologia
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
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Application filed by Scuola Superiore Di Studi Universitari E Di Perfezionamento Sant'anna, Fondazione Istituto Italiano Di Tecnologia filed Critical Scuola Superiore Di Studi Universitari E Di Perfezionamento Sant'anna
Priority to EP12790681.6A priority Critical patent/EP2776310B1/en
Publication of WO2013068941A1 publication Critical patent/WO2013068941A1/en

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B63SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
    • B63BSHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; EQUIPMENT FOR SHIPPING 
    • B63B22/00Buoys
    • B63B22/18Buoys having means to control attitude or position, e.g. reaction surfaces or tether
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B63SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
    • B63GOFFENSIVE OR DEFENSIVE ARRANGEMENTS ON VESSELS; MINE-LAYING; MINE-SWEEPING; SUBMARINES; AIRCRAFT CARRIERS
    • B63G8/00Underwater vessels, e.g. submarines; Equipment specially adapted therefor
    • B63G8/14Control of attitude or depth
    • B63G8/24Automatic depth adjustment; Safety equipment for increasing buoyancy, e.g. detachable ballast, floating bodies

Definitions

  • the present invention refers to a device, independent or to be associated with another structu re, for the passive and the cyclical variation of the buoyancy configuration , that can be used in particular, but not exclusively, in the field of equipment for monitoring the environment.
  • buoys and underwater devices amongst which so called “gliders” (submarine or under water gliders, belonging to the category of autonomous underwater vehicles - AUV), which, being provided with, or associated with, suitable equipment, are capable of autonomously carrying out tasks of detecting and monitoring the environment.
  • gliders submarine or under water gliders, belonging to the category of autonomous underwater vehicles - AUV
  • the object of the present invention is to provide a device for the passive variation of the buoyancy configuration, of the very same device or of a body or structure to which the device is associated, which is both structurally simple and cost-effective, completely autonomous, can be used without particular application limits, and having a predictable control.
  • figure 1 is a split schematic view of a device according to a first embodiment of the invention
  • figure 2 is a schematic axial section view of the upper part, i.e. of a body for capturing solar radiation, of the device of figure 1 ;
  • FIG. 3a and 3b represent schematic sections of the lower part, i.e. of a pneumatic chamber with a variable volume, of an analogous device as that in figure 1 , in a positive buoyancy configuration phase (positive hydrostatic thrust) and in a negative buoyancy configuration phase (negative or neutral hydrostatic thrust), respectively; and
  • FIG. 4a and 4b are schematic sections analogous to the sections in figures 3a and 3b, but referred to a second embodiment of the invention.
  • a device comprises a main body 1 in which, at the base, an immersion portion 2 is intended to remain below the water line in every condition of passive navigation on open water, typically sea, river, lake water.
  • the immersion portion 2 has a deformable configuration , i.e. such as to define an outer variable volume.
  • the bladder configuration of the illustrated embodiment comprising a cup shaped base 21 and a tubular sleeve 22 which is partially housed in a central position inside the cup shaped base 21 and fixedly attached to it through connection means that have not been represented in figures 2, 3a and 3b and that are indicated with 27 in figure 1 .
  • a housing 24 is delimited.
  • the housing 24 is closed, outside the sleeve 22, by a ring-like cap 25, sealingly slidable between the outside of the sleeve and the inside of the cup.
  • the housing 24, pneumatically sealed by means of suitable gaskets, is filled with a substance in a gaseous state, typically ambient air.
  • a perforated diaphragm 26 is coaxially arranged in the housing 24. The diaphragm is integrally movable with the cap 25, so as to obtain a reciprocating piston arrangement.
  • a stem 3 extends centrally in an integral manner, perforating the shutter 23 of the sleeve 22 and penetrating into a cylinder 4, which defines an upper part of the body 1 , like in the example of figure 1 .
  • the cylinder 4 can also be accommodated in an upper shaped portion 1 1 of the body, like in the variant of figures 3a and 3b in which it is the cylinder itself that forms the tubular sleeve 22.
  • the stem 3 supports a sliding plate 41 at the opposite end with respect to the end connected to the diaphragm 26. Due to the plate 41 , inside the cylinder 4 there is formed a chamber 42 with variable volume occupied by an expansible fluid, typically following a transition from the liquid state to the gaseous state (saturated vapour), for example methanol.
  • the plate 41 and congruently a bottom wall of the chamber 42 can be shaped in various ways, for example with matching concavity/convexity like in figure 1 , so as to optimise the fluid dynamic efficiency of the compression/expansion of fluid.
  • the shutter 23 i.e.
  • the cylinder 4 houses a coil spring 5, which is thus compressed, coaxially with respect to the stem 3 and outside it, between the aforementioned plate and shutter.
  • the spring elastically hinders the movement of the plate towards the shutter, that is the movement that corresponds to the increase in volume of the chamber 42.
  • a rod 6 projects coming out from the top of the body 1 so as to rise outside and above the surface of the water in which the device is navigating, at least in a condition of positive hydrostatic thrust, as shall be soon made clearer.
  • the rod 6 ends at the upper (free) end with a member 7 for capturing solar radiation, specifically with a spheroidal shape, preferably surrounded by a shell 8 made from transparent material so as to generate, between the same shell and the sphere member 7, a gap that advantageously is filled with vacuum with the aim of minimising thermal dispersion.
  • the cylinder 4, the rod 6, and the sphere 7 are made from a highly thermal conductive material, for example an aluminium alloy.
  • the sphere 7 is moreover advantageously coloured in black, so as to maximise the absorption of solar radiation.
  • Both the rod 6, and the upper part of the cylinder 4 in the area of the chamber 42 are coated with a layer 9 of thermally insulating material.
  • the device according to the invention thus has an operative behaviour that can be described as follows.
  • the immersion will on the other hand ensure that the chamber 42 is in turn below the water surface, with a consequent increase in the thermal exchange with the outside (heat is yielded towards the outside water).
  • the fluid substance will thus tend to cool down, contracting its volume, and allowing the mechanical energy stored with the contraction of the spring 5 (but also partially with the compression of air in the housing 24, which will now expand) to be liberated, making the device return to the initial configuration.
  • the immersion portion 2 expands, making the hydrostatic thrust increase and inducing the surfacing of the device until the positive buoyancy configuration is reestablished. At this stage with a new heating there will be cyclical reoccurrence of immersion/emersion operations as described above.
  • the mai n aspect of this embodiment consists in restraining means 127 that prevent the downwards movement of the assembly of cap 125, diaphragm 126, stem 103 and plate 141 , until a certain restraining force is overcome (as a result of the expansion force of the fluid in the chamber 142).
  • the restraining means can e.g. include mutually attractive magnets 127a, 127b fixed respectively to the outer (top) face of the cap 125 and the side surface of the tubular sleeve 122.
  • the arrangement is such that in the positive buoyancy configuration (figure 4a), the magnets 127a, 127b are mutually in contact and magnetically coupled. Due to the magnetic force thus exerted, when change in status of the fluid in the chamber 142 starts to occur (as mentioned, following heating through the captation member 107), the corresponding expansion force is not successful in making the plate 141 slide down. As the expansion force progressively increase, the magnetic force is overcome, and this causes an abrupt and impulsive lowering of the above mentioned assembly.
  • the bladder housing 124 in turn quickly reduces its volume to the negative buoyancy configuration (figure 4b), and this impulsive change can be more effective than the progressive change of the first embodiment in that the device can reach deeper below the water surface.
  • the return to the positive buoyancy configuration will follow the same dynamics described for the first embodiment.
  • the proposed solution thus makes it possible to carry out monitoring and sampling campaigns in sea environments with a device that is capable of moving through different sea depths in a completely passive manner, with the propulsion of only solar radiation energy. Any control from outside of any active mechanical or electronic component, or battery means are not required.
  • the proposed device is simple and cost-effective, operatively predictable, and can be applied without particular limitations to a wide array of operation requirements.
  • the device can be made so as to constitute the detection/sampling apparatus itself, with the suitable equipment mounted on the body 1 of the illustrated example configurations, or be mechanically associated with an outer structure/apparatus for which it will act as propulsion means, or even be incorporated in a complex structure, again with the same function.
  • the thermal exchange between solar radiation capturing means and the expansible fluid can occur in different ways from that of the illustrated embodiment.
  • the transmission of heat is not obtained through conduction along the rod 6, but through an actual direct communication between the chamber 42 and the captation member 7, in this case necessarily hollow, through a rod having a tubular structure.
  • the expansion chamber will be in this case a single cavity which extends to the captation member 7 and the fluid will be directly heated mainly inside the same element 7.
  • Such a solution covers any other constructive variant in which it is the chamber itself, through an upwards extension, that defines or integrates the captation means.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Aviation & Aerospace Engineering (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
  • Other Liquid Machine Or Engine Such As Wave Power Use (AREA)
  • Level Indicators Using A Float (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention refers to a device, that is autonomous or that can be associated with another structure, for the passive and the cyclical variation of the buoyancy configuration, which can be used in particular, but not exclusively, in the field of equipment for monitoring the environment.

Description

AUTONOMOUS VARIABLE BUOYANCY DEVICE
DESCRIPTION
Field of the invention
The present invention refers to a device, independent or to be associated with another structu re, for the passive and the cyclical variation of the buoyancy configuration , that can be used in particular, but not exclusively, in the field of equipment for monitoring the environment.
Background of the invention
It is known that increasingly more effort has been going into research concentrating on the development of buoys and underwater devices amongst which so called "gliders" (submarine or under water gliders, belonging to the category of autonomous underwater vehicles - AUV), which, being provided with, or associated with, suitable equipment, are capable of autonomously carrying out tasks of detecting and monitoring the environment.
In such a field, the attention has been particularly focused on the development of systems that are capable of varying the buoyancy configuration of such devices, with the main purpose of allowing sampling and detections to be carried out at different depths.
Some examples of devices that are capable of modifying the buoyancy configuration according to the prior art foresee varying the volume of a chamber due to thermal exchange with sea levels at different temperatures. Devices of this kind are described in Russ E. Davis, et al.: Autonomous Buoyancy-driven Underwater Gliders; The Technology and Applications of Autonomous Underwater Vehicles; 2002 and in Douglas C. Webb et al.: SLOCUM: An Underwater Glider Propelled by Environmental Energy I EEE journal of oceanic engineering, vol. 26, no. 4, October 2001 . In some cases the volume of the chamber is modified by an electric motor that is powered by batteries [Charles C. Eriksen et al: Seaglider: A Long-Range Autonomous Underwater Vehicle for Oceanographic Research; IEEE journal of oceanic engineering, vol. 26, no. 4, October 2001 , and Sekhar Tangirala et al.: A Variable Buoyancy Control System for a Large AUV; IEEE journal of oceanic engineering, vol. 32, no. 4, October 2007]. Similar systems are also disclosed, in which the checking of the volume of a bladder is controlled by a hydraulic system driven by an electric pump [see for example Wen-de Zhao et al.: A Variable Buoyancy System for Long Cruising Range AUV; International Conference on Computer, Mechatronics, Control and Electronic Engineering (CMCE) 2010].
Other systems referring in various ways to the aforementioned principles are shown in patent applications RU2081782 (variation of the buoyancy exploiting the properties of a gas that is p re-compressed in a compartment), RU2153439 and RU2130401 (modification of the buoyancy with a hydraulic-gas accumulator controlled by valves), RU2124457 (bladder containing a fluid which changes state, and therefore volu me, d ue to the d ifference of temperature at the d ifferent sea levels), and US201 1091284 (flexible component which allows the variation of volume of a chamber containing a gas).
All known devices are however limited in terms of operation or application, and/or are affected by constructive complexity, poor flexibility of use (since they are focused on specific applications), lack of or no autonomy, difficulties in the control or the prediction of their motion.
Summary of the invention
The object of the present invention is to provide a device for the passive variation of the buoyancy configuration, of the very same device or of a body or structure to which the device is associated, which is both structurally simple and cost-effective, completely autonomous, can be used without particular application limits, and having a predictable control.
Such objects are achieved with the device according to the present invention, the essential characteristics of which are defined in the first of the attached claims.
Further important characteristics are contained in the dependent claims.
Brief description of the drawings
The characteristics and the advantages of the device for varying the buoyancy configuration according to the present invention shall become clearer from the following description of embodiments thereof given as an example and not for limiting purposes with reference to the attached drawings, in which: figure 1 is a split schematic view of a device according to a first embodiment of the invention;
figure 2 is a schematic axial section view of the upper part, i.e. of a body for capturing solar radiation, of the device of figure 1 ;
- figures 3a and 3b represent schematic sections of the lower part, i.e. of a pneumatic chamber with a variable volume, of an analogous device as that in figure 1 , in a positive buoyancy configuration phase (positive hydrostatic thrust) and in a negative buoyancy configuration phase (negative or neutral hydrostatic thrust), respectively; and
- figures 4a and 4b are schematic sections analogous to the sections in figures 3a and 3b, but referred to a second embodiment of the invention.
With reference to figures from 1 to 3b, a device according to the invention comprises a main body 1 in which, at the base, an immersion portion 2 is intended to remain below the water line in every condition of passive navigation on open water, typically sea, river, lake water. The immersion portion 2 has a deformable configuration , i.e. such as to define an outer variable volume. This result can be achieved with different solutions, like for example but not with limiting purposes the bladder configuration of the illustrated embodiment, comprising a cup shaped base 21 and a tubular sleeve 22 which is partially housed in a central position inside the cup shaped base 21 and fixedly attached to it through connection means that have not been represented in figures 2, 3a and 3b and that are indicated with 27 in figure 1 .
Between the cup shaped base 21 and the tubular sleeve 22, closed by a shutter 23, a housing 24 is delimited. The housing 24 is closed, outside the sleeve 22, by a ring-like cap 25, sealingly slidable between the outside of the sleeve and the inside of the cup. The housing 24, pneumatically sealed by means of suitable gaskets, is filled with a substance in a gaseous state, typically ambient air. A perforated diaphragm 26 is coaxially arranged in the housing 24. The diaphragm is integrally movable with the cap 25, so as to obtain a reciprocating piston arrangement.
From the diaphragm 26 a stem 3 extends centrally in an integral manner, perforating the shutter 23 of the sleeve 22 and penetrating into a cylinder 4, which defines an upper part of the body 1 , like in the example of figure 1 . The cylinder 4 can also be accommodated in an upper shaped portion 1 1 of the body, like in the variant of figures 3a and 3b in which it is the cylinder itself that forms the tubular sleeve 22.
Inside the cylinder 4 the stem 3 supports a sliding plate 41 at the opposite end with respect to the end connected to the diaphragm 26. Due to the plate 41 , inside the cylinder 4 there is formed a chamber 42 with variable volume occupied by an expansible fluid, typically following a transition from the liquid state to the gaseous state (saturated vapour), for example methanol. The plate 41 and congruently a bottom wall of the chamber 42 can be shaped in various ways, for example with matching concavity/convexity like in figure 1 , so as to optimise the fluid dynamic efficiency of the compression/expansion of fluid. Between the plate 41 and the shutter 23, and i.e. on the opposite side with respect to the chamber 42, the cylinder 4 houses a coil spring 5, which is thus compressed, coaxially with respect to the stem 3 and outside it, between the aforementioned plate and shutter. The spring elastically hinders the movement of the plate towards the shutter, that is the movement that corresponds to the increase in volume of the chamber 42.
From the cylinder 4, again with axial development and thus aligned with the stem 3, a rod 6 projects coming out from the top of the body 1 so as to rise outside and above the surface of the water in which the device is navigating, at least in a condition of positive hydrostatic thrust, as shall be soon made clearer. The rod 6 ends at the upper (free) end with a member 7 for capturing solar radiation, specifically with a spheroidal shape, preferably surrounded by a shell 8 made from transparent material so as to generate, between the same shell and the sphere member 7, a gap that advantageously is filled with vacuum with the aim of minimising thermal dispersion.
The cylinder 4, the rod 6, and the sphere 7 are made from a highly thermal conductive material, for example an aluminium alloy. The sphere 7 is moreover advantageously coloured in black, so as to maximise the absorption of solar radiation. Both the rod 6, and the upper part of the cylinder 4 in the area of the chamber 42 are coated with a layer 9 of thermally insulating material.
The device according to the invention thus has an operative behaviour that can be described as follows.
In an initial condition the fluid substance inside the chamber 42 of the cylinder 4 is in a non-expanded condition. The spring 5, or equivalent elastic means, keeps the assembly of plate 41 , stem 3 and diaphragm 26 in a raised position, i.e. displaced towards the upper part of the device. In such a position the ring-like cap 25 is lifted, and therefore the immersion portion 2 has a maxi m u m vol u me . Such a cond ition , represented in figure 3a, generates a maximum hydrostatic thrust, which is in any case positive, such as to lead the device to float on the water surface. This configuration can be referred to as a positive buoyancy configuration.
As the solar radiation hits the captation member 7, heating it, through conduction along the rod 6 there is a heating of the fluid substance contained in the chamber 42. The substance, increasing its temperature, undergoes an expansion, typically through transition from the liquid state to the gas state. Consequently the plate 41 is urged downwards, overcoming the mechanical resistance of the spring 5. Consequently, the diaphragm 26 and the cap 25 are mechanically pushed down, and this causes a contraction of the immersion portion 2, and therefore the reduction of the hydrostatic thrust. The air contained in the bladder housing 24 is correspondingly compressed, contributing, in parallel with the spring, to elastically store a certain amount of mechanical energy. This is the situation of figure 3b, that schematically shows a maximum contraction, and therefore a minimum, below neutral, hydrostatic thrust, which makes the device sink. The configuration can in this case be referred to as a negative buoyancy configuration.
The immersion will on the other hand ensure that the chamber 42 is in turn below the water surface, with a consequent increase in the thermal exchange with the outside (heat is yielded towards the outside water). The fluid substance will thus tend to cool down, contracting its volume, and allowing the mechanical energy stored with the contraction of the spring 5 (but also partially with the compression of air in the housing 24, which will now expand) to be liberated, making the device return to the initial configuration. The immersion portion 2 expands, making the hydrostatic thrust increase and inducing the surfacing of the device until the positive buoyancy configuration is reestablished. At this stage with a new heating there will be cyclical reoccurrence of immersion/emersion operations as described above.
With reference now also to figures 4a and 4b a second embodiment of the device is shown. Parts equal or corresponding to those of the first embodiment bear the same reference nu merals, and wil l not be described again . The mai n aspect of this embodiment consists in restraining means 127 that prevent the downwards movement of the assembly of cap 125, diaphragm 126, stem 103 and plate 141 , until a certain restraining force is overcome (as a result of the expansion force of the fluid in the chamber 142). The restraining means can e.g. include mutually attractive magnets 127a, 127b fixed respectively to the outer (top) face of the cap 125 and the side surface of the tubular sleeve 122.
The arrangement is such that in the positive buoyancy configuration (figure 4a), the magnets 127a, 127b are mutually in contact and magnetically coupled. Due to the magnetic force thus exerted, when change in status of the fluid in the chamber 142 starts to occur (as mentioned, following heating through the captation member 107), the corresponding expansion force is not successful in making the plate 141 slide down. As the expansion force progressively increase, the magnetic force is overcome, and this causes an abrupt and impulsive lowering of the above mentioned assembly. The bladder housing 124 in turn quickly reduces its volume to the negative buoyancy configuration (figure 4b), and this impulsive change can be more effective than the progressive change of the first embodiment in that the device can reach deeper below the water surface. The return to the positive buoyancy configuration will follow the same dynamics described for the first embodiment.
Of course the design choices, amongst which in particular the dimensional proportions between the various components, the calibration of the spring, of the magnets in the second embodiment, the characteristics of the fluids, will determine the functional characteristics of the device in terms of depth of immersion and frequency of the cycle, according to what can of course be implemented according to the specific requirements.
The proposed solution thus makes it possible to carry out monitoring and sampling campaigns in sea environments with a device that is capable of moving through different sea depths in a completely passive manner, with the propulsion of only solar radiation energy. Any control from outside of any active mechanical or electronic component, or battery means are not required. The proposed device is simple and cost-effective, operatively predictable, and can be applied without particular limitations to a wide array of operation requirements. For such a purpose, it should be noted that the device can be made so as to constitute the detection/sampling apparatus itself, with the suitable equipment mounted on the body 1 of the illustrated example configurations, or be mechanically associated with an outer structure/apparatus for which it will act as propulsion means, or even be incorporated in a complex structure, again with the same function.
The thermal exchange between solar radiation capturing means and the expansible fluid can occur in different ways from that of the illustrated embodiment. For example, in a variant embodiment the transmission of heat is not obtained through conduction along the rod 6, but through an actual direct communication between the chamber 42 and the captation member 7, in this case necessarily hollow, through a rod having a tubular structure. In practice, the expansion chamber will be in this case a single cavity which extends to the captation member 7 and the fluid will be directly heated mainly inside the same element 7. Such a solution covers any other constructive variant in which it is the chamber itself, through an upwards extension, that defines or integrates the captation means.
The present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof. It should be understood that there can be other embodiments which all belong to the same inventive core, all within the scope of the following claims.

Claims

1 . A variable buoyancy device comprising:
an immersion portion (2) having a variable outer volume, adapted to be under the water level in any condition when the device passively floats in sea, river or lake water;
a variable volume chamber (42) housing a fluid, said chamber (42) being in a mechanical relationship with said immersion portion (2), such that, to an increase in volume of said chamber (42), as a result of an expansion of said fluid, there responds a reduction in the outer volume of said immersion portion (2), and vice versa, with a consequent variation of buoyancy of the device, said variation being adapted to, when the outer volume of the immersion portion (2) decreases, to bring also said chamber (42) at least partially under the water line of the device;
elastic means (5) arranged between said chamber (42) and said immersion portion (2), adapted to elastically hinder the volume increase of said chamber (42);
solar radiation capturing means (7) arranged above said immersion portion, associated or integrated with said chamber (42) and in a relationship of thermal exchange with said fluid so as to heat it and induce said expansion.
2. The device according to claim 1 , wherein said solar radiation capturing means comprise at least one captation member (7) and a rod (6) mechanically connecting said member (7) to said chamber (42), said member (7), said rod (6) and at least part of the walls defining said chamber (42) being made of a thermally conductive material.
3. The device according to claim 1 , wherein said solar radiation capturing means comprise at least one hollow captation member, communicated with said chamber (42) and occupied by said fluid.
4. The device according to claim 3, wherein said captation member and said chamber (42) are connected by a tubular rod.
5. The device according to claim 2 or 4, wherein said rod (6) and said chamber (42) are provided with an external lining (9) in a thermally insulating material.
6. The device according to any of the claims from 2 to 5, wherein said captation member (7) has a dark colored surface and is enclosed by a shell (8) made of a material transparent to the solar radiation, said shell (8) and said member (7) being distanced so as to define a gap in which a depression is formed.
7. The device according to any of the claims from 2 to 6, wherein said captation member (7) has a spheroidal shape.
8. The device according to any of the previous claims, wherein said chamber (42) and said immersion portion are operatively connected by a sliding piston arrangement (41 ,
3, 26) comprising a plate (41 ) sealingly sliding within a hollow cylinder (4), said chamber (44) being defined by said cylinder (4) and said plate (41 ).
9. The device according to claim 8, wherein said immersion portion (2) comprises a cup shaped base (21 ), said cylinder (4, 22) being at least partially housed inside said base (21 ) in a central position and integrally therewith, a housing (24) being formed between said base (21 ) and said cylinder (4, 22), said cylinder (4, 22) being closed by a fixed shutter (23) externally to said chamber (42); said housing (42) being closed by an annular sliding cap (25) movable integrally with a perforated diaphragm (26) of said piston arrangement, said perforated diaphragm (26) being movable within said cup shaped base (21 ), the piston arrangement further comprising a stem (3) passing through said shutter (23) and connecting said plate (41 ) and said diaphragm (26).
10. The device according to claim 9, wherein said elastic means comprise a spring (5) arranged between said plate (41 ) and said shutter (23) around said stem (3).
1 1 . The device according to any of the previous claims, comprising restraining means (127) adapted to oppose the expansion of said chamber (141 ) until a predetermined restraining force is overcome.
12. The device according to claim 1 1 , wherein said restraining means (127) comprise mutually attractive magnetic means (127a, 127b) .
13. The device according to claim 9, comprising magnetic restraining means (127) adapted oppose the expansion of said chamber (141 ) until a predetermined restraining force is overcome, said magnetic restraining means (127) comprising mutually attractive magnets (127a, 127b) fixed respectively to an outer face of said cap (125) and to an outer side surface of said cylinder (104, 122).
PCT/IB2012/056228 2011-11-10 2012-11-07 Autonomous variable buoyancy device WO2013068941A1 (en)

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ITFI2011A000246 2011-11-10
IT000246A ITFI20110246A1 (en) 2011-11-10 2011-11-10 DEVICE FOR PASSIVE AND CYCLIC VARIATION OF THE FLOAT STRUCTURE

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN105823862A (en) * 2016-05-26 2016-08-03 句容市万福达工艺品厂 Overwater monitoring device based on solar energy and wave energy generating set
CN106240756A (en) * 2016-08-26 2016-12-21 常熟中德重机有限公司 A kind of shock resistance type combination type buoy

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