Mass levitator with energy conversion
09745952 · 2017-08-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
F03G3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10S415/916
GENERAL 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
F03B17/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02B63/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G7/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B17/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The various embodiments disclosed herein provide a generalized system for extracting gravitational energy from the planet and provide for a general, pollution free, mass lifting and energy conversion system in which the laws of fluid flow, and in particular buoyancy and gravity are utilized to lift an arbitrary mass to a higher gravitational potential energy, where upon the increased potential energy can be converted to other forms of energy. Novel and non-obvious features of the fluid interface device, used to insert the buoyant object into the buoyant fluid, insure that the insertion energy is less than the potential energy gained by the object. The net increase in potential energy can be converted to other forms of energy such as electrical power or mechanical energy. It is shown in that energy gain is effectively extracted from the gravitational field of the planet without breaking the laws of conservation of energy.
Claims
1. A fluid interface device comprising: an upper-swing-check-valve; a lower-swing-check-valve; a chamber between the upper-swing-check-valve and lower-swing-check-valve; a high-pressure-equalization-tube in fluid communication with a region above the upper-swing-check-valve and the chamber, the high-pressure-equalization-tube including a high-pressure-valve configured to selectively adjust relative fluid pressure between the region above the upper-swing-check-valve and the chamber; and a low-pressure-equalization-tube in fluid communication with the chamber and a region below the lower-swing-check-valve, the low-pressure-equalization-tube including a low-pressure-valve configured to selectively adjust relative fluid pressure between the chamber and the region below the lower-swing-check-valve.
2. A fluid interface device as in claim 1 wherein: the lower-swing-check-valve is configured to open when the low-pressure-valve is open, when the high-pressure-valve is closed, and when a buoyant-object applies upward force against the lower-swing-check-valve; the lower-swing-check-valve is configured to close after the buoyant-object passes the lower-swing-check-valve; the upper-swing-check-valve is configured to open when the high-pressure-valve is open and when the buoyant-object applies upward force against the upper-swing-check-valve; and the upper-swing-check-valve is configured to close after the buoyant-object passes the upper-swing-check-valve.
3. A fluid interface device comprising: at least two fluid tight and pressure tight doors for connecting an initial fluid region and an adjacent fluid region, and substantially maintaining relative fluid separation and pressure differential between the initial fluid region and the adjacent fluid region, a first of the doors connected to and in fluid communication with the initial fluid region, and a second of the doors connected to and in fluid communication with the adjacent fluid region; and means for transiting material objects, located in the initial fluid region, out of the initial fluid region and into the adjacent fluid region while substantially maintaining relative fluid separation and relative pressure between the initial fluid region and the adjacent fluid region; wherein the fluid doors substantially maintain fluid and pressure separation between the initial fluid region and the adjacent fluid region when at least one of the doors is closed; wherein the fluid doors permit transit of a material object into and out of a central chamber located between the two doors, the two doors and central chamber configured to enclose an entire volume of a material object when the two doors are closed; wherein the two doors and central chamber are configured to contain and substantially prevent fluid leakage when the doors are closed; and means for substantially equalizing fluid pressure within the central chamber to a pressure of the initial fluid region or the adjacent fluid region to allow a material object to be transited between the initial and adjacent fluid regions while maintaining pressure differentials between the initial and adjacent regions.
4. A fluid interface device as in claim 3 wherein the means for transiting and urging material objects includes a motive force substantially supplied by forces of buoyancy and gravity.
5. A fluid interface device as in claim 3 further including: a fluid replacement means for replacing fluid in the initial fluid region with the fluid from the adjacent fluid region when the amount of fluid in the initial fluid region and the adjacent fluid region differ; and a fluid pressurization means for equalizing fluid pressure between the central chamber and either the initial fluid region or the adjacent fluid region.
6. A fluid interface device as in claim 3 wherein the initial fluid region is a light fluid region and the adjacent fluid region is a dense fluid region; and the fluid interface device further including one or more buoyant material objects, the buoyant material objects being buoyant in the adjacent fluid region and sinking in the initial fluid region.
7. A fluid interface device as in claim 6 wherein the means for transiting and urging material objects further includes: gravitational and buoyancy forces supplied from aggregated buoyancy and gravitational weight of a plurality of buoyant material objects stacked on top of each other, each of the buoyant material objects being buoyant in the adjacent fluid region and sinking in initial fluid region; wherein the weight of the plurality of stacked buoyant material objects located in the initial fluid region supplies a motive force to submerge and urge one or more of the buoyant material objects within the stack to move out of the light fluid and into the dense fluid, where thereafter buoyant material objects rise upward and out of the fluid interface device under the motive force of buoyancy.
8. A fluid interface device as in claim 3 wherein the initial fluid region is a dense fluid region and the adjacent fluid region is a light fluid region; and further including one or more buoyant material objects, the buoyant material objects being buoyant in the initial fluid region and sinking in the adjacent fluid region.
9. A fluid interface device as in claim 8 wherein the means for transiting and urging material objects further includes: gravitational and buoyancy forces supplied from aggregated buoyancy and gravitational weight of a plurality of buoyant material objects stacked on top of each other, each of the buoyant material objects being buoyant in the initial fluid region, and sinking in the adjacent fluid region; wherein the buoyancy of the plurality of stacked buoyant material objects located in the initial fluid region supplies a motive force to levitate and urge one or more of the buoyant material objects within the stack to move out of the initial fluid region and into the adjacent fluid region, where thereafter the buoyant material objects sink downward and out of the fluid interface device under the motive force of gravity.
10. A fluid interface device as in claim 3 wherein the means for substantially equalizing fluid pressure includes: an initial-to-chamber-equalization-tube that connects to and is in fluid communication with the initial fluid region and the central chamber; an initial-to-chamber-valve coupled to the initial-to-chamber-equalization-tube and configured to stop or permit fluid flow through the initial-to-chamber-equalization-tube; an adjacent-to-chamber-equalization-tube that connects to and is in fluid communication with the central chamber and the adjacent fluid region; an adjacent-to-chamber-valve coupled to the adjacent-to-chamber-equalization-tube and configured to stop or permit fluid flow through said adjacent-to-chamber-equalization-tube; and means for controlling the initial-to-chamber-valve and the adjacent-to-chamber-valve to stop and permit fluid flow into the central chamber from the initial fluid region and the adjacent fluid region to allow the central chamber's fluid pressure to be equalized to either the initial fluid region's pressure or the adjacent fluid region's pressure.
11. A fluid interface device comprising: two fluid tight doors between a first fluid region and a second fluid region, the doors configured to substantially maintain relative fluid pressure differential between the first fluid region and the second fluid region, a first of the doors coupled to and in fluid communication with the first fluid region, and a second of the doors coupled to and in fluid communication with the second fluid region; the doors configured to permit transit of an object into and out of a central chamber located between the two doors, the two doors and central chamber configured to enclose an entire volume of the object when the two doors are closed; a first conduit in fluid communication with the first fluid region and the central chamber; a first valve coupled to the first conduit and configured to stop or permit fluid flow through the first conduit; a second conduit in fluid communication with the central chamber and the second fluid region; and a second valve coupled to the second conduit and configured to stop or permit fluid flow through the second conduit.
12. A fluid interface device as in claim 11 wherein the object is configured to encapsulate other items while still remaining buoyant.
13. A fluid interface device as in claim 11 wherein the object is at least partially magnetic.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The foregoing will be apparent from the following more particular description of example embodiments of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating embodiments of the present invention.
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FIGURE ITEMS NUMBERS AND PART DESIGNATORS
(73) TABLE-US-00001 Item number FIG.(s) Item or part designator Description/Notes 16 1C, 2, 3 bottom-FID Generalized Fluid Interface Device located at the bottom of an embodiment. 17 1C, 2, 3 top-FID Generalized Fluid Interface Device located at the top of an embodiment. 18 1C, 2 bottom-FID-door-to-light- entrance/exit door to the light fluid 22 fluid contained in the bottom Fluid Interface Device 19 1C, 2 top-FID-door-to-light-fluid entrance/exit door to the light fluid 22 contained in the top Fluid Interface Device 20 4F, 5A-5D, 6 lower-swing-check-valve lower swing check valve - part of the compression decompression chamber or fluid-interface-mechanism. 21 1C, 2, 3 dense-fluid the dense fluid, in which the buoyant- object is buoyant, usually water 22 1C, 2, 3 light-fluid or less-dense- the light fluid, in which the buoyant- fluid object will sink, usually gaseous, and commonly air; can be pressurized in some embodiments 24 1C, 2, 3 energy-conversion-system the embodiment's energy conversion system, these are often optional, and are used to convert the motion (kinetic energy) of the buoyant-object to mechanical or electrical energy (power) 25 4F, 5A-5D, 6 upper-swing-check-valve top most swing check valve 28 1C, 2 bottom-FID-door-to-dense- In the bottom Fluid Interface Device, fluid the door in the FID leading to the dense fluid 29 1C, 2 top-FID-door-to-dense-fluid In the top Fluid Interface Device, the door in the FID leading to the dense fluid 30 4F, 5A-5D, 6, compression- Tube that connects the upper and 15A, 16A decompression-tube lower swing check valves (20, 25) and forms the inner walls of the compression-decompression-chamber 105 35 6, 7E, 17A17C, downtube-dense-fluid-level Water level in the downtube at the 18A, 18C, or dense-fluid to less-dense-fluid 19A, light-fluid-to-dense-fluid- interface also known as the lower- 19C, 20, interface fluid-interface 21A if the dense-fluid is water, and light-fluid is air: downtube-water-level or air-to-water-interface 40 2, 6, 7E, downtube Region between upper and lower 8, 17A, transitions. Filled with the less-dense- 18A, 19A, fluid (e.g. air), in which the buoyant- 20, 21A object sinks and falls rapidly with an acceleration close to g (32 ft/sec.sup.2). Downtube can act as the guided- means for the buoyant-objects decent and may guide the buoyant-object 75 into the lower transition and across the lower-fluid-interface. 45 4F, 5A-5D, electronic-low-pressure- Used to equalize pressure to that of 6, 7C, fluid-valve the lower transition 7D, 7E, 17A, 17C, 18A, 18C, 19A, 19C 50 4F, 5A-5D, electronic-high-pressure- Used to equalize pressure to that of 6, 7C, fluid-valve the uptube 7D, 7E, 17A, 17C, 18A, 18C, 19A, 19C 55 4F, 5A-5D, lower-pressure- Used to connect compression 6, 7C, equalization-tube chamber to the downtube for 7D, 7E, decompression 17A, 17C, 18A, 18C, 19A, 19C 60 4F, 5A-5D, 6, high-pressure-equalization- Used to connect compression- 17A-17H tube decompression chamber to the uptube for compression of the chamber 65 17A, 18A, uptube-secondary-flow-pipe Used to provide for a continuous path for fluid flow from the upper levels of the uptube 70 to its connection again at the bottom of uptube 70 70 1C, 2, uptube a tubular pipe of sufficient diameter 15A-15H, to enclose, contain, and permit 16A-16M, passage of a multiplicity of buoyant- 17A-17C, objects 75. Uptube 70 also contains 18A-18C and encloses the dense working fluid in which buoyant-objects 75 are buoyant. often filled with water or water with a solvent such as salt. 75 1C, 2, 4E, buoyant-object Object that is levitated by apparatus 5A-D, which is buoyant or partially buoyant 6, 7E, 8, in at least one dense fluid, and may 10A-E, sink in the less dense fluid if there is 15A, 15D, a less dense fluid. Can encapsulate 15E, 16A, arbitrary matter such as one or more 16C, magnetic arrays that are fixed in the 16D, 16F, 16H, buoyant-object. May include one or 16J, 16L, more closures or doors which can 16M accommodate other arbitrary 17A, 18A, objects/matter such as cars, water, 19A, 20, water with ships, water with fish, etc. 21A, 22A Usually made to be somewhat streamlined so as to reduce fluid drag and to follow internal guided-means when such guided-means are present. 80 9, induction-coil One or more Induction coils usually 17A, 18A, circumferentially surrounding the 21A downtube, but which may also be present on the uptube. Used to induce electrical pulses from magnetic arrays in buoyant-object. 85 9, 17A, pulse-conversion-subsystem Converts induction coil pulses to 18A, 21A continuous single, 3 phase or dc current as required. 90 9, 17A, electrical-output pulse conversion output 18A, 21A 100 8, uptube-dense-fluid-level The point at the top of the uptube 70 15A, 16A, or where the water ends and the air (less 17A, 18A, dense-fluid-to-light-fluid- dense fluid) begins. Water level in 19A, 20, interface uptube fluctuates slightly as a 21A if the dense-fluid is water, function of time. and light-fluid is air: uptube-water-level or water-to-air-interface 105 4F, 5A-5D, 6 compression- Compression/Decompression decompression-chamber Chamber consisting of check valves 20, 25, tube 30, and associated fluid valves 45 and 50 106 7C, 7D, 23A, electronic-compression- Electronically actuated Compression/ 24A decompression-chamber Decompression Chamber consisting of check valves 20, 25, tube 30, and associated fluid valves 45 and 50 107 36 compression- Senses pressure in the compression- decompression-chamber- decompression chamber and reports pressure-sensor to electronic control equipment 120 110 17A, 18A lower-transition-expansion- Stores water and water pressure tank generated by falling buoyant-object. Recovers some portion of the buoyant-objects kinetic energy acquired during its decent 117 6, 17A, solenoid-timing-motion- Provides timing and guided means 17C, 18A, control-rod control to regulate timing and in 18C, 19A, some cases direct buoyant-object 75 19C, 20, motion. 22 120 15A-15H, electronic-control- Computer Control, timing, positions 16A-16M, equipment of buoyant-objects, and generic 17A-17H measurement and recording system. Measures fluid levels, temperatures, pressures, electrical output and state of external controls such as emergency stop buttons. 125 15A-15H, control-cables Control system wiring to all control 16A-16M, points and sensors in system; also 17A, 18A, supplies electric power when 19A, 20A, required. 21A, 22, 23A, 24A 130 1C, 2, structural-supports Various structural supports for 15A-15H, apparatus 16A-16M, 17A-17C 18A-18C 19A, 20A, 21A, 22A, 23A, 24A 135 15A-15H, elevated-fluid-reservoir Storage for water at top of apparatus 17A-17C which is used when refilling uptube 18A-18C during operation, used as necessary 19A-19C, 20, 21A, 21C, 22 137 16A dam-structural-wall 140 15A-15H, reservoir-electronic-control- Electronic water control valve to 17A-17C valve control water flow from system 18A-18C elevated reservoir which is actuated 19A-19C, via computer control electronics 120 20, 21A, 21C, 22 145 15A-15H, reservoir-fill-pipe Fill pipe connecting system reservoir 17A-17C to top of apparatus 18A-18C 19A-19C, 20, 21A, 21C, 22 150 15A-15H, upper-access-hatch Permits entry and exit into upper 17A-17C transition. 18A-18C 19A-19C, 20, 21A, 21C, 22 160 15A-15H, electronic-water-drain-valve Electronic system drain valve 16A-16M 162 18A high-pressure-electronic- water-drain-valve 165 17A, 18A downtube-water-level- Water level sensor in downtube sensor 170 23A-23H uptube-water-level-sensor Water level sensor in uptube 175 15A-15H, water-pump Optional water pump to lift water to 17A, 18A, reservoir; Computer controlled pump 19, 20, 21, 22 180 15A-15H, water-pump-pipe Pipe from water pump to reservoir 17A, 18A, 19, 20, 21, 22 182 19A water-pump-suction-pipe 185 15A-15H, pump-shutoff-valve Optional water pump shutoff valve 17A, 18A, Computer controlled 19, 20, 21, 22 187 15A-15H, water-pump-to-public- 17A, 18A, source-pipe 19, 20, 21, 22 190 19A low-elevation-water-source 195 19A elevated-water 200 17A, 18A lower-expansion-tank- Lower check valve to ensure one way check-valve water flow into lower transition expansion tank 215 15A-15H, upper-transition guided-means to transition buoyant- 17A-17C object 75 from uptube to downtube; 18A-18C may contain the dense fluid to less 19A-19C, dense fluid interface. If this fluid 20, 21A, interface is from water to air it may 21C, 22 not be pressurize (e.g. water and air meet at atmospheric pressure levels in FIG. 8). 216 19A optional-fluid-filtration- an optional fluid filtration system system such as reverse osmosis to purify water. May be useful to eliminate salt from ocean or sea water for use in cities and farm irrigation 220 17A, 18A lower-access-hatch Entry into apparatus located in the lower-transition. Used to repair and replace system parts when necessary. 230 17A, 18A expansion-tank-output- control-valve 240 17A, 18A external-water-supply water supply for apparatus either from a public water municipality or from other external water supply such as a near-by lake or stream 245 5A-5D, 6, lower-transition region in apparatus containing 17A, 18A unpressurized dense fluid, it extends from the air-water interface in the downtube to the flapper of lower- swing-check valve 20 255 17A, 18A expansion-in-pipe Pipe connecting expansion pipe to lower transition 265 15A-15H public-private-fluid-disposal Public/private fluid disposal (e.g. sewer storm drain for water) 270 15A-15H bottom-landing-pad Landing pad which stops buoyant- 16A-16M object's decent at bottom of Compression-Decompression chamber, also serves as stabilized base when loading objects into buoyant-objects, at same height as entry ramp 275 15A-15H uptube-ceiling Top of Uptube forming a Ceiling 16A-16M which stops further elevation of the buoyant-object 280 1C, 2, ground-level reference point elevation from which 15A-15H buoyant-object increase in elevation is measured; generally the mean local elevation of the surrounding landscape 285 15A-15H water-tight entry-door Sealable water tight door into elevator Compression- Decompression Chamber 325 290 17A emergency-stop-means Emergency stop solenoid rods to stop buoyant-object dropping and to adjust drop timing 295 15A emergency-stop-switch FIG. 17A: cuts power to electrical output circuits, inserts rods into downtube to prevent next buoyant- object drop, regulates timing of buoyant-objects 305 15A-15H water-dump-pipe Pipe to public sewer or water sink 265 from apparatus 310 15A-15H exit-ramp Downward sloping ramp from water elevator exit 335 to elevated landmass/structure, permitting contents of buoyant-object to be removed from buoyant-object 70 315 15A-15H elevated-landmass-structure an elevated landmass or the top of a building structure that the buoyant- object will be levitated to. 320 15A-15H, elevated-water-fill-pipe pipe from elevated water to uptube 70. Used to refill uptube and entry chamber 325 15A-15H, elevator-compression- Primary fluid interface device for 16A-M decompression-chamber water elevator embodiment; chamber where water is filled to lift buoyant- object after arbitrary mass has been placed inside buoyant-object; interfaces water in uptube to air environment where buoyant-object can be loaded 365; composed of swing check valve 370, compression- decompression-tube 365, high- pressure-equalization-tube 60, and attached electronic control valves 50 and 160. 330 4E, standing-column-of-water Standing Column of Water 15A-15H or 16A-16M standing-column-of-dense- fluid 335 15A-15H top-exit-door Top exit from water elevator 340 15A-15H, top-landing-pad Landing pad which stops buoyant- 16A-16M object's 75 ascent at top of uptube 70, also serves as shock absorbing cushion, designed to make buoyant- object door align with height as top exit ramp 310 345 15A-15H, buoyant-object-door Door of buoyant-object 75 16A-16M 350 15A-15H car-embodiment-of-an- Arbitrary mass represented by car, arbitrary-mass that is encapsulated in buoyant-object of FIG. 10D, 10E 352 10E ship-embodiment-of-an- Arbitrary mass represented by ship, 16A-16M arbitrary-mass that is encapsulated in buoyant-object of FIG. 10E 355 15A-15H lower-water-level-sensor Water level sensor in compression- 16A-16M decompression chamber 325 360 15A-15H swing-check-valve-flapper flapper of a swing check valve 16A-16M 365 15A-15H compression- water tube connecting the swing 16A-16M decompression-tube check valve to the bottom-landing- pad 270 370 15A-15H electronic-elevator-swing- swing check valve at top of elevator 16A-16M check-valve embodiment compression decompression chamber 325 375 15A-15H buoyant-object-ballast Buoyant-object ballast used to 16A-16M modify the buoyancy (buoyance force vector) of the buoyant-object 75, ballast can be any heavy mass like water. Use of water for ballast permits changes in object buoyancy when the water level in the ballast tanks are changed. This item becomes a ballast tank with a variable amount of water when water or other fluid is used as the ballast 376 15A-15H buoyant-object-ballast-tank Buoyant-object ballast tank used to modify the buoyancy (buoyance force vector) of the buoyant-object 75, ballast can be any heavy mass like water. Use of water for ballast permits changes in object buoyancy when the water level in the ballast tanks are changed. This item becomes a ballast tank with a variable amount of water when water or other fluid is used as the ballast 380 15A-15H car-at-ground-level car at ground level before it is lifted to the elevated-landmass-structure 315 385 15A-15H elevated-car car on elevated-landmass-structure 315 after exit from apparatus 390 15A-15H system-operator operator of the apparatus, who 16A-16M commands the apparatus to change 17A, 18A states 395 15A-15H system-display-gui system display and graphic user 16A-16M interface that provides touch panel, 17A, 18A keyboard, and mouse interfaces to electronic control equipment 120 via controls cables 125 and is utilized and controlled by system operator 390 400 15A-15H swing-check-actuator an electronically activated check 16A-16M valve flapper opening and closing mechanism, shown here as an electronic solenoid whose rod works with a sliding mechanism to open or close the check valve as needed. 405 15A-15H moderately-elevated-water- a moderately-elevated-water-source source used to refill elevator-compression- decompression-chamber 325 instead of using the water source at the top of the water elevator 410 15A-15H, ballast-tank-water-valve Valve to increase or decrease water 16A-16M, ballast in buoyant-object 75′ 10D, 10E 415 10D, 10E, buoyant-object-power- Induction coil in buoyant-object 75; 15A-15H induction-coil inductively transfers power and 16A-16M control signal to buoyant-object control valve to open valve which increases or decreases the water ballast 420 15A-15H lower-power-induction-coil Lower power Induction coil; transfers 16A-16M power and control signal into buoyant-object induction coil, which in turn controls valve in buoyant- object to open valve which increases or decreases the water ballast. Power & control signal issued by electronic- control-equipment through control cable 125 425 15A-15H upper-power-induction-coil Upper power Induction coil; transfers 16A-16M power and control signal to buoyant- object induction coil, which in turn controls valve in buoyant-object to open valve which increases or decreases the water ballast. Power & control signal issued by electronic- control-equipment through control cable 125 430 15A, 15B mechanical-stop used to prevent buoyant-object 75 15D, from prematurely descending when 15F15G, taking on additional water in the 16A, 16B, ballast tank 375 16D, 16G, 16F, 16H, 16I 435 17A-17H moderately-elevated-water- pipe connecting the moderately source-pipe elevated water source to the elevator compress-decompression chamber 325 via water valve 440. 440 17A-17H moderately-elevated-water- moderately-elevated-water-source- source-valve valve 445 17A-17H water-pump-intake-pipe pipe attaching to water pump and other end connecting to the water source 455 16A, 16B, unelevated-ship ship before it has been elevated by 16G, 16F, 16H, water elevator. 16I, 16J, 16L 460 16A-16M wall-of-dam wall of dam which holds back water 465 16A-16M uptube-water-fill-valve electronic water fill valve, that when open, permits water to enter the uptube from water at the top of the dam. 470 16A-16M dam-wall-extension- an elevated water extension and overhang overhang to the dam wall to permit the ship to exit the water elevator into an elevated water channel that is in fluid communication with the water of the dam 475 16A-16M upper-ship-channel an elevated water channel that ship exits to when elevator is opened, water channel is in fluid communication with the rest of the dam water 480 16A-16M upper-power-induction-coil- Upper power Induction coil; dam inductively transfers power and control signal to buoyant-object induction coil, which in turn controls valve in buoyant-object to open valve which increases or decreases the water ballast. Power & control signal issued by electronic-control- equipment through control cable 125. The dam embodiment upper power induction coil opens valve only until buoyant-object sinks to the elevation of the mechanical stop. The mechanical stop ensures that the valve is closed before complete emersion of the capsule. 485 16A-16M top-lock-gate lock gate at top of ship elevator 490 16A-16M elevated-ship ship embodiment of arbitrary mass that has been elevated to the top of dam 495 16A-16M ship-embodiment-of-an- arbitrary-mass 500 16A-16M lower-ship-channel consists of the lower ship channel that is in fluid communication with the interior of elevator-compression- decompression-chamber 325 when lock-gate-to-compression- decompression-chamber is open 505 16A-16M lock-gate-to-compression- lock-gate-to-compression- decompression-chamber decompression-chamber 506 12B, 13B, 18A-18C buoyant-object-ellipsoid- buoyant-object which is shaped as a dual-magnetic-array ellipse with an internal magnetic array 507 13A, 13C buoyant-object-sphere- buoyant-object which is shaped as a magnetic-array ellipse with an internal magnetic array 521 11A-11C buoyant-object-flapper swing check valve flapper in a buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber 522 11A-11C buoyant-object-flapper- swing check valve flapper pivot in a pivot buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber 523 11A-11C buoyant-object-flapper- swing check valve flapper weight in a weight buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber, optional weighted for flapper ensures prompt closure and opening of internal swing check valve so as to quickly permit exit and entrance of dense fluid 524 11A-11C buoyant-object-flapper- swing check valve flapper ledge in a ledge buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber 525 11A-11C buoyant-object-ellipse- buoyant-object which is shaped as a water-chamber ellipse with an internal water chamber and gravity lid closures 526 11A-11C buoyant-object-light-fluid- entry-exit point for light fluid into entry-exit swing check valve in a buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber 527 11A-11C buoyant-object-dense-fluid- exit-entry point for dense fluid into entry-exit swing check valve in a buoyant object designed to lift and contain water in an internal chamber 528 10A-10C, buoyant-object-light-inner- inner core of buoyant object being 11A-11C core less dense than water 529 10A-10C, buoyant-object-dense-shell buoyant object hard outer core 11A-11C 530 7A-7E solenoid-rod the rod that moves in and out of a solenoid coil to actuate movement 535 7A-7E solenoid-coil the coil of wire that when energized by an electric current draws the solenoid into the coil so as to cause a movement of the solenoid rod 540 4A-4F, check-valve-flapper-pivot pivot point for swing check valve 5A-5D, flapper 7A-7E 545 4A-4F, check-valve-body body of swing check valve usually 5A-5D, often composed of metal or plastic 7A-7E 550 4A-4F, check-valve-flapper flapper of swing check valve used to 5A-5D, stop water flowing through swing 7A-7E check valve, rests against ledge and used in combination with seal 560 555 4A-4F, manual-swing-check-valve A manual swing check valve consisting of the swing check-valve- body 545, check-valve-flapper 550, check-valve-flapper-pivot 540, the check-valve-seal 560, and the check- valve-ledge 565. A three dimensional (3-D) front view of single swing check valve 555 is shown in FIG. 4A, its corresponding 3-D sectional view is shown in FIG. 4B, and its two dimensional cross section is shown in FIG. 4C, and FIG. 4D. 556 17A, 18A swing-check-valve-with- The manual swing check valve 555 float where the flapper is buoyant and or when installed in an inverted position emergency-fluid-stop will close shut when water or other dense fluid in which said flapper is buoyant begins to fill said swing check valve. This device is used to prevent fluid from rising beyond the buoyant flapper and in particular is often used in this application to as an emergency stop mechanism to prevent fluid from filling the normally empty downtube 70. 557 7A-7D, electronic-swing-check- The manual swing check valve 555 18A, 18C valve where the flapper can be opened or closed via electronic means, such as a solenoid. 560 4A-4F, check-valve-flapper-seal Sealing means to substantially limit 5A-5D, fluid leakage from the attached check 7A-7E, valve. Especially useful when the check valve is holding up a significant quantity of water and is subject to a large pressure differential between the top of the flapper and the bottom of the check valve flapper. 565 4A-4F, check-valve-flapper-ledge Ledge built into check valve body 5A-5D, 545 that the check valve flapper rests 7A-7E, on when closed, and which the check valve flapper seal rests on when sealing out the fluid and pressure above the flapper. 570 7A-7E, check-valve-sliding-means sliding means attached to the check valve flapper used by in the example electronic 557check valve for the solenoid rod to open and close the flapper 576 12A-12J buoyant-object-inner- magnet-tube 577 12A-12J buoyant-object-inner- buoyant object with an inner magnet magnet 580 12A, 13D, buoyant-object-ellipsoid- elliptical buoyant object with one one-magnet internal magnet 582 12C buoyant-object-ellipsoid- elliptical buoyant object with multi multi-magnet-array magnet array 583 12F, buoyant-object-spheroid- elliptical buoyant object with three 17A-17C three-magnets-array magnets in the internal array 584 12E, 13E buoyant-object-spherical- spherical buoyant object with one one-magnet internal magnet 585 12D, 12G, buoyant-object-with-water- buoyant object with internal water 12H chamber-two opposing- chamber, swing check valve flapper magnet closure, and two opposing magnets 590 20I, 20J buoyant-object-cylindrical- cylindrical buoyant object with one one-diametrically-opposed- diametrically opposed magnet magnet 900 14A-14C, gravity-wheel gravity wheel couples the downward 22 force of gravity as in a water wheel 910 14A-14C, gravity-wheel's-internal- Internal wheel within the gravity 22 wheel wheel 900 that pivots about a central axis that is mounted on sealed bearings. The Wheel peripheral spokes/blades extend to the edge of the mechanical housing where they encounter a flexible sealing mean, which deters fluid leakage between the liquid and the gaseous fluid sides of the device. As the wheel rotates, enclosed buoyant-objects are moved from the top of the device to the bottom while at the same time forcing internal wheel 910 downward so as to turn central axis 950. 920 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-seal optional liquid tight seal to make 22 gravity wheel perform better when handling dense typically liquid fluids 940 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-pocket 22 945 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-sealed- 22 bearings 950 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-central-axis 22 954 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-generator- support 965 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-upper- 22 downtube-connection 970 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-external- generator 990 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-housing exterior housing of a wheel embodiment fluid interface device 992 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-cover 995 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-lower- 22 downtube-connection 996 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-fluid- 22 entrance-tube 997 14A-14C, gravity-wheel-fluid-exit- 22 tube 1000 23A-23C lower-body-of-water- the lower fluid region in which the 24A-24C containing-fish fish are leaving for the elevated fluid region 1001 23A-23C upper-body-of-water- an elevated fluid region in which the 24A-24C containing-fish fish are migrating to 1005 23A-23C fish fish - in addition to being a living 24A-24C object is represent a buoyant or partially buoyant-object, that is variably buoyant under the fish's control. The fish also has its own motive power - that is it can swim. 1010 23A-23C lower-concentrating-fish- 24A-24C pond 1015 23A-23C fish-counter-sensor sensor to count fish which reports to 24A-24C electronic control equipment 1020 23A-23C upper-fish-entrance-to-dam entrance to upper part of dam for fish 24A-24C 1025 23A-23C lower-fish-entrance-to-dam entrance to lower part of dam for fish 24A-24C 1030 23A-23C standing-column-of-water- pipe connecting upper dam to lower 24A-24C pipe fluid interface device, filled with water 1035 23A-23C lower-fish-entrance-pipe lower entrance to dam which fish can 24A-24C use to enter bottom of dam 1040 23A-23C concentrating-fish-bottle upper water chamber or fluid bottle 24A-24C near dam to congregate fish 1045 23A-23C lower-fish-bottle-swing- lower swing check valve that can be 24A-24C check-valve closed to seal concentrating fish bottle and so as to permit fish to swim into the upper part of the dam 1050 23A-23C fish-bottle-leak-valve valve from which water leaks so as to 24A-24C form the upward current into the concentrating fish bottle 1055 23A-23C leaking-water water leaking form the concentrating 24A-24C fish bottle 1060 23A-23C upper-fish-bottle-swing- upper swing check valve that can be 24A-24C check-valve closed to permit fluid leakage form concentrating fish bottle, or can be open to permit fish to swim into the upper part of the dam 1065 23A-23C fish-bottle-leak-valve-grate grate to prevent fish from being 24A-24C drawn through the fish-bottle-leak- valve 1070 23A-23C fish-bottle-leak-valve-pipe pipe from which water leaks so as to 24A-24C form the upward current into the concentrating fish bottle
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(74) A description of example embodiments of the invention follows.
(75) Lack of Scientific Credibility and Conservation of Energy
(76) Possibly the greatest obstacle to any new energy generation system, is that they often lack scientific credibility and scientific feasibility. Patents describing such systems often claim or imply that they can generate energy or provide greater than 100% power efficiency (e.g. DeShon U.S. Pat. No. 4,742,242, Bokel U.S. Pat. No. 4,326,132, Kwok 2010/0307149 A1, and Francis 2012/0198833 A1). If they can indeed generate more electricity than they consume, then the root problem remains that a fundamental and basic question has not been adequately dealt with in the prior art—that is: where does the energy come from since scientific law states that energy cannot be created or destroyed (only exchanged)? When the origin of the energy generated and exchanged by the patent's embodiments is unknown and unexplained the result is that a knowledgeable scientist cannot and will not believe that the embodiment described is capable of creating energy out of thin air, and therefore must be based on fraudulent principles. The corollary is that no investor, once briefed by an educated scientist/engineer is likely to fund a venture based on such scientifically unsubstantiated claims and premises. For this reason, the rational and scientific application of the laws of thermodynamics to the energy generation embodiment which describes how the embodiment is capable of power generation, and how that device is scientifically feasible, is as important as the mechanical details of the embodiments. Hence an explanation showing how the first law of thermodynamics is not violated by this patent application in particular is necessary, and results in a more detailed explanation than might otherwise be warranted. In particular, the applicant of the present application believes that a discussion confirming that no laws of thermodynamics and physics need be broken by the application of the principles used by this application's embodiments is critical. Conceptual details of the various methods and concepts are also important so as to teach how to facilitate tapping these sources. Additionally the conceptual description will provide further illumination as to why the prior art embodiments already available in the patent literature may succeed to some degree, or possibly fail completely, and why the prior art embodiments are clearly inferior to the present application's technology.
(77) Physics of Generating Energy from the Gravitational Field
(78) The principles associated with buoyancy are said to have been first described by Archimedes of Syracuse in 212 BC, which can be roughly translated as “Any floating object displaces its own weight of fluid.” In more general terms the principles of buoyancy are known to apply to liquids, gases, or other fluids. While the subject matter surrounding buoyancy involves the broader subject areas of fluid flow and fluid dynamics in general, only the more relevant facts and simplified formulation affecting the embodiments of this patent and existing prior art will be described herein.
(79) Consider that the molecules of water in a column of water are accelerated downward by the force of gravity, and the accumulated weight of those molecules creates a pressure as a function of depth from the surface. In a real sense the pressure associated with fluid bodies such as water tanks, water columns, lakes, oceans, and seas represents energy stored by the gravitational field of the planet. Gravity compresses water to the extent of 1 additional pound per square inch (psi) for every 2.31 feet of water depth (head). The oceans, for example, are thus vast sources of stored energy generated by gravity in the form of water pressure. Molecules, atoms, and material bodies that are suspended in and part of the fluid volume are independently subject to the gravitational force, with the heaviest molecules/atoms experiencing a greater downward force. The net result is a separation of atoms, molecules, and objects based on relative density, with atom, molecules, and material objects that are less dense than the surrounding medium experiencing a net upward force. We know this density separating force as the force of buoyancy. For this reason, an object whose density is greater than that of the fluid in which it is submerged tends to sink. Likewise an object that is less dense than that of the fluid in which it is submerged will float upward with the net upward force (buoyancy) that is equal to the magnitude of the weight of fluid displaced by the body minus its true dry weight.
(80) The molecules of any region, tank, or standing fluid column on the planet are compressed by gravity such that there is a greater net pressure at the bottom of the fluid column as compared to the pressure at the top. Every day common experience show us that any buoyant-object (i.e. an object that weighs less than the fluid it displaces) that is injected or pushed to the bottom of a fluid tank/region/column will effectively “float” with an upward force (buoyance) to the top of that fluid container. When that buoyant-object has been lifted above the local mean elevation represented by the bottom of the fluid tank, it has also increased its stored gravitational energy over and above what it had when it was at the bottom of the same column/tank/region—but increased by how much?
(81) The buoyant-object of mass M, having increased its elevation to a new height H above the local mean elevation, is said to have increased its gravitational Potential Energy by an amount equal to PE=MGH, where G is the near earth gravitational constant for this planet (9.8 m/sec^2), and PE stands for potential energy in Joules, M is the mass in Kilograms, and H is height in meters). The object's buoyance is a force, which like any force will accelerate the object, in this case upward so as to decrease the pressure it is experiencing, and in so doing, its motional or kinetic energy (KE=½mv^2) will increase, and its gravitational potential energy will also increase. Hence, the force associated with buoyancy can do useful work against the force of gravity, and since it is a force acting over a distance, the upward floatation of the object generates power in its own right (force times distance=work), and the rate at which work is performed is defined as power.
(82) Utilizing the force of buoyance to raise an object from the bottom of a fluid pool to the surface is normally not going to generate net surplus of energy since one must somehow get the object back to the bottom of the pool before the cyclic process can be repeated. The force needed to push the object to the bottom of the pool is normally the same or more than the amount of energy that is released when it floats to the surface. This is because the gravitational force and the buoyancy force of an object in a submerged fluid are known to be “conservative forces” or “conservative fields”; that is, the work done by gravity or buoyance in moving the object from one position to another is path-independent. Again, this means that forcing the object directly under the water in the inverse direction on the path it followed during its upward course, or even via a different path taken to the bottom of the pool, requires an equal or greater amount of energy/force to be applied to the object before it reaches the bottom again. Using this simple example there is no net gain in energy provided by the object's buoyancy when the normal and conventional processes are utilized. This is an example of how the conservative buoyant field works, therefore the process just described (i.e. pushing the buoyant-object through the water directly to the bottom of the tank), even if it could be made 100% efficient, will never liberate a net surplus of energy that can be made to do real work.
(83) It is known from the laws of Thermodynamics that if a process or embodiment can do real work or generate power, then the energy acquired by the embodiment must be taken from some existing energy source. The law of conservation of energy, states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant over time, and that total system energy is conserved. What is known is that the total energy in the system can be transformed into other forms of energy such as heat, kinetic energy, electrical energy, or other forms of potential energy, but it cannot be created or destroyed. For example, since the gravitational field is conservative, the law of conservation of energy states that the energy gained by levitating an object to a height H in a gravitational field (PE=MGH), can be converted to motion (kinetic energy) or to electrical energy, for example by rolling the object down a hill (increasing its kinetic energy).
(84) What we do know by common observation is that if we can get an buoyant-object of mass (weight) M to the bottom of a pressurized column/body of fluid (e.g. water) of height H, where the gravity has compressed the fluid at 1 psi for every foot of water above the object, then the forces of gravity will effectively force the fluid molecules down around the object in such a way as to create an upward force we call buoyancy. The buoyancy force acting on the object is proportional to the weight of the fluid displaced by its volume minus its normal weight when not in the fluid. This buoyant force vector can do work against the gravitational field with a consequential increase in kinetic energy (its moving upward so it has kinetic energy) and its gain in gravitational potential energy is PE=MGH when it reaches the top. The object's energy increase can then be converted to other forms of energy such as kinetic or electric energy if desired. In addition we know that the energy in the form of pressurized fluids on the planets is vast, generated naturally by the force of gravity, and is presently untapable. Yet in theory it might be available as a source for conversion to other forms of energy by the law of conservation of energy given the proper embodiment and the proper understanding of a suitable process.
(85) The physics of conservative fields tell us that if we just force the object back down through the fluid directly or indirectly to the bottom of the column, we know that it will consume all the energy we have just gained (or more). Therefore we conclude that it is impossible to have the object follow the same path through the standing column in reverse if we plan to extract energy in a cyclic continuous fashion. But we also know that there is energy stored by gravity in the standing column of fluid (e.g. water) in the form of the compressed fluid molecules that result in the pressure difference between the top and the bottom of the column of water. Conservation of energy tells us that the energy in a system (the pressurized water) can be conserved and converted to other forms of energy, and therefore we know that if our “system” is considered to include the energy of the compressed molecules in the column of fluid, then this energy is theoretically available to do work. Lastly we conclude that if it is possible to extract the energy from fluid pressure, it must be achieved through a novel and unique method and/or embodiment that can be employed to find a different path to the bottom of the fluid column that “breaks the symmetry” of the two conservative fields (buoyancy and gravity). Several methods employed by embodiments in this application will be described to break the symmetry of the conservative fields, and hence provide a practical means to extract and convert power from the gravitational field into useable power that can be accessed on a daily, continuous basis.
(86) One observation that makes the mass levitator possible and practical is the simple understanding that the forces of gravity and buoyancy act “as if” there is a more fundamental physical law at work which they both share, namely: that both gravity and buoyance are a result of differences in density, with the more dense substance “sinking” to the bottom, and the lighter substance “floating” to the top. They both act “as if” there is really only one force which is a density separating force. In this context gravity in air might be explained as matter falling through the more dense “aether”. Hence when a hot air balloon rises its net density might be described as being actually less than the hypothetical surrounding “aether”, and the composite object float upward against the force of gravity under such circumstances. The point here is not to debate the existence of the “aether”, but to note that gravity could be explained “as if” there is one. The relevance to this patent is that the forces of buoyance and gravitation act “as if” they are linked by this density separation pseudo-equivalency principle. The key is that this more fundamental law is not governed by the rules of a conservative field. The new more generalized density separating force is not path independent, i.e. there are now at least two ways to transverse the same path within the generalized density separating field: up via buoyancy and down via gravity. Using this new apparently more fundamental density separation law the limitations of the conservative gravitation field can be broken, and energy can be extracted from the gravitational field of the planet.
(87) To understand the impact and implications of what is written above, consider for a moment the possibility that the gravitational field strength (i.e. G in PE=MGH) could be varied by some process or suitable mechanism (like an anti-gravity embodiment) so as to make the constant G negative such that any given object or mass M, of any size, shape, volume, or density floated upward (levitated) to an arbitrary height H. Once the object had gained the desired increase in potential energy (PE=MGH), G is changed to be positive again, the object falls, and the energy gained in the upward elevating path is then converted to kinetic energy (e.g. by dropping it), or changed to mechanical energy (e.g. by let the object/mass be a quantity of falling water and use a water wheel), or by converting the kinetic energy to electrical power (e.g. by dropping a magnet through an induction coil). While there is no anti-gravity device to be found in this patent, the applicant shows how nearly the same results can be obtained through the concepts, processes and various embodiments outlined in this application. In particular, the newly described density separating force or law, tell us that a buoyant-object floating upwards is equivalent to having a negative gravitational constant G′ during its upward motion, although G′ due to buoyancy is generally of a lesser magnitude as compared to the G associated with normal gravity. Hence, G becomes effectively negative the moment a buoyant-object is completely inserted into a fluid medium that is denser than the density of the composite object. Likewise G is positive again when it is falling from its newly acquired height. One of the goals of this patent is to effectively switch the generalized constant of gravity from positive to negative at will via the embodiments of this patent, utilizing both forces of buoyance and gravity in the same embodiment, and to then convert the gain in potential energy to the form of energy that is desired. Consider the following game changing processes and methods to utilize the generalized density separation law to break the symmetry of the conservative laws of gravitation and buoyancy:
(88) 1. Changing the buoyance of an object as a function of time, such that the object is buoyant when “floating to the top”, and sinks by decreasing the surface area, or weight of said object after it arrives at the top of the tank. The ability to repeatable gain energy using this rule depends on how much energy it takes to change the object's overall density.
(89) 2. Using two different paths of travel for the object in the two different but related conservative fields (the buoyancy field followed by the gravitational field), such that the object “rises” by way of buoyancy in a tank of dense fluid, is removed from the dense fluid, and then “falls” generating kinetic energy by way of the force of gravity. The process can repeat when the object reaches the entry point to the bottom of the tank. The ability to repeatable gain energy using this rule depends on how much energy is required to inject the object into the bottom of the dense fluid column where upon it begins to rise to the top of the fluid column.
(90) 3. Some combination of 1 & 2 above.
(91) As will soon become apparent an additional non-obvious key to such a process/embodiment lies in efficiently transitioning the object/mass through the fluid interface formed at the junction of the two fluids (dense to light fluid or vice versa) and by effectively dealing with any fluid pressure differences that exist between at fluid interface boundaries. As will be shown there can be two fluid interfaces (possibly more), one at the top (e.g. water to air) and one at the bottom of the device (e.g. air to water), and at least one pressure differential that represent a source of stored energy. Forces must be supplied to move the object/mass across the fluid interfaces, and a suitable embodiment (consisting of at least one Fluid Interface Device abbreviated as “FID”) must be engineered to equalize, or otherwise deal with, the pressure differentials on the object/mass so that the object can enter the new fluid with the required fluid pressure. These Fluid Interface Devices (FIDs) should be engineered for minimal use of external power, for example by utilizing the already existing forces of gravity and buoyancy if and when possible. It will also become apparent that if the FID requires more energy to insert and transition the object into the bottom of the standing dense fluid column that will be gained in potential energy upon its eventual buoyant elevation to new height H, than the FID (and the embodiment it is installed in) will be a failure with respect to facilitating the generation of energy. This lack of energy efficiency is one of the primary reasons that US 2012/0198833 is completely non-functional as depicted and described by Francis, where it has been shown that there is not enough energy supplied through the gain in potential energy to even move his “ball” through one closed loop cycle, even if no energy is extracted by his energy conversion device.
(92) As previously stated the embodiments of this patent deal with the objects/mass as if the gravitational constant can be changed from positive to negative, hence the conservative nature of the gravitational field no longer applies. Therefore energy can be gained in the upward floatation of the buoyant-object and possibly coupled to do work, and it can also be extracted and coupled to do work when the object is again subject to the full gravitational potential in the downward stroke of the process.
(93) Some of the implications of this new technology are listed below:
(94) 1. Energy generated can be increased by increasing the height that the object/mass is levitated.
(95) 2. Energy generated can be increased by increasing the weight of the object/mass that is levitated.
(96) 3. The greater the object's buoyance the faster the object will rise to the surface and the greater will be the kinetic energy of the object when it reaches the top.
(97) 4. The more objects/mass that can be elevated per second the greater the potential power generated (power is energy per second) by the gravitational field.
(98) 5. Any object of any size can be made to float by enclosing said object in a suitably shape buoyant capsule or object.
(99) 6. Existing bodies of water on the planet can be used as the dense fluid, some of which are already elevated and this elevated fluid represents additional energy above and beyond the energy available due to the pressure developed by the fluid height (head).
(100) 7. The existing atmosphere of the planet (i.e. air) can be utilized as the light less dense fluid.
(101) Some corollaries which will be manifested as embodiments are shown below:
(102) 1. An embodiment can be designed to act as a water elevator to lift an object without necessarily generating power, and the buoyancy of the object can be changed so to send the same or different object back down the water elevator (see
(103) 2. If the buoyant-object contains a magnet or magnetic array and is moving through an induction coil the magnetic fields will generated electric power (see embodiment
(104) 3. If the object/mass contains internal induction coils and passed by or through a suitably directed magnetic field, (in the upward or downward part of the cycle) then the buoyant-object can obtain a source of internal power than can be utilized or transferred as needed within the object/mass.
(105) 4. If the buoyant-object is design to pick up and contain a fluid (e.g. water) in its upward stroke than the embodiment can act as a pump (see
(106) Methods of Mass Levitation and Energy Conversion from the Gravitational Field
(107) One of the important concepts associated with the embodiments disclosed herein is the ability to increase an object's potential energy by capitalizing on the difference in fluids density; to effectively “float” a buoyant-object to a higher elevation using the dense fluid, and then to “sink” the same object in the lighter fluid so as to generate kinetic energy that can be converted into power. To continuously generate power the embodiment must also be able to cyclically accomplish this methodology in a systematic, practical, and repeatable manner that permits energy to be recovered during each cycle. While the increase in potential energy upon floating a balloon upward is well known, and the ability of an object at the bottom of a fluid to float to the surface with an increase in elevation and potential energy is well known, the ability to define a process and mechanism that can effectively extract energy from the gravitation field using the generalized density separating force is novel and important. In particular, the ability to lift an arbitrary object of any given mass, size, and shape to an arbitrary height above the surrounding average ground level is a novel and important contribution to the current state of art.
(108) Gravitation and the gravitationally compressed energy in the form of fluid pressure, which is found naturally in every body of water on the planet is utilized by embodiments of this patent to increase a buoyant-object's potential energy, where the buoyant-object is buoyant, partially buoyant, or variably buoyant in at least one dense fluid, and “sinks” in at least one light fluid. This stored energy represented by the compressed molecules of the fluid is effectively tapped by the embodiment of this device to generate energy. Hence, it is possible to say that the embodiments of this patent extract energy from the earth's gravitational field. The energy so extracted is continually re-established by the gravitational field of the planet on a moment by moment basis, hence the energy source that drives the apparatuses associated with this patent is essential unlimited and continuously replenished. Therefore the “closed system” that needs to be considered with respect to conservation of energy principles must include the entire earth, its mass, and its consequential gravitational field. There is no effective way to reduce the energy associated with the earth's gravitational field no matter how much energy is extracted from the planets gravitational field. This is true because the force of gravity come from the mass of the atoms and molecules on the planet. Hence the embodiments of this patent can be considered a form of free, clean, and abundant energy. The device is not a perpetual motion machine since the source of the energy is well known, having been identified above, as being supplied by and extracted from, the gravitation field of the planet. Its exact method of extraction and useful embodiments that provide examples of such extraction methodology are contained in the following paragraphs.
(109) The embodiments associated with this patent work with the generalized density separating force described above, which can be broken down into two force vectors that can do work and generate power independently of each other—the force of buoyance, and the general force of gravity. As previously described fluid pressure differences are the reason that the forces associated with buoyance exist, and these pressure differentials are instantly established whenever there is a standing body of water of any height by the force of gravity. It is a goal of this patent to point out how this source of energy can be tapped to do work/produce energy and to outline various novel embodiments that can practically make use of this novel means of extracting energy from the gravitational field.
(110) The buoyant-object to be lifted can be of any size, shape, weight, or density as long as it will float in the more dense fluid (e.g. water). For an arbitrary mass M that does not float or cannot be subjected to the lifting fluid directly, it is still possible to enclose the arbitrary mass M in an air/water/fluid proof capsule that has a sufficient lift and buoyancy to float the composite object in the working medium (see for example
(111) The various embodiments of this application include several means of engineering and maintaining a standing column of fluid which extends to an arbitrary height H, while passing and transitioning buoyant-objects through to said standing column of water using only the motive force of gravity and buoyancy. The standing column is created or maintained above the surrounding average elevation through the use of a Fluid Interface Device (FID), composed of a set of swing check valves that act as a compression-decompression chamber (e.g. see
(112)
(113) The various levitator embodiments in this application can exist typically as a closed or open system. In a simple open system embodiment, such as the generalized and simplified embodiment of
(114) The generalized open system embodiment of
(115) Bottom-FID 16 is attached to uptube 70 via bottom-FID-door-to-dense-fluid 28. Uptube 70 is filled with the dense-fluid 21 (usually water) in which the one for more buoyant-object(s) 75 are buoyant in said dense fluid. Uptube 70 may be optionally attached to an energy conversion system 24 to convert buoyant-object 75's motion into other forms of energy such as mechanical or electrical energy. If energy-conversion-system 24 is not present uptube 70 continues upward and generally attaches directly to the top-Fluid-Interface-Device (top-FID) 17 via top-FID-door-to-dense-fluid 29. Top-FID 17 is connected to top-FID-door-to-light-fluid 19 to permit extraction or insertion of buoyant-objects 75 out of/into top-FID 17.
(116) The generalized open system embodiment of
(117) The generalized open system embodiment of
(118)
(119) Additional functionality can be provided to the embodiment of
(120) The closed system embodiment of
(121) An estimate of the power that can be generated by embodiment 2 when the buoyant-object 75 is dropped from height H can be obtained by noting that a given buoyant-object has increased its potential energy upon reaching its new elevation above ground-level 280. Some fraction of the potential energy can be converted to kinetic, electrical or mechanical energy where the percent conversion is a function of how efficient the generalized energy conversion system 24 is at converting kinetic energy to the new form of power. The estimated increase in Potential Energy (PE) is calculated via common laws of physics to be given by the quantity PE=MGH (where M=object mass, G is the constant of gravitation—nominally 32 ft/sec^2, and where H is the height gained by buoyant-object 75). Since power is energy per second, the estimated power generation capability is directly related to the number of buoyant-objects 75 that enter the downtube per second, the mass or weight of the buoyant-object 75, and the height H. To provide some concrete numbers, suppose the buoyant-object is a twenty inch diameter (10 inch radius) sphere weighing about 100 lbs. Its 4188 cubic inches of volume will displace about 151 lbs of water, and have an upward buoyancy force equivalent to 51 lbs directed upward. The same twenty inch diameter sphere will have gained 15.4 kJ of potential energy when it has been elevated to a height 100 ft about its starting elevation. If one such buoyant-object per second is converted to electrical power at 90% efficiency, the mass-levitator system will generate 13.86 kW of sustained power. This is the power that is release due to the down stroke only. There is also the surplus 51 lbs of force that is used to move the buoyant-object upward to height H—this power is not included in the above estimate. Given that a sphere's volume increases as the cube of the radius (volume.sub.sphere=4/3?r3 where r is the radius), the power of the mass-levitator will also scale as the cube of a spherical buoyant-object's radius, hence a 10 times increase in the radius will yield a 1000 times increase in the power generated.
(122) These above numbers are predicated on the premise that the energy to inset the buoyant-object into the bottom of the uptube 70 by a suitable FID can be done using some small fraction of the total energy that is generated by gravity and buoyancy. If not then, like Francis's 2012/0198833 the proposition of a working energy generating embodiment will not be possible. Such efficient FID will be described in association with the detailed description for
(123) Hence a close system embodiments such as the simplified embodiment of
(124)
(125) The more abstract closed system block diagram of
(126) To be more specific the generalized embodiment of
(127) The embodiments of this application can generally be described, organized, and categorized using one or more of the following criteria: a. consisting of two or more continuously connected fluid regions/columns attaching to or contained within said apparatus and where i. differing fluid region/columns: 1. are defined by fluid regions/columns contain differing fluid types or densities, or (e.g. see
(128)
(129) The fluid interface device of this application also make use of the following principles:
(130) 1. It is possible to create a standing column or region of dense fluid of arbitrary height H, through the use of a fluid interface device, where: a. the bottom of the dense fluid region exists at a higher pressure relative to the top of the fluid column due to the force of gravity which have compressed the molecules of the dense fluid; and b. the fluid can be any dense fluid such as water, salt water, water with antifreeze, oil, mercury etc.
(131) 2. It is possible to create various types of fluid interface devices that: a. use significantly less energy to insert and transition the buoyant-object into the dense fluid region that it gains in gravitational potential energy when it float to the top of the dense fluid region. b. can lift and transition the buoyant-object out of dense fluid when it reaches the top of the dense fluid. c. use significantly less energy to lift and transition the buoyant-object of out of dense fluid, than the energy it gains in gravitational potential energy when it float to the top of the dense region of fluid. d. can utilize the forces of buoyancy and gravitation as the motive power required to drive the fluid interface device.
(132) Fluid Interface Devices
(133)
(134) One type of Fluid Interface Device (FID) that can be used to efficiently insert buoyant-objects into the bottom of a standing column/region of water may be comprised of swing check valves as shown in
(135) If swing-check-valve 555 contains water, as in illustrated by
(136) To make a working Fluid Interface Device (FID) that prevents the collapse of standing-column-of-water 330, consider
(137)
(138) To more fully understand how the swing-check-valve embodiment of a FID works, consider the time order sequence of diagrams shown as
(139) Buoyant-objects 75 are shown in time phased snapshots within
(140)
(141)
(142) Hence under the 75% loading condition it will take only 3 buoyant-objects 75 above light-fluid-to-dense-fluid-interface 35 to push the 9 buoyant-objects in the right half of lower-transition 245 below the light-fluid-to-dense-fluid-interface 35 when they are each uniformly loaded to 75% of the dense-fluid 21's density. Other loading conditions (e.g. 60% or 80% loading) will require more or less buoyant-objects to push the submerged buoyant-objects below the fluid level, however it is clear from this discussion and
(143) As
(144) The swing check valves and all connecting tubes/pipes within the compression-decompression-chamber 105 and lower-transition 245 must be sized to permit the buoyant-object to completely pass through the internal surfaces, internal contours, structures, and chambers of the completed embodiment. In addition the buoyancy force of the buoyant-object 75 must be sufficient to open the swing-check-valve-flapper 550. Given that swing-check-valve-flapper 550 can be made of suitably light weight mater such that it is nearly buoyant, it will always be possible to engineer a flapper that can be open by the net upward force of a suitably loaded buoyant-object 75.
(145)
(146) An alternative to the manually actuated check-valve-flappers 550 of
(147) At this point it is possible to identify the contents of
(148) 1. it can interfaces two or more continuously connected fluid regions/columns, which in this case is represented as the light-fluid-to-dense-fluid-interface 35 where the light-fluid 22 and dense-fluid 21 meet.
(149) 2. provides motive force in the form of only gravity and buoyancy to move and inject/transit the buoyant-objects 75 through the FID from the light-fluid environment 22 to the dense fluid environment 21.
(150) 3. where no external power is required by the fluid interface device if a mechanical means is used to regulate timing, and to open and close valves. For example, if solenoid rods are used to regulate timing via timing-control-rod 117 and to effect the momentary opening and closing of fluid valves 45 and 50 then a few 10s-100's of watts will be required to be used out of kilowatts or megawatts that can be generated (see above discussion of estimated power associated with
(151) 4. provides a guide through the FID so as to guide buoyant-objects from the light-fluid 22 where buoyant-objects 75 fall under the influence of gravity to the dense fluid 21 where the buoyant-object 75 are buoyant, and:
(152) a. maintains fluid communication between said regions
(153) b. maintains the relative pressure differential between said regions
(154) c. maintains relative height and volume of the said regions
(155) d. substantially prevents or mitigates fluid flow from one region to the next
(156) e. substantially maintains fluid separation between said regions when the regions consist of differing fluid types
(157) f. controls the timing and flow of buoyant-objects 75 through the FID.
(158)
(159) A complementary yet simple top Fluid Interface Device (FID) that can be utilized to transport buoyant-object 75 from the dense-fluid 21 environment back to the light-fluid 22 environment is shown in
(160)
(161) Faraday's law of induction states that the magnitude of the voltage/power generated depends on the rate of change of the magnetic flux, not necessarily just the strength of the magnets field. Hence as a general rule, the faster the magnetic array falls and rotates as it approaches, enters, and exits the coil the greater the induced voltage. If possible it would be beneficial, from a power generation stand point, to have buoyant-objects dropping continuously through the induction coils and for multiple buoyant-objects to occupy a least one induction coil at all times. If the magnets obtain a high velocity through the coil, then the magnetic field change is correspondingly fast, and therefore the power generated by the coil increases as a function of increasing speed. Again the induced voltage is due to the translational and rotation motion of the magnetic array enclosed within the buoyant-object as it passes through the induction coil.
(162) In
(163) By Faraday's law the time rate of change of the magnetic flux is the physical mechanism that couples power into the induction coils. The faster the magnetic flux can be made to change the more power can be generated by the same coil of wire for a given strength magnet. The change in magnetic flux can be increased in several ways, including the following:
(164) 1. Increase the strength of the magnet that is dropped through the coil.
(165) 2. Increase the speed at which the magnet drops through the coil.
(166) 3. Rotate the magnet as it drops (adding rotational kinetic energy to the linear drop).
(167) 4. Varying the direction of the magnet field within the buoyant-object as a function of width or length (this is achieved via magnetic arrays with in the buoyant-object for example 12B, 12C, 12F) such that the wire coil “sees” a faster changing magnetic field from its stationary point of view as the buoyant object move through the coil.
(168) 5. Some combination of the above.
(169) Hence, the magnetic field strength and field distribution within buoyant-objects affect the amount of power that can be generated via Faraday's law from a mass-levitator; therefore
(170) To overcome some of the issues just described consider
(171) When buoyant-object 506 (
(172) The opposing magnetic field structure of
(173) The more cylindrical shape of
(174) The cross section shown in 12F represents a spheroidal buoyant-object with three magnets 577 in the array enclosed by magnet tube 576. The virtue of this arrangement is that the middle magnet oriented 90 degrees to the other two will reduce the internal repulsion between magnets within the magnet tube and will stabilize the internal forces within the magnetic assembly. Magnet arrays such as those shown in
(175) The induced electrical voltage/current pulses can be converted by pulse-conversion-subsystem 85 in
(176) The induction coils depicted in
(177) For a closed system mass-levitator as shown in
(178) It is also true that the upward motion of the buoyant-object and its magnetic array will induce a current in a circumferential induction coil which can be tapped to generate electrical power directly (for example using an embodiment as shown in
(179) Any rotation of the buoyant-object as it drops linearly through downtube 40 will also induce an increased rate of change of the magnetic field. Hence electrical production can be enhanced when the downtube 40 and the associated linear generation array of
(180) Buoyant-Objects
(181) Buoyant-objects 75 generally conform to the following descriptions and definitions: i. buoyant-objects are buoyant, neutrally buoyant, or variably buoyant in at least one fluid region and optionally not buoyant in at least one other fluid region. ii. where the overall shape, size, and design ensures ease of passage through the various regions, surfaces, pipes, tubes, chambers, and interior structures of said mass-levitation apparatus by suitably streamlining, smoothing, and shaping said buoyant-object/capsule iii. where said buoyant-object may be composed of a buoyant capsule and optionally one or more encapsulated objects which can be composed of any arbitrary material, shape, weight and volume as long as the overall buoyant capsule plus the its encapsulated objects are still buoyant in at least one of the fluid regions 1. where said buoyant capsule is designed so as to reshape, surround, protect, and otherwise encapsulate said encapsulated objects 2. where said encapsulated object may be fixed or removable from said buoyant capsule 3. where said buoyant capsule, when encapsulated object is removable, provides suitable interior volume to house said one or more encapsulated objects, and provides mean for entry and removal of the said encapsulated objects through a suitable opening and closure means iv. where said buoyant-objects force vectors generated by buoyancy and gravitation can be designed with the following criteria and notes: 1. The buoyancy force vector and the energy generated by said buoyant-object acting on, or in, the mass-levitation apparatus against the gravitation field of the planet when in buoyant fluid regions is increased when fluid displacement increases, dry weight decreases, and capsule is suitably shaped to reduce drag and otherwise facilitate movement of the capsule in the buoyant dense fluid region 2. The gravitational force vector and the energy generated by said buoyant-object acting on or in the apparatus in non-buoyant fluid regions is increased by increasing the dry weight of said buoyant-object 3. The buoyant-object should be relatively incompressible so as to displace the greatest volume of fluid, so as to generate the greatest possible force of buoyancy when compressed to the greatest degree near the bottom of a buoyant region, and so as to be scalable with height of the uptube/downtube. 4. The designer should consider using part of the motive force provided by the forces of buoyancy and gravity to facilitate motion of the buoyant-object between adjacent fluid regions 5. Buoyant-objects can encapsulate and elevate any type of mater including: other fluids, living objects such as fish and people, entire mechanical assemblies such as ships or automobiles, and can include electrically charged and/or magnetic substances.
(182)
(183) Examples of buoyant-objects conforming to the above descriptions and definitions can be seen in
(184)
(185)
(186)
(187) In
(188)
(189) The buoyant-objects of
(190) When multiple magnets are included in, and contained by magnetic tube 576 within a single buoyant-object, they are known as a magnetic-array in this application. When magnetic-arrays are present the importance of having the magnetic tube 576 is of greater importance, since the tube fixes the internal position of the magnets in the array, constrains internal movement and rotation, and greatly facilitates loading of the magnets into the buoyant object's tube when first assembled. More complex magnetic array examples are provided by
(191) Surplus Kinetic Energy from Buoyant-Object Fall
(192) When a buoyant-object is dropped down through downtube 40 (
(193) 1) where the dense fluid is permitted by flow to upon the buoyant-object's initial impact, this is related to fluid impact wave that is formed to dissipate this excess energy.
(194) 2) how much the buoyant-object weighs.
(195) 3) and how fast the buoyant-object is moving upon impact.
(196) If the buoyant-object strikes the water interface in a confined space such as a pipe when the buoyant-object's dimensions have been designed to be a rather snugly fit to the interior of the downtube (usually a desirable feature so as to increase the displaced fluid which increase the buoyancy force), then the buoyant-object will tend to act like a hydraulic ram which will push the water at the surface downward. The result is that the buoyant-object will experience a “belly flop” effect in which the depth of penetration is greatly reduced. Hence the surplus kinetic energy under these circumstances tends to be converted to pressure and turbulence, unless there is some place for this energy dissipating fluid wave to go. Various embodiment can be devised to handle this pressure/turbulence successfully including (but not limited to) the use of expansion tanks as shown in
(197)
(198)
(199)
(200) In
(201) While a water wheel represents old technology, the purpose here is to use it in association with the mass-levitator, in a more generalized fashion, and thereby put it to use in new ways. The generalized gravity wheel can act as a simple water wheel as shown in
(202) To summarize gravity-wheel 900:
(203) 1. consists of a circular wheel that pivots on a central axis.
(204) 2. accepts material/buoyant-objects into a pocket in the top of wheel's outer periphery from a guided means that directs said material object into said wheels outer periphery's said pocket.
(205) 3. holds material/buoyant-objects in the wheel's outer periphery during wheels downward motion from top to bottom of wheels motion.
(206) 4. releases said material/buoyant-objects into a connected guided means near bottom of wheel.
(207) 5. directs the material/buoyant-object's force due to gravity and any falling kinetic energy of said material object into torque that is directed onto a central shaft in said gravity wheel.
(208) 6. converts said torque into mechanical work or other form of energy such as electrical energy.
(209) 7. provides one or more guiding means to connect said gravity wheel to one or more fluid interface devices.
(210)
(211) A generalized water elevator embodiment, based on the basic open loop system of
(212) In
(213) Buoyant-Object 75 resides in the apparatus and is the primary lift vehicle to levitate car-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 350, (represented in
(214) When elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 is filled via moderately-elevated-water-source-pipe 435 and the opening of moderately-elevated-water-source-valve 440, then buoyant-object 75 becomes buoyant, swing-check-valve-flapper 360 is opened, and buoyant-object 75 moves through swing-check-valve 370, and floats upward in uptube 70 as shown in
Embodiment 1—Water Elevator Explanation of Design and Operational Details
(215) The goal of embodiment 1 shown in
(216) With the goal of embodiment specificity and simplification in mind, the design goal for this embodiment consists of a floatable reusable buoyant-object 75, sized to enclose and accommodate the entry/exist of a variety of small vehicles (i.e. the car-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 350 is a car/trucks that will be levitated), and to provide a lift force (buoyancy) sufficient to float the highest imagined weight of these various vehicles types to the top of the elevated-landmass-structure 315. To be even more concrete, suppose the engineering goal is to elevate various vehicles to the top of a landmass structure 1000 feet tall using the water elevator embodiment shown in FIG. 15A-15H. In this case the car/truck is the arbitrary object to be lifted to a specific destination, which is at the specific elevation of 1000 ft above the ground-level 280. The designer generally needs to understand the volume and weight constraints of the objects to be lifted in order to be sure that the embodiment will generate sufficient buoyancy. Hence a specific volume and weight upper limit (design target) will need to be estimated and then used in the design of the embodiment. By way of example, an average car is roughly 10 ft long, 5 feet wide, about 4 feet tall, and weighs about 4,000 pounds. To give the elevator sufficient space to accommodate the dimensions of the vehicle, a space on the order of a two car garage could be utilized for the size of the buoyant-object that will encapsulate the car, say 20 ft×20 ft×20 ft. This volume target should be more than sufficient for most vehicles to enter and park inside the buoyant-object 75 with some room to spare, or to accommodate oversized/bigger vehicles if they still conform to the upper weight limits of the design (which are about to be calculated). This buoyant-object 75 of twenty cubic feet displaces 8000 cubic feet of water, and where each cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. By Archimedes law of buoyancy, if the car plus encapsulating buoyant-object 75 weight less than water displacement of about 8000 ft3×62.4 lbs/ft3=499,200 lbs (about 250 tons), then the buoyant-object will float to the top. Since the car only weighs about 4,000 pounds (2 tons) the composition of the enclosing buoyant capsule can be quite heavy and still lift the load.
(217) If 75% of the displaced water volume by weight is used (75% load factor) in the engineering calculation for an estimate of the useable and available force of buoyancy (to move the capsule upward with acceptable acceleration and speed), then the buoyant-object 75 must weigh less than 374,000 pounds (about 187 tons). If the buoyant-object 75 is composed of, and fabricated from, ½ inch ship grade steel plate, (the six sided cube has about 120 ft2 of surface area) and given that 20 ft2 of steel plate weighs about 8200 pounds each, the total weight of the buoyant capsule will be about 50,000 pounds (25 tons). This leaves over 300,000 pounds (150 tons) of surplus force available. From these simple calculations we conclude that there is no issue lifting the weight of almost any imaginable vehicle that will fit in the enclosed space. Because there is so much surplus power available it may become necessary to take on ballast (buoyant-object-ballast 375 in
(218) The energy price for levitating vehicle 380 to the top of elevated-landmass-structure 315 is the energy cost of the acquiring the water required to fill the elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325. If the water resource is a naturally renewable quantity, for example, provided by mountain run off or other natural phenomena, then the major “costs” associated with operating the system principally consist of the energy required to run associated computers (e.g. electronic-control-equipment 120), open the valves associated with the water flow, which in turn run the compression/decompression cycles of the apparatus. It is clear that the energy input required to run the apparatus as a whole is arguably much smaller than the energy required to lift the mass of the various vehicle to the elevation H, some 1000 feet above ground level.
(219) Embodiment 1 is generally controlled and monitored by, and new running states are activated by, an experienced system-operator 390, who utilizes the touch sensitive system display and graphic user interface 395 to provide touch panel commands to electronic-control-equipment 120 via controls-cables 125. Water temperature, buoyant-object 75 position, water flow, water pressure, and water height to name a few, can also be monitored, recorded, and possibly controlled via electronic-control-equipment 120 using various industrial sensors (e.g. proximity, temperature, pressure sensors) heating coils, and mechanical actuators (not shown in
(220) The “initialization state” (
(221) At this point the embodiment's “initialization state” ends and the system “load state” begins by driving the vehicle 380, shown as a car in
(222) The “levitate state” begins when buoyant-object 75, contains the car-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 350, when we have an empty elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325, when all water tight doors (285, 325) are closed an sealed, and when standing-column-of-water 330 exists and is awaiting its first use. Next electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 is commanded to be open by electronic-control-equipment 120, and elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 is flooded and completely filled with water that flows from uptube 70 through high-pressure-equalization-tube 60 and into elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325. At the same time water is released by electronic command signals propagating along control-cables 125 from electronic-control-equipment 125 to actuate and open reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140. Reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140 releases water from elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 along associated reservoir-fill-pipe 145, so as to maintained uptube-water-level 100 slightly above the desired height H (i.e. H approximately 1000 ft in this example). Elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 is required to be at a slightly higher elevation than height H, so as to permit water flow via gravity to refill the uptube 70 as needed in order to maintain water at the desired height. Water levels are automatically maintained and controlled by electronic-control-equipment 125 which monitors and records uptube-water-level-sensor 170, and electronically actuates reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140 when water levels are low. Water temperature, buoyant-object 75 position, water flow, water pressure, and water height to name a few, can also be monitored, recorded, and possibly controlled via electronic-control-equipment 120 using various industrial sensors (e.g. proximity, temperature, pressure sensors) heating coils, and mechanical actuators (not shown in
(223) Once elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 is filled with water and the pressure within elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 is equalized (placing elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 is in a high pressure compressed fluid state) due to fluid communication occurring through electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 and high-pressure-equalization-tube 60 with the uptube 70. The buoyancy of buoyant-object 70 must now be sufficient to lift the submerged weight of swing-check-valve-flapper 360. This is achieved by knowing the submerged weight and buoyancy of swing-check-valve-flapper 360 which in turn determines the amount of upward force required to open swing-check-valve-flapper 360 when in the decompressed state. The weight and required upward force on open swing-check-valve-flapper 360 is not generally a significant design issue since the buoyancy of open swing-check-valve-flapper 360 can be increased or even made to float. Alternatively swing-check-valve-flapper 360 can be electronically actuated such that the flapper opening/closing can be facilitated by swing-check-actuator 400 via its solenoid rod and coil as shown in
(224) Upon equalization and compression of elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325, the buoyant-object 75 will become buoyant and move under the motive force of buoyancy so as to open swing-check-valve-flapper 360, whereupon the entire buoyant-object 75 containing car-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 350 of mass M (equal to about 4000 pounds in this example embodiment) will float upward to the uptube-water-level 100, which also corresponds to height H (equal to slightly more than 1000 feet in this embodiment), where its progress will be halted by contact with top-landing-pad 340 (see
(225) The shape of the buoyant-object 75 as shown in
(226) 1. the top has been rounded to be more bullet like so as to reduce fluid drag, and hence increase motional speed and reduce turbulence.
(227) 2. the square sides have been maintained so as to match the internal sides and contours of the uptube 70, and elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 which also act as guided-means for buoyant-object 75 to remain upright and stable in its accent to top-landing-pad 340.
(228) At this point in time (
(229) In this simple embodiment there is no energy conversion subsystem, so there is no corresponding “energy conversion” system state. However, conversion of the potential energy gained by elevated-car 385 to other forms of energy can still be achieved by other means (not shown), such as by rolling/coasting the car downward on a sloping incline so as to increase its speed and acceleration, thereby converting the increased potential energy to kinetic (motional) energy. Alternatively, if the car is a new hybrid model which is equipped with an electric generator attached to the wheel's braking mechanisms, then the car can convert some of this motional kinetic energy directly to electricity. The electrical power from the braking generators is transferred to, and stored in, the hybrid car's enclosed battery, which can be consumed later by the vehicle's enclosed electric motor (again not shown).
(230) The system can enter a “descent” state in two ways, first by slowly purging water from the entire embodiment (not the buoyant-object 75) whereby buoyant-object 75 descends back to the ground level 280 where it again rests upon bottom-landing-pad 270. Or, secondly by changing the buoyancy of buoyant-object 75 so that less water is consumed.
(231) Using this first method, when there is an abundance of elevated water, water release occurs when uptube 70 is still in fluid communication with the elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 by way of high-pressure-equalization-tube 60 when electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 and electronic-water-drain-valve 160 is opened by electronic-control-equipment 120 so as to purge water via water-dump-pipe 305 to water-sink 265 which can be a public sewer connection or a gravity feed to a body of water at a lower elevation. During the decent stage it is possible for swing-check-valve-flapper 360 to close prematurely as water level decrease, thereby preventing buoyant-object 75 from passing into elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325. To prevent such an unwanted event, swing-check-valve-flapper 360 is temporarily locked in place by electronically actuated swing-check-actuator 400 which is controlled via electronic-control-equipment 120. To complete the “descent” state swing-check-valve-actuator 400 is released which permits gravity to close swing-check-valve-flapper 360, at which point the standing-column-of-water 330 can be re-established by electronically opening reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140. This permits water to flow from elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 into uptube 70 via reservoir-fill-pipe 145. Note that using the first method the entire column of standing water 330 must be refilled, which is not an issue in some cases, for example if you are at the foot of a Dam. The system now enters the “initialization” state after the fluid levels in uptube 70 have been re-established. The entire cycle comprising “initialization”, “load”, “levitate”, “unload/reload”, “energy conversion”, and “decent” state can be repeated indefinitely as long as water reserves in elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 are sufficient and replenished when the next cycle is initiated.
(232) When water reserves at elevated-landmass-structure 315 are not sufficiently abundant, or when an elevated water source is not available at the top of elevated-landmass-structure 315 in
(233) 1. do not purge water from the entire embodiment, instead make buoyant-object 75 variably buoyant by taking on ballast so that the buoyant-object 75 can be made to sink during the embodiment's decent state.
(234) 2. then purge the water at ground level from the ballast tank such that buoyant-object 75 is again buoyant when the “levitate” state is active.
(235) 3. empty and refill only the elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 from a less elevated, less pressurized water source such as moderately-elevated-water-source 405.
(236) This alleviates the requirement to completely purge standing-column-of-water 330 when buoyant-object 75 is in the “descent” state of operation, thereby saving an enormous amount of water. To accomplish this water saving goal buoyant-object 75's buoyant-object-ballast 375 is identified as really being a ballast tank with a variable quantity of water in the tank as shown in
(237) When buoyant-object 75 is docked at the top of the apparatus (
(238) When buoyant-object 75 is docked at the bottom of the apparatus and touching bottom-landing-pad 340, and when electronic-control-equipment 120 is ready to initiate the “levitate” state, electronic-control-equipment 120 provides power through control-cables 125 to lower-power-induction-coil 420, and supplies coupled power to ballast-tank-water-valve 410. At this point elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 has been purged of water and is empty, therefore buoyant-object-ballast 375 purges water under the force of gravity until buoyant-object-ballast 375 is empty (or until the electronic-control-equipment 120 turns power off) causing buoyant-object 75 to be buoyant when surrounded by water. The rest of the “levitate” state operational description is unchanged.
(239) Connections to a moderately-elevated-water-source 405 are optionally provided as a water reduction mechanism. Given that buoyant-object 75 has been provided with the means to be variably buoyant, it is no longer necessary to purge the water from standing-column-of-water 330 in order to make buoyant-object 75 descend. The only chamber that needs to be cyclically refilled is the elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325, which can be refilled by any water source with an elevation only slightly greater than the top of swing-check-valve-flapper 360. Optionally this could also be supplied by a public/municipal water supply that provides adequate water pressure to fill elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325. To effect this change, moderately-elevated-water-source 405, along with moderately-elevated-water-source-pipe 435 that connects moderately-elevated-water-source 405 to elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325 by way of moderately-elevated-water-source-valve 440 is utilized. Using the more water conservative “levitate” state, moderately-elevated-water-source-valve 440 is opened by electronic-control-equipment 120 sending control and power signals through control-cables 125 whereby water from moderately-elevated-water-source 405 flows through moderately-elevated-water-source-pipe so as to fill elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325. The rest of the “levitate” operational steps remain unchanged.
(240) Water-pump 175 and associated pipes can also be utilized to reduce water consumption such that the elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 can be filled by water-pump 175, eliminating the need to find an elevated water source on the elevated-landmass-structure 315. Water-pump 175 is connected to elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 via water-pump-pipe 180 and pump-shutoff-valve 185, and is connected to moderately-elevated-water-source 405 via water-pump-intake-pipe 445. Electronic-control-equipment 120 commands and powers water-pump 175 to pump water in an upward direction and opens pump-shutoff-valve 185 to initiate water flow from moderately-elevated-water-source 405 to the top of elevated-fluid-reservoir 135, when elevated-fluid-reservoir-sensor 450 relays a fluid-low signal to electronic-control-equipment 120. The operationally elevated-fluid-reservoir 135, when used in conjunction with the variably buoyant buoyant-object 75, no longer needs to fully replace standing-column-of-water 330 on each use of the water elevator, instead elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 is used to initially fill standing-column-of-water 330, and thereafter will only replace water due to system leakage.
(241)
(242) Embodiment 2, is a derivation and evolution of embodiments 1, in that the mass levitator is being used in
(243) Major changes in the physical structure from
(244) 1. Addition of dam-wall-extension-overhang 470 that supports elevated-water-channel 475.
(245) 2. Elevated-landmass-structure 315 becomes wall-of-dam 460 which represents the physical mass of the dam that holds back the dam's waters.
(246) 3. All references to elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 and its associated pipes, valves, and sensors (140,145,135,170,450), have been removed since the elevated water level at the top of the dam serves the purposes of the elevated-fluid-reservoir 135.
(247) 4. Uptube-water-fill-valve 465 now assumes the functionality of refilling standing-column-of-water 330 instead of reservoir-fill-pipe 145.
(248) 5. Lower sealable water tight entry-door 285 used in embodiments
(249) 6. Similarly at the top of the apparatus sealable water tight top-exit-door 335 used in
(250) 7. Compression-decompression-chamber 6 now drains to lower-ship-channel 500 when electronic-water-drain-valve is opened via electronic-control-equipment 120 by signals traveling along control-cables 125.
(251) 8. The water level and pressure in compression-decompression-chamber 325 equalizes to that of lower-ship-channel 500 when open.
(252) 9. car-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 350 becomes ship-embodiment-of-an-arbitrary-mass 495, while elevated-car 385 becomes elevated-ship 490, and car-at-ground-level becomes unelevated-ship 455.
(253)
(254) From a simplistic view point the open loop system embodiments (
(255) The ship levitator embodiment 2 of
(256) When buoyant-object 75 is docked to top-landing-pad 340 (
(257) When buoyant-object 75 is docked to bottom-landing-pad 270 after its descent state is complete (
(258) Time-Sequence Through the Embodiment's States
(259) To be complete the states of embodiment 2 are reviewed in time sequence order. In
(260)
(261) In preparation for the “levitate” state these same fluid tight doors are closed, and water floods elevator-compression-decompression-chamber 325, lifting buoyant-object 75 off of bottom-landing-pad 270 to the level of swing-check-valve-flapper 360. Control signals 125 from electronic-control-equipment 120 to swing-check-actuator 400 open swing-check-valve-flapper 360 and buoyant-object 75 rises through electronic-elevator-swing-check-valve 370 as shown in
(262) Buoyant object 75 continues its journey upward until it rises to the top of the embodiment as in
(263) The “descent” state begins in
(264)
(265) In
(266)
(267) Embodiment 3 in
(268) Upper-transition 215 connects to, and is in fluid communication with, downtube 40. Downtube 40 is the tubular pipe between upper and lower transitions that is filled with the light fluid 22 (i.e. air in this embodiment), in which the buoyant-object 75 sinks and falls rapidly with the near earth acceleration of gravity (i.e. 32 ft/sec2) when no energy conversion device is present. Downtube 40 is also a tubular pipe that acts as the guided-means for buoyant-objects 75 decent into the lower-transition 245 and across the lower-fluid-interface 35. Downtube 40 is circumferentially surrounded by a series of induction coils. Each induction coil consists of N turns of preferably low resistance wire. As shown in
(269) The embodiment of
(270) Water-pump 175 is turned by electronic-control-equipment 120 and fills elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 via water-pump-pipe 180 from external-water-supply 240 by opening water-pump-shutoff-valve 185. Alternatively lower-transition 245 can be provided with additional fluid from lower-transition-expansion-tank 110 by opening expansion-tank-output-control-valve 230 when lower-transition-expansion-tank has recovered fluid from impact pressure waves in lower-transition 245 that arise when buoyant-objects 75 imping upon and impact air-water-fluid-interface 35 after falling through downtube 40. Lower transition pressure waves are directed into expansion tank 110 via lower-expansion-tank-pipe 205 and lower-expansion-tank-check-valve 200.
(271) Optional emergency-stop-switch 295 cuts power to, and power output from, pulse-conversion-subsystem 85 and informs electronic-control-equipment 120 to actuate optional emergency-stop-means 290 which can for example insert a solenoid rod into downtube 40 so as to prevent further buoyant-objects 75 from entering downtube 40. Similar emergency action and other commands to access system reports, view current system conditions, and other system state changes (e.g. filling system after a maintenance drain) can be issued by optional system-operator 390 though optional system-display-gui 395. System access and maintenance is facilitated by entrance into embodiment 3's internal pipes through lower-access-hatch 220 and upper-access-hatch 150, whereby buoyant-object 75 can be removed or added if desired.
(272)
(273) A closed system embodiments is shown in
(274) The embodiment consisting of a self-contained tube or chamber 105 that can effectively contain the working fluid's associated weight and pressure. This standing column of dense fluid 330 is primarily composed of a single tube denoted as the “uptube” 70 since the buoyant-object floats upward in this portion of the embodiment. The uptube 70 contains many buoyant-objects 75 all of which are progressing upward and dragging the dense fluid toward the top of the embodiment at the same time.
(275) Embodiment 3 contains one dense fluid region 21, where the dense fluid region is water, however the dense fluid could be any dense fluid such as mercury, salt water, or oil. Embodiment 3 also contains one light-fluid 22 region which is identified as air at normal atmospheric pressure, but as previously discussed this less dense fluid could easily be He, O2, CO2 etc.
(276) The two interfaced fluid regions of embodiment 3,
(277) The dense fluid (water) exists in three sections of the mass levitator as follows:
(278) 1. standing-column-of-water 330 as in
(279) 2. lower-transition 245 as in
(280) 3. compression-decompression-chamber 105 as in
(281) The light fluid (air) exists in two sections of the mass levitator as follows:
(282) 1. Downtube 40 as in
(283) 2. upper transition 215 as in
(284) The bottom fluid interface device (FID) of embodiment 3 is of the form of compression-decompression-chamber 105 as shown in detail in
(285) Pressure equalization of compression-decompression-chamber 105 to the pressure level at the bottom of standing-column-of-water 330 is achieved by connecting compression-decompression-tube 30 to the top of uptube 70 by opening electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 so that a small amount of fluid flows into fluid-interface-mechanism 105 by way of high-pressure-equalization-tube 60. It is no exaggeration to state that the amount of water required to pressurize the already existing water in fluid-interface-mechanism 105 is very small because water is a relatively incompressible fluid (bulk modulus of water is 3.12×105 lbs/in2). Similarly decompression of compression-decompression-chamber 105 occurs by opening electronic-low-pressure-fluid-valve 45 so as to permit fluid to flow out of lower-pressure-equalization-tube 55 into lower-transition 245. Swing check valves 20 and 25 are sized and engineered so as to permit buoyant-object 75 to pass freely through, and act as guided-means through the swing check valves interior spaces.
(286) Fluid levels in the device are shown as downtube-water-level 35 and uptube-water-level 100, and represent fluid interfaces in the embodiment (also known as air-water-fluid-interface 35 and water-to-air-interface 100). The embodiment contains the dense fluid 21 (i.e. water) and is in fluid communication with all associated chambers and pipes between water-to-air-interface 100 in upper-transition 215, through the compression-decompression-chamber 105, and through the lower-transition 245 to air-water-fluid-interface 35. The embodiment contains the lighter, less dense fluid (e.g. air) from water-to-air-interface 100 across the upper-transition 215, through downtube 40 and optional emergency-fluid-stop 556 to the air-water-fluid-interface 35.
(287) The column of water of arbitrary height exerts a downward force on the flapper of check valve 25 when the water pressure in the compression/decompression chamber 105 is equalized to the pressure level of the lower transition. When the compression/decompression chamber is in this low pressure condition, it is said to exist in the decompressed state. Hence check valve 25's flapper, must be capable of holding back the full pressure of the standing water column 330 within some acceptable standard of leakage. When compression-decompression chamber 105 is in the compressed state, water pressure in chamber 105 is equalized to the pressure in the uptube 70. In the compressed state the standing-column-of-water 330 is held back (prevented from collapse into the downtube 40) by lower-swing-check-valve 20's flapper. Any buoyant-object(s) in the compression-decompression-chamber 105 are then able to open the flapper on check valve 25 and begin their trip to the top of standing-column-of-water 330 (water-to-air-interface 100) via uptube 70.
(288) As previously stated, compression-decompression-chamber 105, in conjunction with lower transition 245 and part of downtube 40, acts as the bottom fluid-interface-device which transits and guides buoyant objects between light and dense fluid regions while maintaining the pressure differential setup by standing-column of water 330. It separates the light and dense fluid regions while preventing the standing-column-of-water 330 from collapsing into downtube 70. The location of this pressure differential is either at the top or the bottom of compression-decompression-chamber 105 depending on the state within its enclosed pressure chamber. Hence, the pressurized to unpressurized dense fluid interface in this embodiment is movable, and shifts as a result of the state of the compression-decompression-chamber 105. When compression-decompression-chamber 105 is pressurized, the transition from high pressure to low pressure is separated by the flapper of lower-swing-check-valve 20, and when compression-decompression-chamber 105 is depressurized or “decompressed” the pressurized fluid interface moves to the flapper of upper-swing-check-valve 25. The one or more buoyant-objects that are contained in fluid-compression-decompression-chamber 105 are also undergoing a state change from being in a region of low pressure, to being in a region of typically much greater pressure. Additionally the force that it takes to open swing check valves 20 and 25 changes greatly depending on the state of the fluid-interface-mechanism 105. When compression-decompression-chamber 105 is in the decompressed state the flapper of lower-swing-check-valve 20 can easily be opened so as to permit entrance of buoyant-object 75 into the compression-decompression-chamber 105. Similarly when compression-decompression-chamber 105 is in the pressurized (compressed) state the flapper of upper-swing-check-valve 25 can easily be opened so as to permit buoyant-object 75 to leave the chamber.
(289) When a buoyant-object 75 has passed through compression-decompression-chamber 105 it naturally rises to the top of the fluid column (water-to-air-interface 100) under the force of buoyancy, with the interior walls of the uptube 70 acting as guided-means during its upward motion. This first buoyant-object 75 will rest at water-to-air-interface 100 until the next (second) buoyant-object is released from the compression-decompression-chamber 105 and makes the same trip upward toward water-to-air-interface 100, where this second buoyant-objects rests just below the first. The second buoyant-object abuts against the first/top buoyant-object 75 so as to apply its upward buoyant force to the top buoyant-object 75 such the first buoyant-object moves upward slightly. The second buoyant-object is followed by the release of a third, fourth, and on-going succession of buoyant-objects that are released from the compression-decompression-chamber 105, all of which travel upward so as to lineup below each other and apply their force of buoyancy in an upward direction, to the buoyant-object directly above. Eventually enough buoyant-objects 75 are stacked up below the first buoyant-object so as to apply their cumulated force to the top buoyant-object and by so doing levitate the top buoyant-object completely out of the dense fluid at water-to-air-interface 100 and into the upper-transition 215. The continuous stacking of buoyant-objects under water-to-air-interface 100 continuously forces the top most buoyant-object out of the dense fluid in a sequential and continuous fashion. Each buoyant-object that exists in the dense fluid forces the buoyant-objects already in the upper-transition 215 further into the upper-transition so as to provide enough motive force to push along the entire string of buoyant-object that enters the upper-transition 325 through the upper-transition 325 and into downtube 40. Once buoyant-object 75 enters the downtube it experiences the full downward force of gravity, at which time the acquired gravitational potential energy is converted to kinetic energy.
(290) The buoyant-objects in
(291) Due to the fact that water is being dragged upward, a path for the water to circulate can optionally be added to reduce the splash and turbulence that would otherwise occur at the interface. An optional circulation path, when the compression/decompression chamber 105 is in the decompressed state, is shown as the closed path from the top of uptube 70 through secondary fluid tubes 60 and 65 and then back to the bottom of uptube 70 to complete the circuit. In addition to providing a circulation path, the circulation caused by water drag will influence the speed of the water in uptube 70, the speed of accent of the buoyant-object, and can potentially reduce transit time of each buoyant-object through the uptube 70. The resulting smoother circulation of fluid within the device effectively increases the overall energy efficiency of the embodiment.
(292) The buoyant-object overall density must be less than the fluid it displaces, if the buoyant-object is to be buoyant. There is a wide range of densities that could be used for buoyant-objects, however from an engineering point of view the factional percentage of the weight of the buoyant-object's volumetric fluid displacement is a useful metric which we denote as the “load factor” in this application. For example, if the buoyant-object is loaded at 75%, it means that the buoyant object weights 75% of the water that it displaces, and has 25% of its displaced fluid weight available as the upward buoyancy force vector. Hence one such buoyant-object is capable of lifting one third of its own weight. Therefore, it will take the buoyancy of at least three other 75% loaded stacked buoyant-objects that are immersed in the dense fluid to begin to lift one other similarly loaded buoyant-object out of the dense fluid (e.g. water) into light fluid (e.g. air).
(293) To make the discussion more concrete, suppose the weight of fluid displaced by the buoyant-object was one pound (equivalent to a sphere of about 3.75 inches in diameter), then a 75% load factor would mean that the buoyant-object weighs 75% of 1 pound or 0.75 lbs, and it therefore has a buoyancy lift force of 0.25 lbs upward. To lift one buoyant-object will require a lift force of 0.75 lbs, which can be supplied by 3 such buoyant-objects which supply an upward force of 0.25 lbs each. In
(294) If buoyant-object 75 weights 100% of the fluid weight that it displaces, the buoyant-object will be neutrally buoyant, and will not move up or down in the enveloping dense fluid. If it weighs more than the fluid it displaces, it will sink. In this embodiment the buoyant-objects must move upward with some speed, yet should carry as most weight as possible to maximize the potential energy gain that is directly related to the increase in mass (PE=MGH). Hence buoyant-object 75 in this embodiment typically (but not always) weighs approximately 60% to 85% of the dense fluid that they displace when completely submerged. Therefore, if the working fluid is water and buoyant-object displaces one pound of water, the encapsulated magnetic material plus the casing surrounding the magnetic material can be engineered to weight 0.6 to 0.85 of a pound. Hence the buoyant-object will float in the dense fluid, and is said to be loaded by 60% to 85% respectively.
(295) Again when the target load factor is desired to be 75%, the buoyant-object generates a net force of buoyancy equal to a quarter of pound (0.25 lbs.), which acts on the buoyant-object so as to provide it with upward motive force (buoyancy) against the force of gravity. Since in a practical design there can be many more buoyant-objects in the uptube (75) at any given time (potentially hundreds or thousands depending on the design goals and the height of the uptube), there is by design more than enough accumulated upward force from stacked buoyant-objects in the uptube to push the upper most buoyant-object across the water-air interface 100 into to the downtube 40.
(296) When the buoyant-object falls through the induction coils (80) and reaches air to water interface 35 the opposite situation arises, in which the buoyant-object needs to be forced under the dense fluid to light fluid interface 35. One can deduce using the logic just stated that one buoyant-object weighing 0.75 lbs in our example, can cancel the upward buoyancy force of three submerged 75% loaded buoyant-objects that are pushing upward with a force of 0.25 pounds each. Stated another way, 3 buoyant objects weighing 0.75 lbs each (2.25 lbs total weight) located above the fluid interface will completely submerge 8 buoyant objects that are generating a net upward force of 2.0 lbs. This means that there is also no difficulty in forcing a number of buoyant-objects below the air-water-fluid-interface 35 and across the lower transition (245) using no external power other than that supplied by gravity.
(297) When the buoyant-objects, are submerged in lower transition 245, they then enters the left half of lower transition 245, where they begin to rise upward again. At this point in the embodiment's cycle, the buoyant-object 75 is submerged (light fluid exchanged for the dense fluid) and is floating upward, but the buoyant-object has not crossed the pressure differential which has been created by the standing column of water 330. The buoyant-object floats upward until it reaches the flapper 550 of the lower check valve 20. If there is no pressure differential between the lower most region of the lower-transition 245 and the compression-decompression chamber 105, then the buoyant object pushes open the swing check valve 20's flapper 550 (see detail in
(298) It is only when the fluid pressure has been equalized to that of the lower transition 215 that the swing check valve flapper 550 can be pushed open and the buoyant-object 75 can fully enters the compression-decompression chamber 105. At this point the bottom swing check valve 20's flapper closes. Next electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 is open which makes a connection via high-pressure-equalization-tube 60 between uptube 70 and the total weight of standing-column-of-water 330 and the compression-decompression chamber 105. The compression-decompression chamber 105 is pressurized by adding a very small amount of the working fluid by volume until the pressures are equalized on either side of the upper check valve 25. At the point of pressure equalization the buoyant-object 75 uses it buoyancy force vector to push open the top swing check valve (25), and the buoyant-object (75) proceeds to float to the top of standing column of water 330 and to the desired height H. To prepare for the compression-decompression-chamber 105 for the next buoyant-object, the pressure in compression-decompression-chamber 105 is equalized to the lower transition's 245 pressure level by opening fluid valve 45 and connecting pipe 55 between the compression-decompression-chamber 105 and the lower-transition 215. The next buoyant-object 75 can then proceeds into compression-decompression-chamber 105 and the cycle of compression and decompression can occur in a rhythmic cycle as the buoyant objects are moved through this fluid interface device that works on the motive force of gravity and buoyancy.
(299) Energy is required to activate the automatic fluid control valves (45,50), control circuitry (120), and the embodiment requires an additional small amount of water from the uptube 70, that represents a small energy drain in the system. However this energy loss due to water exchange between uptube 70 and lower-transition 245 can be made very small compared to the potential energy gained by the buoyant-object 75 upon being levitated to height H. Also consider that this small amount of the dense fluid that is removed (or leaked) from the standing column of water 330 during each cycle which must be replaced. This can be done by occasionally running a small pump, by having each buoyant-object hold a small amount of water that is dumped at the top transition 215 using for example buoyant object of the type shown in
(300) The amount of water required to compress a few cubic feet of water in the compress-decompression chamber (105) amounts to a few drops of water due to the relatively incompressible nature of water. Again consider the same example used in the prior art section at the beginning of the application, where the standing-column-of-water 330 is a cylinder of height 20 ft of diameter 4 inches, and where the ball is 4 inch in diameter, the compression-decompression-chamber is 50.26 inch3, and the pressure at the bottom of the standing-column-of-water 330 is 8.66 psi. Given a bulk modulus of water of 3.12×105 lbs/in2 the 50.26 inch3 of water in the compression-decompression-chamber 105 when under 8.66 psi of additional pressure will induce a volume decrease of 0.0014 cubic inches. This is equivalent to a cube of water approximately 0.1 inches on each side or approximately one drop of water that is required to pressurize this chamber. This one drop of water will weigh 5×10−5 pounds and when replaced at the top of the 20 ft standing-column-of-water 330 represents 0.001 Joules of energy. In contrast the elevated 75% loaded ball of 4 inch diameter represents 24.6 Joules of energy when elevated 20 ft. For a potential net gain in energy of approximately 24.6 Joules.
(301) Thinking big, a 6 ft diameter sphere loaded to 75% of the displaced water will weigh 5,294 lbs, displace 7,060 lbs of water, and if elevated 250 ft will represent 1.8 Million Joules of energy. To make this possible the
(302) The buoyant-objects, having fallen through the linear induction coil 80, effectively convert part of their kinetic energy to electrical pulses by Faraday's law of induction. The final velocity at which they arrive at the lower fluid interface 35 is a function of the total height of the embodiment, the strength of the magnetic material in the buoyant-object, how much power has been extracted from the total kinetic energy, and by other factors such as friction.
(303) The excess energy in the form of kinetic energy, and the buoyant-object's weight can also contribute to pushing one or more buoyant-objects through lower transition 245 where they begin their cyclic journey upward. As previously disused a buoyant-object that is loaded by say 75 percent will be able to push three other buoyant-objects under the fluid level, therefore even if the buoyant-object arrives at the fluid interface 35 with virtually zero surplus kinetic energy the accumulated weight of several buoyant-objects will be sufficient to force other buoyant-objects through the lower transition.
(304) Given that the design parameters of a specific embodiment generate a significant surplus kinetic energy which impinges on fluid interface 35, there are various mechanisms for partially recovering some of this energy which is otherwise wasted in the form of pressure waves, turbulence, splash, or other mechanisms. One method to recover some of this surplus energy is through the use of expansion tanks 110 which contain an internally pressurized diaphragm, and which can accept and store part of the impact pressure wave's energy. Swing check valve 200 is used to insure that the water flow due to the impact at fluid interface 35 is always into the expansion tank. In addition a path for the water to circulate within the lower transition 245 can be provided which will cut down the turbulence and pressure created when the buoyant-objects 75 strike the fluid interface 35. When the chamber is in a compressed state, the circulation path for impact pressure waves is provided through pipe 205 and one way check valve 200. Water from the expansion tank 110 can re-enter the system when automatic value 230 are in an open position by way of pipe 255.
(305) Filling and Draining of the System
(306) Initial filling of the system is supported by a private or public fluid source 240, which is controlled by automatic valve 185, through associated pipe 187. The system is filled from the top, and is accomplished by release of fluid from elevated-fluid-reservoir 135, through reservoir-fill-pipe 145 and reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140. Filling of elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 is accomplished by opening pump-shutoff-valve 185 and through the use of optional water-pump 175. Water-pump 175 may not be needed if the water supply source has sufficient pressure to fill elevated-fluid-reservoir 135. Draining the system for maintenance/repair is accomplished via electronic-water-drain-valve 160 through associated drain-pipe 155 into the public-private-fluid-disposal 265.
(307)
(308)
(309) 1. Multiple uptubes 70 with a single downtube 40 are possible and may be desirable so as to increase the rate at which buoyant-objects 75 flow through the induction-coils 80. This feature can be desirable since the rate at which a buoyant-object 75 rises in the uptube is many times slower (due to dense-fluid 21's viscosity) than the rate of fall due to gravity in the light-fluid 22, and since the electrical power is generated only when buoyant-objects containing magnetics or magnetic arrays are moving through induction-coils 80. Due to the cost of the induction coils it makes sense to provide multiple uptubes and a single set of induction coils which represent a major capital expense.
(310) 2. Various types of buoyant-objects 75 can be sent through the embodiment.
(311) 3. Many shapes are possible for the uptubes 70 and downtubes 40. The simple double U shapes of
(312) 4. Provides an example of the use of electronic-swing-check-valve 557 (as in
(313) 5. Provides an example where high-pressure-equalization-tube 60 and uptube-secondary-flow-pipe 65 are more smoothly combined together, and where these combined pipes/tubes extends downward so as to combine with the lower-transition 245 just below the lower swing check valve 20. The slight change in shape provides a means to more effectively drain the system when high-pressure-electronic-water-drain-valve 162 is open along with electronic-water-drain-valve 160.
(314) 6. Provides an example of a more complex mass-levitator that does not fit the simplified structure of
(315) All parts numbers and part functions are identical with those of
(316) 1. Addition of 2 pairs of solenoid timing and motion control rods 117 at the top and bottom of each uptube and at the bottom of downtube 40. At the top of each uptube 70 solenoid-timing-motion-control-rod 117 serves the function of ensuring that only one buoyant-object 506 (as in
(317) 2. Elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 now fills both the left and right hand upper-transition 215 from reservoir-fill-pipe 145 when the left or the right reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140 is opened. Filling of elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 is unchanged.
(318) 3. Pressure equalization of the compression-decompression-tube 30 to the lower-transition 245 pressure levels still occurs via lower-pressure-equalization-tube 55 when electronic-low-pressure-fluid-valve 45 is open, however the attachment point of lower-pressure-equalization-tube 55 into lower-transition 245 has been moved to be located directly across from U-shaped lower-transition 245. In addition top-downtube-check-valve 190 has been added to ensure that water flows away from compression-decompression-tube 30 in one direction only. This slight change in lower-transition 245 pipe/tube connections provides the possibility for fluid circulation of the dense-fluid 21 within the path formed by lower-transition 245, lower-swing-check-valve 20, compression-decompression-tube 30, lower-pressure-equalization-tube 55, top-downtube-check-valve 190 and back to lower-transition 245 when lower-swing-check-valve 20's flapper is open along with electronic-low-pressure-fluid-valve 45.
(319) Operationally,
(320)
(321)
(322)
(323) 1. Water or other dense-fluids 21 can be pumped to a higher elevation by specialized buoyant-objects like 525 which are continuously circulated in the mass-levitator, represented in
(324) 2. Multiple dense fluid regions can be connected and the dense fluid regions can be natural bodies of water such as rivers or lakes, or man-made fluid regions such as the water behind a dam.
(325) 3. The dam embodiment 5 can also be utilized of as a means for general irrigation of the earth, in which water is pumped upward into a vast irrigation system of potentially huge scale.
(326) 4. By the addition of an optional-water-filtration-system 216, such as a reverse osmosis system housed just beneath upper-transition-dense-fluid-drain-pipe 219, the water has the possibility of being purified. Using the optional-water-filtration-system 216 as part of a water pump embodiment mass-levitator it may be possible for sea water to be purified and elevated from the oceans or sea and transported via aqueducts for use by cities, factories, and or farmland.
(327) Operationally,
(328) There are a few part numbers that have not previously been mentioned in other figures and other portions of text within this application. They include:
(329) 1. lower-transition-inlet-pipe 247 which serves the function of always keeping lower-transition 245 filled with water as water is extracted when buoyant-objects 525 are filled and levitated out of the lower-transition.
(330) 2. water-pump-suction-pipe 182 which has been added so that water-pump 175 can reach into low-elevation-water-source 190 as shown to the left bottom of
(331) As previously described water can be added to the system via elevated-fluid-reservoir 135, reservoir-fill-pipe 145 when reservoir-electronic-control-valve 140 has been opened. Elevated-fluid-reservoir 135 is filled via water-pump 175 through water-pump-pipe 180, and water-pump-suction-pipe 182. Finally the entire system of valves, solenoids, pumps, water and pressure sensors are controlled, monitored, and actuated by electronic-control-equipment 120 through electrical control-cables 125 as in
(332)
(333)
(334)
(335)
(336)
(337) The major advantage of an inclining downtube, as discussed somewhat in the text associated with
(338) A secondary advantage to this embodiment is that the rotation of the buoyant-objects in the downtube 40 will permit the buoyant-objects to spend more time in the downtube generating electrical pulses. This is true because the speed of the buoyant-object will be less than a free vertical fall and the downtube is itself longer due to the geometry of the incline and will therefore support more induction coils and has longer to travel through the induction coils.
(339) An alternative to the simple inclined configuration in
(340) A final variation to
(341)
(342)
(343) The utility of
(344) Given that gravity-wheel 900's operational details have been completely defined via the text associated with
(345)
(346)
(347) In
(348) Electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 is used in embodiment 9 as a form of Fluid Interface Device (FID) to permit variably buoyant self-propelled objects in the form of fish 1005 to migrate from lower-body-of-water-containing-fish 1000 to upper-body-of-water-containing-fish 1001. The dual electronic swing-check-valve 106 style FID holds back the water pressure of the dam. It is used to create a standing-column-of-water in standing-column-of-water-pipe 1030 that is attached on the lower end to upper-swing-check-valve 25 within electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 and on the top end to wall-of-dam 460 at upper-fish-entrance-to-dam 1020. A secondary optional lower entrance to the dam occurs via lower-fish-entrance-pipe 1035 which is attached to, and is in fluid communication with the dam on the right of
(349) Fish 1005 in bottom detail
(350) When there are sufficient fish in electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106, or when sufficient time has elapsed since the last compression-decompression cycle within the embodiment 9, check-valve-flapper 550A and 550B of swing-check-valve 20 and 25 are both closed and electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 is equalized to the high pressure level at the bottom of the dam. High pressure equalization occurs when electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 is opened so as to permit a small amount of water to flow through high-pressure-equalization-tube 60. When the internal water pressure of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 is equal to the pressure created by the standing-column of water at the bottom of standing-column-of-water-pipe 1030, check-valve-flapper 550B of upper-swing-check-valve 25 is open so as to permit fish 1005 to swim out of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106. The pressure levels inside of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 are monitored by electronic-control-equipment 120 through compression-decompression-chamber-pressure-sensor 107 so as to know when to open or close check-valve-flapper 550. Once fish 1005 have exited electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 they have the choice to swim upward through standing-column-of-water-pipe 1030 where they enter the dam at upper-fish-entrance-to-dam 1020, or they can swim through the lower dam entrance via lower-fish-entrance-pipe 1035 where they enter the dam at lower-fish-entrance-to-dam 1025. Fish 1005 having overcome the elevated dam are then free to populate the dam or migrate further upstream.
(351)
(352)
(353) Concentrating-fish-bottle 1040 can be closed off at its bottom by lower-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1045 and on the top by upper-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1060 which also extends through wall-of-dam 460 into upper-body-of-water-containing-fish 1001. Concentrating-fish-bottle 1040 also connects through fish-bottle-leak-valve-pipe 1070 to a lower water drain valve (fish-bottle-leak-valve 1050). The entrance to fish-bottle-leak-valve-pipe 1070 is covered by fish-bottle-leak-valve-grate 1065 so as to prevent fish 1005 from being sucked through fish-bottle-leak-valve-pipe 1070 when fish-bottle-leak-valve 1050 is open and leaking-water 1055 is flowing from concentrating-fish-bottle 1040.
(354) As in
(355) Fish 1005 swim into electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 when check-valve-flapper 550A of lower-swing-check-valve 20 is open and the water pressure within electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 has been equalized to the water pressure level in lower-body-of-water-containing-fish 1000. Pressure equalization occurs by opening electronic-low-pressure-fluid-valve 45 so as to permit a small amount of water to flow through lower-pressure-equalization-tube 55 into lower-body-of-water-containing-fish 1000. It is this slight water leakage that originates upstream from the fishes prospective, and that “smells” of their origin, and that attracts the fish to move into electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 in the first place. Fish entering electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 are counted by electronic-control-equipment 120 and fish-counter-sensor 1015. In addition electronic-control-equipment 120 starts a timer that can also cause electronic closure of check-valve-flapper 550A which is part of lower-swing-check-valve 20.
(356) When there are sufficient fish in electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 and lower-concentrating-fish-pond 1010 which is contained in electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106, or when sufficient time has elapsed since the last compression-decompression cycle within the embodiment 10, check-valve-flapper 550A and 550B of swing-check-valves 20 and 25 are both closed and electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 is equalized to the high pressure level at the bottom of the dam. High pressure equalization occurs when electronic-high-pressure-fluid-valve 50 is opened so as to permit water to flow through high-pressure-equalization-tube 60. When the internal water pressure of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 is equal to the pressure created by the standing-column of water at the bottom of standing-column-of-water-pipe 1030 check-valve-flapper 550B of upper-swing-check-valve 25 is open so as to permit fish 1005 to swim out of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106. The pressure levels inside of electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 are monitored by electronic-control-equipment 120 through control-cables 125 and compression-decompression-chamber-pressure-sensor 107 so as to know when to open or close check-valve-flapper 550A and 550B.
(357) Up this the point there have been no operational differences between that of
(358) The flowing water propels and flushes fish contained in electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 out through electronic upper-swing-check-valve 25 up standing-column-of-water-pipe 1030, through lower-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1045 and into concentrating-fish-bottle 1040. Fish are levitated from lower-concentrating-fish-pond 1010 to concentrating-fish-bottle 1040 and are prevented from flowing down fish-bottle-leak-valve-pipe 1070 by fish-bottle-leak-valve-grate 1065. Once enough time has passed to ensure that all fish within electronic-compression-decompression-chamber 106 have been levitated into concentrating-fish-bottle 1040, fish-bottle-leak-valve 1050 and lower-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1045 are closed and upper-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1060 can be opened so as to permit fish 1005 to swim through upper-fish-bottle-swing-check-valve 1060 into upper-body-of-water-containing-fish 101. Fish having overcome the elevated dam are then free to populate the dam or migrate further upstream.
SUMMARY AND ADVANTAGES
(359) Previously, other issued patents and applications have claimed to be able to create energy from the forces associated with buoyancy, and gravity, however the understanding of how to create an energy efficient Fluid Interface Device (FID) that functions under the motive power of gravity and buoyancy has not been achievable. In this application the fundamental link between gravity and buoyancy has been identified and harnessed using FIDs. The understanding gained generates several classes of mass-levitators, an open loop version that can act as a fluid elevator using a variably buoyant-object, a closed loop version that can act as an energy generator wherein the buoyant-objects continually circulate in a closed looping system, and a few variations of these two basic themes. The application scientifically shows how energy can be extracted from the gravitational field of the planet without breaking the laws of conservation of energy, in a device that is practical to build, breaks no know laws of physics, and which can be used to increase the gravitational potential energy of an arbitrary mass using less energy than is gained when the mass is elevated. Thus the closed loop embodiments of this application generate a net surplus of energy with each cyclic elevation of the arbitrary mass. By using suitable energy conversion techniques, such as a gravity wheel, or a linear induction generator the net surplus of energy can be transformed to other forms of power such as electrical, mechanical, or heat power.
(360) While a simple open loop mass-levitator fluid elevator embodiments of
(361) Due to the scalability of the apparatus's lift capabilities, which scale up as the cube of the radius when using spherical buoyant objects, the amount of energy that can be produced is also exceedingly scalable, and can be employed to serve individual consumers, cities, states, factories, or countries. Since the apparatus can be situated locally at any point on the planet, energy can be generated adjacent to the site where it is utilized. With local energy generation, there will be a reduction in the amount of power transmitted between cities, states, and countries, and there will be a consequential reduction in the electrical transport costs, resistive power loss, and the associated infrastructure maintenance requirements that are present with the current centrally located power generation stations.
(362) Because the basic principles associated with the various embodiments of this patent can be easily understood by most human beings, there will be no intellectual barriers to its implementation. In addition, due to the intrinsic simplicity and elegance of the various embodiments, as outlined and documented by this application, the final production devices should be capable of extremely reliable operation (an important requirement for any energy generation system) and should hypothetically be operational for hundreds of years with no external energy input required. Once the embodiment's infrastructure (induction coils, tubing/pipes, buoyant-objects, with magnetic arrays etc.) are assembled, like a lock system—where the water flows downhill into the lock chamber without apparent cost, the laws of gravitation and buoyancy will propel the operation of the herein described embodiments, while simultaneous generating an abundance of energy for mankind.
(363) Finally this applicant envisions two other very critical applications that are addressable by the various embodiments of this patent, namely the pumping of water for distribution to farmlands, population centers, and factories, and the lifting of fish and boats over structures such as dams. Since water, and in particular fresh water, is becoming a critical planetary resource, the ability to obtain water is one key to the survival of the planet's many billions of people. The water pump, ship, and fish lift embodiments are made possible when one considers that the mass M elevated to height H can be a quantity of water, any arbitrary matter, or even an arbitrary object such as a fish. For example, once water is encapsulated in the buoyant-object it can be lifted as easily as any other material and subsequently dumped upon reaching the top of the apparatus. Projects such as North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), and its sister project on other contents, which strive to irrigate deserts, and bring water to million (if not billions) of people, become more implementable since the gigantic power requirement to pump water over mountains are greatly reduce or eliminated by the embodiments contained in this patent. Given the ability to cyclically elevate water from the sea with a variation on the closed system embodiment, it also becomes possible to use reverse osmosis (or other similar water filtration techniques) to remove the salt to create fresh water supplies and distribute this clean water to the population of the planet. Hence this application holds the promise for clean abundant electrical energy, fresh water, less global warming, and a clean environment that can be supplied cheaply, and used by all the communities of the world.
(364) While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to example embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims.