Underwater propeller device with pulsed jets
09764809 · 2017-09-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B63H21/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63H11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63H1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B63H25/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63H1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63H21/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A device, which is autonomous or which can be associated with another structure, for propulsion in a liquid environment, is described. The device has a bladder body made of a soft material, developing along and around a central longitudinal axis, defining an internal chamber between a dorsal wall and a ventral wall; in the bladder body, an inlet opening and an outlet opening of a liquid in and out of the chamber, arranged at a longitudinal end of the body; and drive means for driving a contraction of the bladder, arranged on the dorsal wall and having a mechanical connection with the ventral to cyclically attract the ventral wall to the dorsal wall, thereby causing a pulsed ejection of a propeller jet from the chamber through the outlet opening.
Claims
1. An underwater propeller device comprising: a bladder body completely made of a soft material, developing along and around a central longitudinal axis, defining an internal chamber between a dorsal wall and a ventral wall; in said bladder body, an inlet opening and an outlet opening of a liquid in and out of said chamber, arranged at a longitudinal end of the body; and drive means for driving a contraction of said bladder, arranged on said dorsal wall and comprising a mechanical connection with said ventral wall to cyclically attract the ventral wall to the dorsal wall, thereby causing a pulsed ejection of a propeller jet from said chamber through said outlet opening.
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein said drive means comprise a distribution of flexible and inextensible wires anchored at respective ends to different points of said ventral wall and pulled by motor means arranged on, or associated with, said dorsal wall.
3. The device according to claim 2, wherein said motor means comprise a motor adapted to bring into rotation a shaft projecting inside said chamber over a normal plane to said longitudinal axis in proximity to said outlet opening, said shaft driving in turn a crank, to the free end of which the ends of the wires opposite the ventral anchoring end are connected, wire guide means being further provided, extending longitudinally in proximity to said dorsal wall and adapted to guide the radial exit of respective wire groups differently spaced apart from said crank, whereby said wires are pulled and released, with consequent contraction and expansion of the bladder, further to the rotation of said crank.
4. The device according to claim 3, wherein said guide means comprise a tubular guide with an orderly distribution of holes spaced along said longitudinal axis and through which respective groups of wires radially branch off spreading towards said ventral wall.
5. The device according to claim 4, wherein said guide integrally projects from a protective case housing the rotation of said crank.
6. The device according to claim 3, wherein said motor is embedded in said dorsal wall along with battery means and control means.
7. The device according to claim 1, wherein said outlet opening comprises a syphon ending in an outlet nozzle, the syphon having a cylindrical or frustoconical shape and being arranged in substantially coaxial fashion with said longitudinal axis.
8. The device according to claim 7, wherein said inlet opening comprises a valve, formed by a fracture of said ventral wall extending circumferentially at the base of said syphon.
9. The device according to claim 8, wherein said valve comprises a skirt penetrating said chamber adapted to shut said fracture by internally overlapping an adjacent bladder wall portion, said overlapping and consequent shutting of the fracture and closure of the valve being urged by a contraction of the bladder to which an ejection of the liquid from the chamber responds, whereas in an expanded or unwarped configuration of the bladder the skirt is adapted to become passively lifted freeing the inlet passage of the liquid through said fracture, such condition urging instead the closure of the nozzle of the syphon.
10. The device according to claim 7, wherein steering means of said syphon comprise steering motor means controlling tie-strings that extend over the syphon, embedded in its walls, along respective generatrices.
11. The device according to claim 10, comprising two steering motors controlling respective pairs of tie-strings arranged in two mutually orthogonal diametrical planes.
12. The device according to claim 1, wherein said bladder body is substantially egg-shaped with the major axis coinciding with said longitudinal axis.
13. The device according to claim 1, wherein said soft material has elastic or viscoelastic properties.
14. The device according to claim 13, wherein said material is a polymer having a Young's modulus lower than 100 kPa.
15. The device according to claim 14, wherein the polymer is a silicone polymer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The characteristics and the advantages of the underwater propeller device with pulsed jets according to the present invention shall become clearer from the following description of an embodiment thereof given as an example and not for limiting purposes with reference to the attached drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(7) With reference to said figures, a device according to the invention comprises a bladder body 1 made of soft material and preferably having generically elastic or viscoelastic behaviour (i.e. natural tendency to return to an unwarped configuration). Viscoelastic materials can be used such as silicone rubber, elastomers with viscoelastic properties that are similar to those of silicone or in general other polymers with low Young's modulus (of the order of some tens of kPa and in any case lower than 100 kPa) which can undergo big deformations (greater than 500%) without suffering permanent deformations.
(8) The bladder 1 has an elongated shape, advantageously egg-shaped developing along and around a central longitudinal axis X, which as shall be seen also defines the propulsion direction. Inside, the bladder 1 defines a chamber 2 that is open towards the outside by a siphon 4 ending in an outlet nozzle 41, in the shape of a cylindrical portion or preferably frustoconical arranged at a longitudinal end and coaxial to the axis X, so as to produce an ejection of liquid along the aforementioned axis (when not oriented so as to control the direction of the movement, according to what will be described in the rest of the description).
(9) An inlet opening of the fluid inside the chamber 2 is, on the other hand, supplied by a valve 3, formed by a fracture 31 of the bladder extending circumferentially at the base of the siphon 4. A skirt 32 moreover extends from such a base, said skirt penetrating the chamber 2 so as to be adapted to intercept the fracture 31 internally overlapping the adjacent bladder wall portion 1. Such an overlapping (with shutting of the fracture 31 and consequent closure of the valve) is in particular ensured by effect of a contraction of the bladder 1 (
(10) On the inner surface that defines the chamber 2, two regions that are opposite one another with respect to the axis X can be identified, and precisely a ventral region 21, on which the valve 3 opens, and a dorsal region 22 at which the bladder has a thickened dorsal wall 11.
(11) Means 5 for driving the contraction of the bladder, and with it the propulsion, comprise according to the invention (
(12) The shaft 52, indeed inside the chamber 2, sets a crank 56 in rotation, said crank being arranged inside a protective case 7, from which a tubular guide 8 longitudinally extends, running along the entire development of the chamber. The tubular guide 8 has (
(13) A further and independent steering motor 57, again supplied by the batteries 53, is arranged in the dorsal wall 1 at the base of the siphon 4, practically in a position that is diametrically opposite the valve 3. The steering motor 57, or more accurately an outlet pulley thereof (
(14) In terms of its operation, the jet propulsion according to the invention is made by cyclical repetition of contraction steps of the bladder 1 with the expulsion of fluid (
(15) To a rotation angle of the crank 56 equal to 180° with respect to the previous one, corresponds moreover a release of the tie-strings (
(16) For every rotation of the crank 56 there is thus a corresponding half a rotation in which the tie-strings are pulled, and half a rotation in which they are released. In the design stage, in order to adapt the volume undergoing pressurisation, and the power of the ejection jet, to the specific requirements, it is obviously possible to operate on various structural and dimensional parameters, such as, in particular, the length of the crank, the thickness of the ventral wall of the bladder, the material used, the same geometry of the bladder (with possible presence of inner walls), the number of wires and the position in which they are anchored to the belly, the configuration of the guide and of the relative holes, the power of the motor and the characteristics of its dispensing etc.
(17) In the contraction/ejection step, the fluid in outlet is accelerated through the siphon 4. In such a way, a jet with a finite volume is ejected in an impulsive or semi-impulsive fashion through the nozzle 41, downstream of which the expelled volume naturally gives life to a vortex ring. The propulsion with discontinuous jets, in particular if associated with the generation of vortex rings, offers two very significant advantages with respect to conventional propeller propulsion, i.e. greater efficiency and a shorter response time in transferring the thrust from the fluid to the propelled body. In this type of propulsion, indeed, the thrust generated is transferred in a percentage of about 80% in a time of five tenths of a second, in contrast with a continuous jet like that generated by a propeller in which the response time is longer (concerning this see for example Krieg, Mohseni, Thrust Characterization of a Bioinspired Vortex Ring Thruster for Locomotion of Underwater Robots, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, VOL 33, April 2008, No. 2).
(18) In each diametrically opposite pair, to the pulling of a wire (lower wire in the condition of
(19) The mechanism given as an example allows the device moreover to carry out turning manoeuvres inside radii of curvature that are very small. Indeed, by associating a pronounced bending of the siphon to a suitable pulsation of the jet it is indeed possible to generate a moment that is capable of moving the bladder on itself. The possibility of carrying out impulsive accelerations with a short duration in different directions thus makes it possible to exert a fine control on the navigation of the device. One interesting prerogative of the aforementioned steering mechanism consists of the possibility of orienting the siphon by turning the nozzle to the front, i.e. towards the opposite longitudinal end of the bladder and thus in the direction that corresponds to the direct navigation motion, exerting a bending of 180° with respect to the resting configuration. This makes it possible to both produce noticeable decelerations, and to navigate with a reverse movement without needing further appendages or actuators.
(20) The device according to the invention is in conclusion extremely indicated for underwater activity in many different fields, since it is suitable for operating in small spaces and since it is made up of a structure that is minimally rigidified by the particular actuation system defined, and thus capable of being compressed and of adapting to the surrounding environment, without producing impacts of a critical nature. Such characteristics and the other accessories highlighted above make the device suitable for carrying out tasks both in the industrial field and in service robotics. Since, for the materials used, the device is suitable for taking up a hydrostatic configuration that is substantially neutral, there are clear advantages for underwater use, even as integrations with underwater robotic platforms (Autonomous Underwater Vehicle—AUV), but also on ROVs (Remotely Operated Vehicle) specialised in underwater manipulation.
(21) The extreme lightness and softness makes the device potentially useful also for space applications, where weight, bulk, and risk of being damaged, are crucial factors. For the deformability of the materials used, the present invention can be used in all the industrial fields in which it is fundamental to have a mechanically yieldable structure and to be capable of moving with dexterity and delicately, like handling artefacts in underwater archaeology or in mini-invasive surgery. Again, the present invention can find use in fields such as maintenance of underwater structures (for example underwater petrol pipelines), navigation in muddy waters (for example in ports), fish farming, underwater speleology and scientific exploration.
(22) The possibility of the bladder 1 contracting itself makes the present invention very suitable for all those environments that are difficult to reach from very small inlets, in which however there is the requirement of great mobility, like in cleaning pipelines, silos, tanks and reservoirs or in the removal of ruins or searching for people in areas affected by natural disasters. These possible uses, of course, are only some and all relate to the use of the present invention as described, but it can be easily equipped with numerous specific components, soft or rigid, for carrying out more specific tasks. For this purpose, it should be noted how the device can be made so as to form an operative robotic apparatus itself that is self-sufficient, with the suitable equipment mounted for example on the dorsal wall of the body 1, or, keeping its configuration substantially as described above, be mechanically associated with an external structure/apparatus of which it will act as propulsion means, or again incorporated in a complex structure, again with the same function.
(23) The present invention has been described with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof. It should be understood that other embodiments may exist belonging to the same inventive core, all covered by the scope of protection of the following claims.